The Peacemaker (newspaper)The Peacemaker was a pacifist newspaper based in Melbourne, Australia. It was published from 1939 to 1971. HistoryIn 1939 Frank Coaldrake (1912–70) was a community worker with the Brotherhood of St Laurence in the inner-Melbourne suburb of Fitzroy.[1] In 1938-39 he had been the travelling secretary of the Australian Student Christian Movement, and during this time he had become a convinced pacifist.[2] Three weeks after the declaration of war in 1939, he founded The Peacemaker, a monthly paper to inform and assist those who conscientiously objected to military service.[3] Although The Peacemaker was notionally a monthly publication, the actual publication history was more erratic than that suggests. Coaldrake was president of the Federal Pacifist Council of Australia from 1943 to 1946.[4] He offered to serve as a missionary in Japan, initially in 1943 at the height of the war to Dr H. V. Evatt, the Minister for External Affairs and which was declined,[5] but which was accepted by Bishop George Cranswick, Chairman of the Australian Board of Missions in 1946.[6] He left Melbourne at the end of 1946 to spend 15 months studying Japanese at the University of Sydney.[7] At this point the Federal Pacifist Council (which was the Australian section of War Resisters' International)[8] took over responsibility for publication of The Peacemaker.[9] During this time The Peacemaker was a strong campaigner for those who objected to performing national service.[10] The last issue featured a cover photo of the anti-war activist and conscientious objector Michael Matteson whilst on the run from police.[11] The Peacemaker ceased publication in 1971. Editors
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