When Barbara Wiedner learned she was terminally ill
__________
... she asked Lorraine Krofchok
to continue Grandmothers
for Peace.
__________
... she asked Lorraine Krofchok
to continue Grandmothers
for Peace.
The New American
Dream Interview
Dream Interview
LORRAINE KROFCHOK lives in Elk Grove, California.
She is the director of Grandmothers for Peace International, an organization founded in 1982 at the height of the Cold War.
The group was founded by Barbara Wiedner of Sacramento, who lived fifteen minutes from Mather Air Force Base. She became aware of 150 nuclear weapons at the base, aimed at the Soviet Union, and made her think that if things did not change, her grandchildren could be part of the last generation on earth.
"That thought catapulted me 'out of my kitchen,' to join others at the gates of Mather in protest of the nuclear arms race. My granddaughter made me a sign that read 'Grandmother for Peace,' which I held at weekly protests. That sign attracted a great deal of attention from the public and media."
When Barbara learned she was terminally ill she asked Lorraine Krofchok to continue Grandmothers for Peace.
Lorraine was not a grandmother, but Barbara knew that and said biology was never a requirement.
Lorraine says she did not "take over, but is taking care of a beloved organization." There is no requirement for membership because "grandmother" is a concept of love and caring--there is no age, biology, or gender required!
_______________
The New American Dream Trivia Question:
To win a round button that says, "Bush Is Lying About What He Knew," be the first one to correctly answer the following.
Lorraine Krofchok would rather be ...
a. Director of Grandmothers For Pizza b. A finalist on American Idol c. Cooking on TV d. Coaching soccer e. Anywhere but Sacramento f. Telling Bush a thing or two, in private
_______________
NAD: Lorraine, hello, thank you for taking the time for this.
How long have you been with Grandmothers for Peace?
How did you get the director's job?
LORRAINE KROFCHOK:
I joined GFP in 1990, well before the age of the possibility of being a grandmother because I liked the concept and the people in the organization.
I became director when Barbara found out she was terminally ill and she asked me to continue. Actually, she saw a video of an interview at the SOA protest at Ft. Benning and knew I could do the job.
But, we were friends from the beginning of my association in GFP since 1990.
NAD: Doesn't that keep you very busy?
LORRAINE KROFCHOK:
It keeps me very busy and it could consume my life if I let it.
I like to have "my other life" though--and that is a love for music and the theater.
NAD: Why do you think that your group has such broad appeal?
LORRAINE KROFCHOK:
"Grandmother" is a feeling of love and caring.
We have a broad appeal because people can do as much as they want, but can also be a part of GFP in any way they want — making phone calls, writing letters, standing on corners with a sign, active in the political process or, as one woman wrote me "It is SO good to be able to write a letter and sign it "Member of Grandmothers for Peace!
NAD: Would you like to choose one of these to answer, elaborate on?
We don't ask this to make fun. We ask because we really seek the answers.
— Are UFOs real?
— Did we land on the moon in 1968?
— Did Bush knock down the towers?
— Was Paul Wellstone's death an accident?
— The Oklahoma City bombing? Wasn't that just another U.S. government terrorist exercise? Or not.
— Waco. We burned kids, right? You can see flames shooting out of the tanks. Or not.
— Is Bigfoot real?
— Is there a God?
... What makes you think that?
LORRAINE KROFCHOK:
Bush didn't "directly" knock down the towers, but he did ignore the August memo.
I think his handlers had a "buzz" that something was going to happen and "let it go" because Bush was already falling out of favor.
However, they had no idea how BIG the event would be.
I think they believed it would be a "terrorist" attack of some sort, a shopping center, school, activity, but nothing on the scale of the WTC.
It became the "opportunity" to promote the agenda of the neocons--the event they were waiting for.
NAD: How did you survive the Bush years?
LORRAINE KROFCHOK:
The Bush years were survived by the activism I did, along with the help and dedication of Grandmothers for Peace and the solidarity groups all over the world.
NAD: Do you anticipate having to survive the Obama years, struggle through — or do you have hopes for something better?
I don't hope for something better from Obama, I expect it.
LORRAINE KROFCHOK:
I don't hope for something better from Obama, I expect it.
He has a huge job and I don't expect instant change, but I want to see the steps to peace and undoing the disasters of the Bush years.
NAD: What do you think about the election of Obama?
LORRAINE KROFCHOK:
It was an amazing experience to be part of history.
Fifty years ago a Black man could not go in the same door as a White person, nor drink out of the same water fountain.
It made me so proud that so many saw beyond and it was a goose bump moment in time to see how the rest of the world reacted.
I literally could feel the world breath a sigh of relief at one second after 8 p.m. Pacific time when the projection for Washington, Oregon, California came in and it was announced "Barack Obama is the 44th President of the US."
I was absolutely hysterical with joy and hope — and knowing it was the end of an error.
Obama will not do everything for all, but we can only proceed with steps — and that usually means two steps forward and one step back.
It is a difficult path, but at least we can be finished with the stumbling, destructive path of the Bush years.
NAD: Please tell us more about yourself, the things you have done, what you would like to do, what you did today.
LORRAINE KROFCHOK:
I really don't like past history. I have lived in many places.
Grew up in New Jersey, lived at Lake Tahoe, Southern CA, Northern CA, Phoenix, Atlanta and now in Sacramento.
What I would like to do, or see is some kind of peace come to this country and a sense of living without intense militarism.
NAD: What did you absolutely have to get done by noon today?
LORRAINE KROFCHOK:
Nothing!
NAD: How about by Christmas 2009?
LORRAINE KROFCHOK:
Oh, dear, I don't have long term goals anymore — just live a few days ahead — plan for a few months!
BUT, I hope to make plans to go to the big party and Fiesta at Ft. Benning when we hope the SOA will finally be closed!
NAD: Have you been arrested? Been in jail?
LORRAINE KROFCHOK:
No.
NAD: How has your activism been accepted by your family, friends?
LORRAINE KROFCHOK:
There is not much choice. I do it. They accept it or not.
NAD: What else would you like to add? What else should we have asked?
LORRAINE KROFCHOK:
Not much else.
I try to stay focused on what is asked!
NAD: Please insert a link here to something you would like linked to, with a brief tag re: where that link goes:
LORRAINE KROFCHOK:
http://www.grandmothersforpeace.org
Grandmothers for Peace International, working for peace since 1982 and everyone is welcome!
_______________
Trivia question answer:
LORRAINE:
Doing what I am doing, but would love to be cooking on TV!
And as far as telling Bush a thing or two, he doesn't listen to anyone and does not care. Why waste the energy?....
The New American Dream Feature Interviews
If you search the archives below, you will find, in a sort of order [last to first], interviews with:
Bob Kincaid, host, Head-On Radio Show
Tony Packes, Animal Farm Radio Host, Keeping An Eye on Big Brother
Richard Flamer, Working With the Poor in Chiapas
David Ray Griffin, 9/11 Truth activist author
Barry Crimmins, U.S. comedian, author, social activist
Bret Hayworth, political reporter for the Sioux City [IA] Journal
Lisa Casey, publisher of website All Hat No Cattle
Joe & Elaine Mayer, activist couple in Rochester, Minnesota
Fr. Darrell Rupiper, U.S. priest revolutionary
Whitney Trettien, MIT student, Green Party activist
Meria Heller, radio show host
Phil Hey, professor, poet
John Crawford, book publisher
Steve Moon, Iowa Bigfoot researcher
Carol Brouillet, California social activist, 9/11 Truth
Russell Brutsche, Santa Cruz artist
Kevin Barrett, professor, radio show host, 9/11 Truth activist
A'Jamal Rashad Byndon, social activist in Omaha
Chris Rooney, Vancouver, Canada Catholic Worker, website publisher
Marc Estrin, political novelist, from the left
Peter Dale Scott, poet, professor, author, activist
Anthony Rayson, anarchist zine publisher, works with prisoners
Alice Cherbonnier, editor of The Baltimore Chronicle, an independent newspaper
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