VANCOUVER, Wash. Jerry Levin, former American hostage and CNN Middle East bureau chief and current Christian Peacemaker Teams (CPT) volunteer, and his wife Sis Levin are to speak on their work for peace and nonviolence in the
The Levins will present “A Report on the Struggle to Wage Peace and Nonviolence in the
On his escape after almost a year’s captivity in Lebanon over 21 years ago, Levin, who had been the Beirut-based Middle East bureau chief for CNN in the early 1980s, decided that he and his wife Sis needed to dedicate themselves to bringing understanding and reconciliation to the various factions in the Middle East. Now, as a full-time volunteer with the CPT in
At the same time, Sis Levin, through her “The Children of Abraham Interfaith Peace Teaching Project” has initiated a program to prepare educators on how to teach nonviolence and resilience to Palestinian students systemically, all the way from pre-K through university. Sis, an internationally known peace educator and certified professional mediator, attracted international attention in the mid-1980s in connection with her successful efforts to create the conditions by which Levin was able to escape from his captors. The book, “Beirut Diary,” is her account of that experience, and was later made into the ABC-TV docudrama “Held Hostage.”
The Levins will be available for interviews from 1:30-2:30 p.m. in Multimedia Classroom Building Room 102Q before the lecture. To arrange an interview, please contact Kiri Horsey at (360) 546-9520 or horsey@vancouver.wsu.edu.
This event is co-sponsored by the Association Students of Washington State University Vancouver and the Social and Environmental Justice Club.
WSU Vancouver is located at