Every year people gather to fast together at the start of August. Marc Morgan from Haringey CND has just returned from the 2024 event in Germany. He reports back here.
The International Fast against nuclear weapons has been taking place, almost without exception, every year between Hiroshima and Nagasaki days, since 1983. It currently involves approximately 50 people fasting worldwide, in 6 different countries (not counting individuals and groups in some places who may not be connected to those of us who do fast together, as an informal collective). The International Fast is known as an Action-Fast; it goes hand in hand with other forms of protest, and is definitely seen as a call to public opinion, rather than as an introspective exercise in self-mortification.
I myself have fasted every year since 2013, as often as possible with fasters from other countries. This year I joined several fasters in Germany: Dr. Matthias Engelke, a Lutheran priest who has vowed to fast one extra day each year until all nuclear weapons are removed from German soil (see his blog regarding his fasting campaign) ; Reinhard Bergholz , who fasts with Matthias; and Etienne Godinot from France, Vice President of the Institut de Recherche sur la Résolution non-Violente des Conflits. We fasted in Bremen, Köln, and Büchel, the American airbase at which US nuclear weapons are stationed, in the Eifel in Western Germany.
COMMEMORATION IN BREMEN
We arrived in Bremen on 5th August, and took part in an evening involving the screening of two films, one on the dangers of nuclear weapons in general, one on the lasting effects of Uranium bombs used by NATO in Serbia in 1999.
We then headed to the town’s central Market Square, and held a midnight vigil for one hour: