Searching for a peacemaker: Jane Addams

Last winter Hull House shut its doors.

The closing of Jane Addams’ experiment in peacemaking haunts my thoughts, even while attending to the immediate issues of supermax prisons and of drones dropping from the skies on unsuspecting families.  Little public notice seems to have been given this closing.  Are we forgetting Jane Addams?  Somehow, I am feeling that remembering our peacemakers, not just Addams but so many others in our communities, is vital to our civic lives.  Addams teaches what it means to live the life of a peacemaker.

One time, she taught me by her works as a builder of institutions and a doer of good deeds.  Twenty Years at Hull House remains a classic in our peacemaking tradition.  In time I have found myself attending to the less pronounced, often illusive, facets of her interior life where I think I glimpse meanings in her calling as peacemaker.   Her connections with Quakers, while seemingly incidental, are revealing.  Although her father forsook the Quaker meeting for the Presbyterian church and she kept her father’s faith, Jane felt an affinity with Friends in particular by way of the Fellowship of Reconciliation.  And yet on reflection she chose not to become a Quaker.  This Quaker connection, however tenuous it may seem, points to common sensibilities that guide the lives of peacemakers no matter their specific faith affiliation.

Respectful listening, patient reflection, and quiet courage—these habits of mind shaped her calling.  While guided by her beloved father’s principle of service, she came to wonder whether the truths she had learned from a privileged, Protestant, and Anglo-Saxon childhood could guide her work with poor, Eastern-European, and Catholic immigrants.  Or could those inherited verities, for example the explanation for poverty’s causes, carry the patronizing attitudes of the missionary?  As she listened to her new neighbors, she turned inward.  Sometimes the work was difficult.  While bearing witness against racial violence, she listened to painful lessons from her associates who reminded her that she too harbored racist attitudes similar to those that sparked the lyncher.   Democracy, she came to see, was something larger than legal forms guaranteeing the citizen’s rights.  It lay in the ability to listen to others, to reflect, and to realize that the truths passed down from past generations could easily become impediments to service in the present.  This quiet habit of listening, of opening oneself to others’ voices, and of reflection led Addams through long years of evolution.

As I read Newer Ideals of Peace, I discover a quiet courage to challenge the conventional and to risk the unconventional.  Writing at midcourse in her thinking, she was reconsidering time honored truths and unquestioned patterns of authority.  Reverence for the Founding Fathers and their constitution might blind oneself to the changing times and to needs once unimagined.  Prescriptive truths, as if written in stone, work to prevent the democracy from attending to different voices in the neighborhood.   Truth is unfolding.   Each generation finds it in the changing contexts of community life.  Militarism, she speculated, becomes more than the application of organized force but a manifestation of pervasive authoritarian impulses deeply embedded in the culture.  Militarism, she ventured to propose, included habits of mind that twisted relations with neighbors as well as with peoples abroad.  As she wrote, she sometimes stumbled in her effort to fashion new vocabularies to guide her thinking.  Yet she continued and in her steadfast, patient, spiritual quest demonstrated a remarkable and exemplary resolve and courage.  Later in life, as she watched the flapper generation of the 1920s, she felt bewildered, even troubled.  But she advised her associates to attend to young people and to beware imposing verities on them lest creative thought be stifled.

And so we return to Addams and the Quakers.   The affinity seems to run deeper than her public work against militarism.  It reveals itself in habits of  listening and reflection, of attending to truth emerging from the present, and of reconsidering prescriptions inherited by generations past.  Let me return to what seems contradiction: her affinity with the Society of Friends and her hesitancy to join that circle.   Clearness came to her when she was asked how public association with Quakers might affect her relationship with her neighbors—Catholic, Jew, Eastern Orthodox—in the Hull House community.  Would she create distances and stifle her ability to speak with them?

And so I ask myself: how do we understand peacemaking?  Is the peacemaker identified by the deeds well done?   A resume such as of Jane Addams would meet that standard.   Founder of Hull House, charter member of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, outspoken opponent of the First World War, leading light in the Women’s International League for Peace and Freedom—her works earned her a worldwide reputation in the peace community.  Her persistence is also worthy of recognition.   While vilified for resistance to American entrance into the Great War and branded “the most dangerous woman in America,” she continued steadfast, though sometimes disheartened, to her calling.

But what if she had not done these deeds?   Is her inner quest for understanding the way to peace worthy of notice?  With this question I find myself turning to Rufus Jones and his reflections on the spiritual life.  Sometimes, he counseled, we are tempted to look to spiritual heroics, inspiring moments, for example and guidance.   Yet by so doing we overlook the quiet searchers.  We cannot all be Saul on the Road to Damascus.  Nor can many of us be a George Fox atop Pendle Hill.   Those dazzling moments may distract us from attending to the less visible, less eye catching, workers for peace.  And so who is the peacemaker?   To paraphrase William James who deeply admired Addams’ Newer Ideals and who inspired Jones’ writing we need to be alert to the varieties of the peacemaking experience.

Finally–remembering seems important for peacemaking.  This is why I am concerned that Jane Addams may be forgotten, even by today’s workers for peace.   Peacemaking can be lonely work, as Addams felt.   Forgetting can cut the young witness for peace adrift in time without a sense of an anchoring tradition and without awareness of others who endured and thereby teach and invigorate by example.  To be aware of a tradition of people who persevered and, perhaps most important, lived fulfilled lives may be essential to maintaining that spirit.   The drones will continue to kill, prisoners in our midst will be mistreated.  And continuing to keep courage may come, in part, from stopping to remember.

4 thoughts on “Searching for a peacemaker: Jane Addams

  1. I agree with an observation I heard from Bradford Lyttle some years ago, that Miss Addams was arguably Chicago’s most important citizen – ever!

    Her not joining a Quaker Meeting — or any church –was probably a strategic decision, in that she would not favor one denomination over any others (probably good for fund-raising, too!) — while acknowledging her spiritual heritage and roots.

    I believe that her father simply identified himself as (having been) a “Hicksite Quaker.” Sabron Newton had accumulated good documentation on this question.

    For a number of years there was a worship group, loosely affiliated with Illinois Yearly Meeting, that met near Jane Addams’ birthplace, in northwest Illinois near Freeport. (Perhaps others have recollections of that group.)

    But other than her influence of style and substance — which was profound — we can also note this Quaker connection: It was at her home at Hull House, the original building still standing on Halsted at Polk, where the predecessor FGC-related Friends Meeting met, which was one of the components to become 57th Street Meeting. [Someone could provide an online link to the history which documents this, published on 57th St.’s 75th anniversary.]

    Miss Addams invited the group in which Jonathan Plummer had membership, “Chicago Executive Meeting” (which had gathered at the Fine Arts Building on Michigan Avenue) to come worship at her home. Friends would then join her, at her table afterward, for dinner at Hull House. I remember hearing from one of 57th St.’s founding members Alice Flitcraft that Miss Addams’ bedroom was offered as a nursery for her infant son Alan Flitcraft.

    So, we know that Jane Addams had strong affection for and affinity with Quakers, formal membership or not.

    Thanks, Michael, for bringing this Nobel Prize winning Peacemaker to our attention!

    -DHF

  2. But the work of Jane Addams continues on in so many ways!

    It continues literally with the work of Jane Addams Hull House Museum, which was always unaffifialted with the failed Jane Addams Hull House Association, and continues regular public programming in the historic Dining Hall:

    “The original Hull House stemmed from Addams’ desire to create a safe haven to provide educational and social benefits for the working class. Her idea solidified in 1889 when she and Ellen Gates Starr, a fellow philanthropist, founded Hull House. Addams ran Hull House, 800 S. Halsted Street, until her death in 1935. After being designated a U.S. National Historic Landmark in 1965 and a Chicago landmark in 1974, Hull House now operates as part of the College of Architecture at the University of Illinois at Chicago. The house transformed into the Jane Addams Hull-House Museum in 1967. The museum, not affiliated with the association, is open to the public and contains more than 1,100 artifacts related to Hull House’s extensive history.” (http://columbiachronicle.com/hull-house-closes-legacy-continues/) More at: http://www.uic.edu/jaddams/hull/hull_house.html

    And an extensive archive of their past programs is available online:
    http://www.wbez.org/users/jane-addams-hull-house-museum-0

    But it also lives on in the work of many who strive to keep the work of today connected to the voices of our past, efforts like the Chicago Voices project: http://www.peopleshistory.us/chicago

    Thank you, deeply, for your request that we listen & explore a shared understanding of who the peacemakers are around us. I am open to the messages of the Friends we can capture as part of the Quaker Peacemaker Archive project. I am honored to hear their reflections.

  3. Dear Friends –

    So true, the work of Jane Addams lives on, despite loss of Hull House.

    And so does her illustrious name, in (among other things) Illinois’ very own “Jane Addams Tollway” (northwest of the city proper)…or, hmm – does naming a tollway after a peacemaker truly honor her/his memory?

    In answer to this blog’s question – I “see peace,” at least as well as I can, in living simply, gently, and perhaps even frugally – “that others might live,” as Gandhi (I think it was) once said. Certainly Miss Addams was a role model in those ways – not to mention her impact on raising poor children into improved diets, education, and futures. Do I see it, though, in building highways, charging tolls so those who use those highways can kid themselves into thinking they are defraying the full costs thereof (costs which, I think, can easily be seen to include destruction of animal habitat, increased incidence of violent and wasteful animal/human contact [which can be fatal to both animal and automobile-occupant, and which could be, but rarely is, followed by harvest of dead animals for food/other use, either by humans or by members of other carnivorous species], destruction of breathable air, etc. etc. etc.)? Not so much…even when those highways are named after peacemakers.

    What say y’all?

    In the Light,
    P McMillen

  4. Not the moon, but the finger pointing at the moon. That is possibly how Jane Addams would reflect on her life and accomplishments. Like the
    Buddha, she would want us to keep a higher view of her life — that she was a messenger for the Truth. In that effort she reminds us a that we all carry the responsibility to be valiant for Truth.

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