Tax resistance in the “Peace Churches” →
Mennonites / Amish →
Charles Carney
Erica Weiland protesting at the new National Nuclear Security Administration plant in Kansas City (photo by Robyn Haas).
The first new nuclear weapons manufacturing facility in the United States in decades is under construction in Kansas City in .
So, when NWTRCC held its Fall, 2011 national gathering in Kansas City , they also took a little time out to protest.
Some — Erica Weiland, Jim Hannah, Jason Rawn, Kima Garrison, and Charles Carney — were arrested in a symbolic civil disobedience action.
Charles Carney reflects on his conversion to war tax resistance, partially motivated by the war tax resistance of Archbishop Raymond Hunthausen in .
I have been able to divert over $100,000 away from the Boeings and the Halliburtons of the world to the Oxfams and Amnesty Internationals and Physicians for Social Responsibility and Harvesters of the world.
It all started for me with that very liberating idea of unilateral disarmament.
What a freeing thing to be able to lay down my sword and shield.
What a freeing thing to tell the government, to tell the military-industrial complex, to tell Wall Street: “No you can’t have my money.
All my checks will be written out to the people.
All my checks will be written out to the 99 percent; no more checks written out to the 1 percent.”
Notes about the IRS policy on salary levies and on employers who are willing to work with resisters to help them resist such levies, on banks versus credit unions, and on the effectiveness of scary letters from the IRS.
Information about the upcoming International Conference of War Tax Resisters and Peace Tax Campaigns, on the European Court of Human Rights case for conscientious objection to military taxation being pursued by Roy Prockter, and on a new director for the American peace tax fund promoting group.
A report from the 26th annual New England Regional Gathering of War Tax Resisters.
Ed Hedemann’s proposal for “zombie war tax resistance,” in which he suggests that resisters prefill war-tax-refusing tax returns for several years in the future, and leave instructions for people to file them each year after your death.
“Why concede the ‘death’ part in that old saying about certainty?
Why give the government a break from having to deal with your resistance when you die?
What if there were a way to continue war tax resistance from the grave?”
An update on the case of imprisoned war tax resister Carlos Steward.
Mennonite John Schrag faces a mob during World War Ⅰ
by James C. Juhnke
When World War Ⅰ broke out, Mennonites discovered they were considered
enemies by their neighbors and business associates. Their German origins,
even if generations removed, their German language and culture, and their
pacifism made them suspect. In some communities, patriotic citizen groups
harassed “slackers” by throwing yellow paint on houses and meetinghouses,
committing arson, tarring and feathering pacifists and threatening death by
hanging. In this story, Swiss Volhynian Mennonite John Schrag finds himself
in the hands of such a patriotic mob.
The John Schrag espionage case was the dramatic climax to the dilemma of
Kansas Mennonites in World War Ⅰ. Schrag was chosen to be the symbol and the
bearer of the American community’s mistrust and hatred of German-speaking
pacifists in the tense days of .
Schrag was a believer in those simple and durable virtues that made Mennonites
highly prized citizens on the Kansas frontier. He was 13 years old when his
family emigrated from Volhynia, Russia, to central Kansas in
. In his teens, he helped his father build a
grain mill on the banks of the Little Arkansas River in Harvey County. From
his father he learned the value of hard work, the love of the soil and the
wisdom of careful investment.
From the Mennonite faith and tradition Schrag knew that God generously rewards
his faithful laboring servants. Schrag’s rise as a prosperous farmer with a
large family and extensive landholdings was as natural as the economic and
social success of the Mennonite community in the first decades after arrival
in the new country.
The Mennonite role as outstanding and valuable citizens received an
unforgettable jolt when the United States entered World War Ⅰ in
. It suddenly became a requirement of
acceptable American citizenship to support the war and to hate Germany. The
Mennonites failed on both counts. They could not support the war because their
religious faith taught them nonresistance, a doctrine whose practical
expression included a claim for exemption from military service. They could
not hate Germany because Mennonites themselves were of German background and
loved the German language and culture as preserved in their homes, schools and
churches.
Their sympathies in the European war had been demonstrated in their
collections of money for the German Red Cross. Mennonites could not be
acceptable citizens in America during World War Ⅰ unless they gave up their
German culture and their doctrine of nonresistance.
The war bond drives became the test of loyal citizenship in the local
community. Faced alternatively with persuasion and intimidation by local
Loyalty Leagues, many Mennonites reconciled their nonresistance with the
purchase of the bonds. After all, reasoned Henry Peter Krehbiel, member of the
Western District Committee on Exemptions, a war bond is a kind of tax, and
Jesus told us to pay our taxes. But John Schrag was not convinced. Buying
bonds was supporting the war, and he would not support the war. That was that.
Five carloads of men: On ,
a group of patriotic citizens in Burrton,
Kan., decided that the time
was ripe for a showdown. “We was out to convert these slackers into patriots,”
said one of them later. Five carloads of men drove 11 miles to the Schrag farm
to get him to join the Armistice Day festivities in Burrton. Schrag’s boys,
sensing trouble, refused to say where their father was, but the Burrton men
found him after ransacking the farmstead and forcing their way into the house.
Schrag offered neither argument nor resistance.
He went along in the hope that a measure of cooperation would help avoid
physical violence.
In Burrton, a crowd quickly gathered as the citizens confronted Schrag with
their real reason for bringing him to town. He must buy war bonds now or face
the consequences. Schrag offered to contribute $200 to the Red Cross and the
Salvation Army, but this was not sufficient.
They demanded that he salute the American flag and carry the flag through town
at the head of a parade. But Schrag quietly and firmly refused to cooperate.
The flag thrust into his hand fell to the ground. Someone shouted, “He stepped
on the flag.” The crowd became an enraged mob.
Yellow paint: They sprinkled and poured yellow paint on their victim,
rubbing it into his scalp and beard until he resembled “a big cheese or yellow
squash or pumpkin after the autumnal ripening.” They led him to the city jail.
Someone ran for a rope to hang him, but Tom Roberts, the head of the local
Anti-Horse-Thief Association, courageously stood before the jail door,
brandished a gun and said, “If you take this man out of jail, you take him
over my dead body.” Temporarily frustrated, the indignant citizens made plans
to return that night, force the jail open and hang this so-called traitor.
Meanwhile, Schrag was placed in a chair on a raised platform in the jail, so
passersby could view the humiliated man through the window in the jail door.
One repentant member of the mob later testified to Schrag’s calmness
throughout the ordeal: “If ever a man looked like Christ, he did.”
Schrag was finally rescued from the Burrton crusaders for American democracy
by the Harvey County sheriff, who came that evening to take him to the county
jail in Newton for cleaning and safe-keeping. Before he was released, Schrag
was informed that he was to be tried in court for violation of the Espionage
Act. It was against the law to desecrate the flag of the United States.
Local newspaper accounts of the incident failed to defend the rights of the
victim. The weekly Burrton Graphic on
saw in the event “a pungent and durable reminder that loyalty is a necessary
prerequisite to life in this community. We must all be Americans.”
The Hutchinson News article said that “a petition
is being circulated to have him [Schrag] deported to Germany, his native land.
This country is fast becoming an unhealthy place for ‘slackers’ of any kind.”
The Newton Evening Kansan-Republican suggested that
if a federal court would find Schrag guilty, “it would undoubtedly mean the
confiscation of his property and his deportation.” On the week of his hearing
in Wichita, the editor of the Burrton Graphic
published a list: “Some Things Residents of Burrton Should Be Thankful For.”
In the list was “that we as a people are more tolerant of others’ foibles.”
Desecration of the flag: The case against Schrag was heard in the
Wichita federal courtroom by
U.S. Commissioner
C. Shearman on .
Five Burrton citizens presented 50 typewritten pages of evidence to prove
Schrag’s disloyalty and desecration of the flag. For his defense, Schrag
retained the services of a Jewish lawyer named Schulz. Commissioner Shearman
took the case under advisement and promised that the decision would be made
shortly.
The decision, handed down on ,
was that Schrag was not guilty and should not be bound over for federal trial.
But Commissioner Shearman did say that “Schrag could not have gone closer to a
violation of the Espionage Act if he had had 100 lawyers at his side to advise
him.”
Schrag in fact had not willfully desecrated the flag. Nothing in the Espionage
Act required one to salute the flag. Schrag’s words that supposedly slandered
the flag had been spoken in German, so none of the monolingual plaintiffs
could prove any guilt.
The Newton Evening Kansan-Republican, frustrated by
the acquittal of this “bull-headed” man, suggested that the case “should
certainly make plain to any thinking person the viciousness that exists in the
encouragement of the German language as a means of communication in America…
The melting pot cannot exercise its proper functions when such things are
allowed.”
The Mennonite newspapers in central Kansas, intimidated into silence, did not
come to Schrag’s defense and did not even mention the incident or the hearing
as an item of news. After the commissioner’s decision, however, C.E. Krehbiel,
editor of Der Herold, wrote an editorial,
“Mob Power,” that clearly referred to the Schrag case, although it mentioned
no specific names or events. In cases of mob violence, wrote Krehbiel, either
the mob or the abused person is guilty. If the court of justice decides that
the victim is innocent, the only conclusion is that the mob is guilty. Readers
were to make their own applications.
Schrag’s attorney encouraged him to bring charges against his persecutors, but
Schrag declined. Such an action would have violated the Mennonite principles
of nonresistance.
Nevertheless, in the months after the Schrag affair, the nonresistant
German-Mennonites had no scruples against clamping an economic boycott on the
town of Burrton. The boycott was not organized systematically, but it was
effective in disrupting the trade of Burrton businessmen who were dependent on
the commerce of German-Mennonite farmers. The legacy of tension and hatred
generated by the event would be remembered for decades to come.
American Melting pot: The experience of the Mennonites in World War Ⅰ
hardly had a salutary effect on the processes of the American melting pot. In
the years after the war, the Mennonites were driven to a defensive
retrenchment, to a renewed awareness of their distinctiveness as Mennonites.
Though the Mennonites gradually abandoned their German language and some
German cultural traits, the war experiences forced them to a reconsideration
and reaffirmation of the doctrine of nonresistance. As long as Mennonites held
to that doctrine, they would be a thorn in the flesh of American nationalists.
The witness of John Schrag and of other Mennonites who refused to compromise
their doctrine of nonresistance during wartime can serve as a reminder of the
Anabaptist heritage of steadfastness in the face of persecution.
While reading The Earth Is The Lord’s… John Ruth’s massive history of Lancaster Conference, I discovered that this same question confronted my ancestors during the Civil War.
As their neighbors joined local militias “to preserve the Union,” many Pennsylvania Mennonites were forced to answer questions about their loyalty.
In the end, Congress passed a bill that allowed “the conscientious” to pay a commutation fee of $300 and thereby avoid the military draft.
“Mennonites, who preferred to pay anything called a tax rather than
participating in their government’s military activities, were more content
with this arrangement than were the Quakers, many of whom saw it as a moral
compromise,” writes Ruth.
That solution is the pattern that exists to this day. While we do not fight,
at least half our federal taxes support a vast military machine that no longer
needs our bodies. It needs our money to pay for high-tech weapons and for the
training for those who guide those weapons.
This reality leaves us directly supporting our country’s military with our
dollars and means that in spite of our convictions and beliefs, in practice
Mennonites are not much different from those who loudly support the current
military buildup.
This Memorial Day, we can remember and pray for neighbors who publicly mourn
the loss of a family member. We can also pray for those who were killed by our
country, which for years has used and continues to use our tax dollars to kill
in our name.
Don Schrader penned letters to the editor for the
and
editions
to describe how his simple-living, non-voting lifestyle meets his goal of tax
refusal. Excerpt:
In I lived well on $3,845 for my total
expenses: rent, food, phone, stamps,
etc. I have no
right to more than I need while others have less than they need. I love to
live simply. I write down every penny I spend for everything every day. I
always pay cash; I refuse to buy on credit and to pay interest. I enjoy
learning new ways to stretch dollars, to live healthily and responsibly on
less.
The most radical, nonviolent action that people of conscience can take in this
society is to pledge publicly to live simply, to own no car, and to pay no
federal income tax for war for the rest of their lives.
What would happen if Christians en masse decided to no
longer pay the portion of their taxes that go to war? What if Christians
mounted a mass resistance movement as an expression of our loyalty to Jesus
Christ and his way of peace? Several years ago
PBS
aired a series called A Force More Powerful. This
documentary tracked six nonviolent social-change movements in
,
including the
U.S. civil rights
struggle, the campaign to end apartheid in South Africa and the movement in
India to end British rule.
The common thread in these successful nonviolent movements was masses of
people choosing not to cooperate with forces of evil and oppression.
Oppressive powers depend for survival on the cooperation of the masses. When
that cooperation is withdrawn, these structures eventually crumble.
Ten years ago, when Linda Shelly accepted her first salaried job, she did not
want all the money. What she did made her a recipient of a Journey Award,
given by Mennonite Mutual Aid to highlight good
stewardship.
After working with Mennonite Central Committee
in Bolivia and Honduras, Shelly returned to the United States to be
MCC’s
director of Latin American and Caribbean programs. But her wages
were problematic. Shelly did not want her tax dollars to
support the
U.S. military. She
also wanted to share her money, after years of benefiting from the
generosity of Latin Americans who had so few
resources. So Shelly accepted a lower salary to
reduce her lax liability. She also loaned money to
friends, then instead of receiving taxable interest income,
shared it with people in need, both locally and internationally.