  
     
      
    Nonviolence: Twenty-five 
	Lessons From the History 
	of a Dangerous Idea
       
 
As the old saying goes, "fish, cut bait, or get out of the boat." Faced with aggression, 
we can respond in kind, submit, or-? "The first clue, lesson number one from human history 
on the subject of nonviolence, is that there is no word for it." So opens Mark Kurlansky's 
Nonviolence, an audacious, concise, and thoroughly original sweep through human history 
to draw twenty-four additional lessons about the nature, meaning, implications, and potential 
of nonviolence.
Distinct from pacifism, not a state of mind but a technique- in the Dalai Lama's words, 
"a rational stimulus to action"- nonviolence has always had its practitioners, but they 
have been few, seldom understood, and, because considered dangerous by the state, disparaged, 
imprisoned, tortured, and often killed. They include Mohandas Gandhi, Martin Luther King, 
Archbishop Desmond Tutu, the Founding Fathers, many Abolitionists, certain Russian dissidents, the 
Maori leader Te Whiti, and the Dalai Lama - who has provided a heartfelt preface to this volume. 
His Holiness writes, "It is my hope and prayer that this book should not only attract attention, 
but have a profound effect on those who read it."
 
A scholarly and literary gem, Kurlansky's Nonviolence invites both contemplation and 
debate. Make no mistake, Nonviolence is a frontal assault on the ideology of warfare, 
the choice of us versus them, good versus evil, patriots versus traitors- fish or cut bait. 
Kurlansky asks, "Is the source of violence not human nature, as Hobbes contended, but a lack 
of imagination?" Could we, perhaps, get out of the boat, as it were? Kurlansky shows that with 
nonviolence, yes, and - lesson twenty-five - "the hard work of beginning a movement to end war 
has already been done." This is a book about hope, a book that gives hope.
 
�C. M. Mayo, 2007 finalist judge
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