Peace or Atomic War
The commitment of Albert Schweitzer against the nuclear bombs.
The first time Albert Schweitzer talked of his concerns about the use of nuclear bombs was in a letter to the "Daily Herald" in London, published on the 14th of April 1954
On the 4th of November 1954, in his acceptance speech in Oslo
for the Nobel Peace Prize of 1952, Schweitzer talked for a second time on the danger of nuclear weapons.
Many friends
and well-known scientists, headed by his friend Albert Einstein who died on the 18th of April 1957, urged Schweitzer to protest in public against nuclear bombs and the atomic tests. Renowned
scientists had the idea that the reputation of Albert Schweitzer could help to awaken the public to the problem of nuclear
pollution and the consequent danger to human beings.
Schweitzer didn't feel called upon to do this. He had always
refused to comment on political problems or to take up a position in favour of one party or another. But after the first hydrogen
bomb test in 1954, he began to make an intense study of the political and scientific aspects of the nuclear tests and the
military implications. Robert Jungk wrote about this: "Almost everyone who met Schweitzer private between the year 1954
and 1957 was questioned very intense about the 'nuclear danger'".
In January 1957 the well-known publisher Norman
Cousins visited Albert Schweitzer together with the photographer Clara Urquhart in Lambaréné. Together they hoped to be able
to persuade Albert Schweitzer that he must commit himself against the nuclear bomb. He hesitated about his competence in the
nuclear question and doubted seriously whether a statement from him would have any influence.
Then Schweitzer
wrote a letter to the American President Dwight Eisenhower:
"In my heart I carry the hope I may somehow be able
to contribute to the peace of the world. This I know has always been our deepest wish. We both share the conviction that humanity
must find a way to control the weapons which now menace the very existence of life on earth. May it be given to us both to
see the day when the world's people will realize that the fate of all humanity is now at stake, and that it is urgently necessary
to make the bold decisions that can deal adequately with the agonizing situation in which the world now find itself."

On the 23. April 1957 radio Oslo broadcast Schweitzer's "Declaration of Conscience".
The declaration was transmitted by 140 other radio stations all around the world. Many broadcast services - in the east and
west - were forbidden by their governments to broadcast it. Schweitzer was always looking for more material and he corresponded
with well-known scientists and friends such as Bertrand Russell, Pablo Casals and Norman Cousins.
On the 14th January 1958 - Schweitzer's 83rd birthday - the chemist and Nobel Prize winner Linus Pauling delivered a petition
to the UNO in New York, signed by Albert Schweitzer and 9235 other scientists. The resolution urged an international agreement
to stop nuclear weapons tests. Schweitzer wrote to the director of radio Oslo: "Since October I have spent the greater
part of my time in keeping myself informed about the progress of atomic weapons, and I am in touch with experts on the subject."
Meanwhile Schweitzer prepared three other appeals. The manuscripts were read by Gunnar Jahn, the president of the Norwegian
Nobel Prize Committee. The broadcasts were made by radio Oslo on the 28th, 29th and 30th of April 1958. There were various
echoes around the world.
The three speeches - The Renunciation of Nuclear Tests - The Danger of an Atomic War - Negotiations
at the Highest Level - were published by Henry Holt in New York in the same year in under the title "Peace
or Atomic War?" and were also translated into several languages.
Following an announcement by the government
of the USSR, America and Britain stated that they would stop nuclear tests by the 31st October 1958. When the three nations
who possessed the atomic bomb stopped their tests, the French began their own tests in the attempt to become an atomic force.
The first test happened the 13th February 1960 in the Sahara.
The test-ban moratorium held for 34 months and
then, in August 1961, when the USSR began new tests, the American too announced that they would not hold the test-ban moratorium
any longer. A wave of protest started. Leading it, Linus Pauling released a declaration to the press on the 31st August.
The 20th April 1962 Schweitzer wrote a letter to president Kennedy as "someone who has occupied himself for a long time with the problem of atomic weapons and with problem of peace". He took
the stance that "disarmament under effective international control" is the important goal and that negotiations toward this
end should not be "made questionable by unnecessary appeals for international verification of the discontinuance of testing".
He declared that "only when the states agree not to carry out tests any more can promising negotiations about disarmament
and peace take place". Then he took the "courage" to draw the attention of the president "to something that concerns you personally"
- the hereditary effect of radioactivity on children. He closed by saying: "It was not easy for me to draw your attention
to the great responsibility you hold to protect the future generations. Please forgive me; I could not do otherwise, not only
for the sake of humanity, but also out of consideration for you personally".
Kennedy replied with a letter dated
June 6, 1962.
At Easter 1962, the German monthly "Das Gewissen" published the first big common declaration of international anti-atomic
fighters against new tests in east and west.
The growing crisis in Cuba in October 1962 made the world insecure.
In the middle of the crisis Schweitzer wrote to Norman Cousins, "that the time works for all who want to abolish nuclear weapons".
When Schweitzer heard that the American might use an atomic bomb to resolve the crisis, he wrote an open letter to the American
Secretary of Defense, McNamara. He asked Cousins to find a magazine in America that might publish the letter. When the crisis
was over, Cousins thought that they should change the tactic and that an open letter to the Minister of Defense would not
be the right thing. Schweitzer insisted: "We cannot stop criticizing McNamara in public very strongly, because he announced
that he would use nuclear bombs".
Partial Test-Ban-Treaty
A new disarmament commission of the UNO began in March 1962 to prepare for an atomic test ban treaty. President Kennedy
said in a speech on the 10th June 1963, that the USA would stop all nuclear tests, and that the prime minister Krustchev had
agreed to intensify negotiations for a test-ban treaty. The negotiations began on the 15th July in Moscow and ended on 25.
July with the test-ban treaty. It banned al nuclear tests in the atmosphere and under water with the exception of underground
tests. The treaty was signed the 5th August in Moscow and was effective from the 10th October 1963.
Regarding this success Schweitzer wrote to president John F. Kennedy:
"I am writing to congratulate you and
to thank you for having had the foresight and the courage to inaugurate a world policy toward peace. Finally a ray of light
appears in the darkness in which humanity was seeking its way and gives us the hope that the darkness will make way for light.
The treaty between the East and the West to renounce nuclear tests in the atmosphere and underwater is one of the greatest
events, perhaps the greatest, in the history of the world. It gives us the hope that war with atomic weapons between East
and West can be avoided. When hearing of the Moscow treaty I thought of my friend, Einstein, with whom I joined in the fight
against atomic weapons. He died in Princeton in despair. And I, thanks to your foresight and courage, am able to observe that
the world has taken the first step on the road to peace.
Please accept, Mr. President, the assurance of my highest
consideration. Devotedly Albert Schweitzer."
In December 1964 Albert Schweitzer recorded a speech, "My words to mankind", on a disk. He summed up his life and
his " Reverence for Life ". At the same time he renewed his appeals from Oslo against the arms race and nuclear weapons.
Up to the death
of Albert Schweitzer at the end of 1965 there were a total of 646 nuclear tests by five states: 403 by the USA, 200 by the
USSR, 25 by Great Britain, 16 by France and 2 by China. Up to the end of 1986, 1662 atomic explosions were recorded around
the world by six states (including India).