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Teaching Peace: Students Exchange Letters with Their Teacher

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To see if nonviolence could be taught, in 1982 Colman McCarthy became a volunteer teacher at one of the poorest high schools in Washington, DC. In the thirty-two years since then, he has taught peace studies courses for more than ten thousand college and high school students. Large numbers of those students have faithfully kept in touch with McCarthy, often with handwritten letters, and he has answered them with the same seriousness he brought to his columns and books. The exchanges rise to a rare kind of literature that blends personal warmth, intellectual honesty, and shared idealism.

The discussions range from peace and war to a host of other issues of social justice, such as the death penalty, human rights, poverty, the living wage, animal rights, and vegetarianism. The wide-ranging letters suggest how teacher and students co-create a world of more love and less hate.

224 pages, Paperback

First published February 15, 2015

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About the author

Colman McCarthy

32 books29 followers
American journalist, teacher and peace activist.

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Profile Image for Sarah.
144 reviews3 followers
May 3, 2018
I was a student of Colman's...this book is it!! Very relatable. Love it.
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