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My name is Joseph Olejak, I live in Chatham Center, and I attend the Old Chatham Quaker
Meeting. My war tax resistance started in 1994. I was listening to “60 Minutes”
and Leslie Stahl was interviewing Madeleine Albright, and she asked Madeleine Albright
the question: “Was the sacrifice of a half a million children in Iraq, due to the embargo
of food and medicine, worth it?” And without skipping a beat, Madeline Albright said, “Yes.”
I knew at that moment, I couldn’t do it anymore. I couldn’t support the war. And
I felt compelled to take an action.
In 1994, I started my tax resistance by just not filling. I got the stuff from my accountant
back and it had the whole form filled out and the amount that was due and I was holding
it in front of me and I just looked at the numbers and I thought, “How much of this
is going to go toward creating bombs and guns and nuclear weapons and everything else?”
And I just set it down. And I didn’t file.
The way Quakers look at war is that, when we destroy other human beings, we’re not
only destroying humanity but we’re also destroying that in humanity which is a reflection
of God. In the Bible, one of the things that Christ himself said was that you should do
unto others as you would do unto yourself, and if you love me, you would love your brethren.
And that’s really what it stems from. And if we take that, along with the commandment
to not kill, I think it’s pretty clear. It’s unequivocal. There’s no fine print
there.
When we write that check to the IRS, we often don’t think about where those tax dollars
go. According to the American Friends Service Committee, about 57% of those tax dollars
are going either to the preparation for war, funding the debt on war, or funding nuclear
weapons. 57% of every dollar is an awful lot of money.
If there was indeed a Peace Tax, you would write that check and what the peace tax law
would say is, the funds that you’re giving to government are going to be used to support
things that are other than war. I think, given our long history as peaceniks, Quakers should
definitely have an exception for where their money goes, and anyone else who is a Christian
who feels uncomfortable paying for war.
In April of 2009, 11 armed IRS agents in Kevlar vests came into my office and removed all
my books and records. And that’s when the prosecution started. I pled guilty to one
count of willful failure to file, and told the probation department when I had my interview
that I was a Quaker and that did what I did because of conscientious objections to war.
They were pretty lenient on me. They gave me 26 weekends in the county jail, which I’ve
completed, and now I’m on probation for 5 years. When I was in the Columbia County
jail for my war tax resistance sentence, the Meeting was deeply involved. A lot of people
came and visited me, they called me up, they asked me questions, and it was really good.
I would say that my spiritual family supported me more than my blood family, which was surprising.
Martin Luther King said you don’t need to see the top of the stairs to take the next
step. At the time, I felt like there was an important step that needed to be taken, and
I took it. Really, it was a step of faith. And, you know, I’m still alive. I’m still
here. I still have food. I still have clothing. I still have the support of my children and
my Meeting and I think it’s going to be OK.
I’m not unhappy with the decision I took. I won’t say that it hasn’t had its challenges,
but I think the challenges have helped me to grow in my faith and have helped to make
the world a better place. I know I’ve only done it on a small scale, but I think, with
the help of my Meeting and with the growing awareness of the need for peace and a Peace
Tax, I’m hoping that this action will shed light and help peace to grow.