Soldier turned peacemaker Diana Oestreich heard God's call to love her enemies in the most unlikely place: on the battlefield of Iraq. Diana is an activist, veteran, sexual assault nurse, and the key relationships officer at Preemptive Love, a global relief organization working to end war. She speaks across the US to empower individuals and communities to identify and cross their own "enemy lines" in order to remake the world. She lives with her husband and two children in Duluth, Minnesota.
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Reviews
"This is a book the world needs right now. Diana Oestreich has seen the horrors of war firsthand and has felt the collision between the Empire's sword and the Savior's cross. She is not just giving us a theology of peace; she is showing the world what it looks like to follow the way of the cross in a world ravaged by war. Diana Oestreich is a new hero of mine." ---- Shane Claiborne, author, activist, and founder of Red Letter Christians "Once in a while, we encounter a story so vivid, so personal, it drags us from complacency and propels us toward possibility. This is one of those rare books. Told through combat boots and teacups, mothers and neighbors, enemies and their absence, Waging Peace promises something more valuable than security and taking sides. Bold, tender, and courageous to the core, this book has changed my life forever." ---- Shannan Martin, author of The Ministry of Ordinary Places and Falling Free "It's time. Time to challenge the very foundations of 'us vs. them,' at home and afar. But even if you think it's time to end war, protesting will never be enough. Like Diana, we have to put our lives on the line. We have to wage peace. This book will show you how." ---- Jeremy Courtney, CEO of Preemptive Love Coalition, author of Love Anyway: An Invitation Beyond a World That's Scary as Hell "Waging Peace is the necessary medicine that will heal us in our spiritual wildernesses. It ushers us forth with power and life-sustaining permissions to reimagine a world where peace is danced in every color." ---- Jaki Shelton Green, North Carolina Poet Laureate "'Love never fails.' Oestreich's Waging Peace invites us to believe those words as never before. The world is barricaded behind walls of shame and 'otherizing,' and only tender love can scale those walls. On the other side, we find our shared humanity, a?reverence for complexity, and a longing to be?practitioners of this dangerous hope that only chooses love. This book helps you scale the walls." ---- Gregory J. Boyle, S.J., founder of Homeboy Industries, author of the New York Times bestseller, Tattoos on the Heart: The Power of Boundless Compassion "Diana Oestreich's personal transformation is laid out like bread crumbs for readers to follow without having to participate in military conflict. Diana shows us that the ultimate act of peace is to love. This book is a confession, an atonement, and an act of penance. If one soldier can emerge from such trials, then there is hope for us all to conquer fear. At the same time, it is an instructional manual on how humans can be more humane regardless of circumstance." ---- Garett Reppenhagen, US Army Iraq veteran, and Executive Director of Veterans for Peace "Diana Oestreich truly understands that war is a choice, and it's a choice we don't have to make anymore. Read this book and join the community of peacemakers from every corner of the world who believe that peace is not only possible but imperative." ---- Jason Russell, co-founder of Invisible Children "In faith pursuits, the simplest commitments always get closer to the heart of things. That's what I found in Diana's Waging Peace. Summed up with clarity rising from living into truth, not just talking about it, she offers this message: 'Love first. Love always. Neighbors and enemies. It's possible, even in life's most challenging moments.' Diana's story could not be more relevant and needed, here and now, where fear and division find constant justification to see even our neighbors as enemies. This book inspires. I feel a resonant sense of gratitude for this voice at this time." ---- John Paul Lederach, professor emeritus, University of Notre Dame