Paul K. Chappell

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Paul K. Chappell
Paul Chappell photo by Tom Cogill sm.jpg
Paul K Chappell in Charlottesville, Virginia
BornMarch 7, 1980
Maryland, United States
OccupationInternational Peace Educator
Known forPeace Literacy

Paul K. Chappell is the Director of the Peace Literacy Institute Peaceliteracy.org. A graduate of West Point and a veteran of the war in Iraq, he created the idea of Peace Literacy after his time in the military. He develops the idea further in his seven-book series The Road to Peace where he writes about waging peace, ending war, the art of living, and what it means to be human.

Since 2009 Chappell has offered workshops for educators, activists, community leaders, veterans, and faith-based organizations and has taught courses on Peace Literacy and Leadership in colleges across the US and Canada. In 2017, Chappell began work with a team of educational experts, coordinated by Sharyn Clough, Director of Phronesis Lab and Professor of Philosophy at Oregon State University, to design and teach Peace Literacy curriculum and assessment for use in public school through adult and higher education.

Family[]

Paul speaking at the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation

Chappell was born in 1980 in Maryland, and was raised in Alabama, an only child in a multi-racial family.[1] His mother is Korean, and moved to the US when she was in her thirties; his father (d. 2004) was half-black and half-white, and was raised in the segregated South.[2] His father enlisted in the US military and fought in both the Korean and Vietnam wars retiring as a Command Sergeant Major, the highest enlisted rank. When Chappell was 4 years old, his father suffered a major mental break from which he would never recover. Chappell became the victim of his father's war trauma, suffering from violent abuse throughout his school.[3]

Chappell also reported alienation as a racial outcast, rejected by Korean, black, and white communities.[4] His father's war trauma, his own childhood trauma, and the trauma of racism had devastating and cumulative effects on Chappell who was suspended and expelled numerous times for fighting at school. Chappell writes that he eventually entertained fantasies of shooting everyone in his high school[5]

Education[]

Despite his violent upbringing and turbulent educational record through high school, Chappell excelled as a student, and after graduation was accepted to West Point in 1998. As Chappell writes in Will War Ever End, he was obsessed throughout his childhood and teen-age years with the problem of war that had been brought home to him with such violence, but ironically it was in his studies of military history at West Point that Chappell discovered abundant evidence [1] that humans do not have natural impulses to violence against other humans; that in the absence of traumatic catalysts of some kind, violence must be learned, as explored by Lt. Colonel Dave Grossman in On Killing. During his time at West Point, Chappell began to develop the major ideas that are the foundation of Peace Literacy, e.g., that our capacity for conscience and empathy, like language, develop naturally in humans, though these capacities need to be developed[5]

He wrote the first draft of the book that became Peaceful Revolution in 2001 and graduated from West Point in June 2002 with a major in International Relations and a minor in Systems Engineering.

Postgraduate education[]

While Chappell was stationed in Fort Bliss, El Paso he continued his education, graduating from Officer Basic Course (2003) and Captain's Career Course (2007). His military assignments included a post as C-RAM Liaison Officer Forward for Multi-National Corps Iraq (2006-2007) where he was responsible for the installation and system effectiveness of Counter Rocket, Artillery, and Mortar (C-RAM ) Sense, Warn, and Intercept capabilities at Forward Operating Bases in Iraq. He also served as Air Defense Liaison to DARPA (Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency) in 2006. Earlier he was appointed Deputy Chief of Doctrine, Training, and Requirements for Air Defense (2005-2006). In 2008-2009, he served as a PATRIOT Battery Commander, responsible for the training, welfare, and safety of over 90 soldiers and their families; and for the maintenance and operational readiness of PATRIOT missile equipment.

After leaving the military as a Captain in 2009, Chappell furthered his studies of non-violence, attending civil rights leader James Lawson's Non-Violence Program in 2010. He also attended the Level 1 and 2 International Nonviolence Summer Institute in 2013, where he trained with civil rights leaders Bernard Lafayette and C.T. Vivian at the University of Rhode Island.

Employment[]

From 2009-2020, Paul K. Chappell worked full time for peace at the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation, first as the Peace Leadership Director giving lectures, keynotes, and workshops and from 2016-2020 as the Peace Literacy Director, continuing to lecture and give workshops, and responsible for Peace Literacy Curriculum Design and Development, Teacher Training, Coordination of Peace Literacy Curricular Development Team and National Peace Literacy Team. Chappell has also co-taught LEAD 581 Special Topics in Leadership Studies/Peace Leadership, at the University of San Diego School of Leadership and Education Science with Dr. Steven Gelb, and PAX 415 Special Topics in Peace Studies/Peace Literacy, at Oregon State University Honors College with Dr. Sharyn Clough.

Peace Literacy[]

Building on models of reading and writing literacy, as well as the nonviolent strategies of global leaders like MLK Jr.[4] and Gandhi,[2] Chappell's model of Peace Literacy teaches a strategic approach to peacemaking, focusing on and integrating well-being at the personal, social, and political levels. Broadening and deepening the scope of educational models in Social Emotional Learning, Peace Literacy addresses trauma, including childhood trauma, war trauma, and racial trauma, and the links between these and the social barriers that prevent inclusive and equitable quality education. Anticipating the disruptive effects that emerging technologies such as Virtual Reality (link), Augmented Reality (link), and Artificial Intelligence will have on societies around the world, Peace Literacy also provides a framework for understanding the psychological needs these technologies are often used to meet, so that these technologies can be designed and used more responsibly.

Peace Literacy has developed into a growing movement of educators, citizen activists, and community leaders who want to empower people with training and skills. Peace Literacy aims to offer the understanding needed to heal the root causes of problems, rather than merely address surface symptoms. Even as education in reading and writing literacy is properly recognized as a universal human right,[6] Chappell's educational team has as a goal the recognition of education in Peace Literacy as a universal human right. According to Chappell, education in Peace Literacy is the human right that empowers us to protect all our other human rights.

Archbishop Emeritus Desmond Tutu has endorsed the goal:

"Peace Literacy has the capacity to repair our broken parts and create a nonviolent world anchored in dignity, meaning, purpose, and compassion for all. Given the crucial role that Peace Literacy can play, I support the recognition of education in Peace Literacy as a universal human right." 2018 Archbishop Emeritus Desmond Tutu, Nobel Laureate Peace Prize Winner

Publications[]

  • Soldiers of Peace: How to Wield the Weapon of Nonviolence with Maximum Force Prospecta Press. 2017 ISBN 978-1-63226-083-3
  • The Cosmic Ocean: New Answers to Big Questions. Prospecta Press. 2015. ISBN 978-1-63226-009-3
  • The Art of Waging Peace: A Strategic Approach to Improving Our Lives and the World. Easton Studio Press, 2013. ISBN 978-1-935212-78-2
  • Peaceful Revolution: How We Can Create the Future Needed for Humanity's Survival. Easton Studio Press, 2012. ISBN 978-1-935212-76-8
  • The End of War: How Waging Peace Can Save Humanity, Our Planet and Our Future. Foreword by Gavin DeBecker. Easton Studio Press. 2010. ISBN 978-1-935212-11-9
  • Will War Ever End? A Soldier's Vision of Peace for the 21st Century. Foreword by Lt. Col. Dave Grossman. Rvive Books. 2009. ISBN 978-1-935073-02-4

Awards[]

  • 2015 CMM Institute Fellows Program/Project title: Literacy in the Art of Living, the Art of Listening, and the Art of Waging Peace[citation needed]
  • 2019 Walden Award Honoree

References[]

  1. ^ "Fighting With Another Purpose". The Sun Magazine.
  2. ^ Jump up to: a b "Waging Peace". Guernica. 3 June 2013.
  3. ^ "From waging war to waging peace". National Catholic Reporter. 24 October 2013.
  4. ^ Jump up to: a b Woodiwiss, Catherine (10 July 2015). "War, Peace, and the Stories We Tell". Sojourners.
  5. ^ Jump up to: a b "How I went from Potential Mass Shooter to Peace Educator - Thrive Global". thriveglobal.com.
  6. ^ "Article 26 of The Universal Declaration of Human Rights". www.humanrights.com.

Lectures[]

External links[]

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