Bill Quigley, lawyer for Voices in the Wilderness and Loyola Law Professor in New Orleans. Bill talked about the government’s case against Voices for circumventing sanctions, Kathy Kelly’s arrest at the School of the Americas protests, and the crack down on dissent at the FTAA protests in Miami and the G8 Summit in Georgia.
The interview was conducted by Chuck Mertz from This is Hell, a radio program that is broadcast every Saturday morning live from 9 am till 1 PM (central time), in Chicago on WNUR 89.3 FM , and live on the web via RealAudio and Windows Media Player through WNUR’s website. Just go to WNUR’s website and click on “live webcast.”
Stream the Interview (43:29 - 19.9 MB)
or Download (43:29 - 19.9 MB)
A gallery collection of many photographs from both professional photographers and snapshot artists that have traveled to Iraq with Voices in the Wilderness, and some of our own work here in the U.S.
Photos from Lorna Tychostup’s recent journey to Iraq. February 2003. Also, Since 9/11, Tychostup has been working on independent photography project capturing the peace movement, entitled, “Defining Patriotism“. “My commitment is to get these photos shown in as many places as possible to encourage people to actively participate in a peace movement that does indeed exist, or at the very least, to help allay the fear of those who might be afraid to speak out in the face of the war rhetoric.”

(2002-2003):
Thorne Anderson, a photojournalist whose work emphasizes the impact of conflict on civilian populations, has documented the current situation in Iraq as well as the work of Voices In the Wilderness’ Iraq Peace Team project. Thorne is staying in Iraq with the IPT indefinitely.
View Iraq on the Edge (pdf)
(1997-2000): Alan Pogue is a remarkable photojournalist who has traveled several times to Iraq with Voices In the Wilderness.
Alan began his photographic-
documentarian career in 1968 while he was serving as an Army chaplain’s assistant and a combat medic in Vietnam. He returned from the war as both a photographer and a pacifist. In these photographs, Alan documents, through word and images, the common humanity underlying the political discord in Iraq.