The Atomic Mirror Logo Atomic Mirror launches Valentines for a Nuclear Free World Campaign

download your own Valentines to send here in english (83kb) Monika Szymurska and Pamela Meidell with our Valentine for a Nuclear Free 
      World in Mexico City download your own Valentines to send here in spanish (82kb)
Monika Szymurska and Pamela Meidell with our
Valentine for a Nuclear Free World in Mexico City

In Mexico City, Atomic Mirror launches three-year-long campaign to thank the world’s first nuclear weapons free zone and presents Valentines for a Nuclear Free World. View a photo gallery of the event.

The Treaty of Tlatelolco shows the world that it is possible to transform situations of potential paralyzing fear (such as the Cuban Missile Crisis) into opportunities where governments and peoples can create zones of safety where life can flourish.

We invite you to send your Valentines throughout this next year to express your support for the Nuclear Weapons Free Zones as a positive path to a Nuclear Free World. You can download your own Valentines to send here in english (83kb) and spanish (82kb).

On Valentine’s Day, 14 February 2007, at the party celebrating the 40th Anniversary Year of the Treaty of Tlatelolco, the Atomic Mirror launched “Valentines to Tlatelolco: The Nuclear Weapons Free Zone Path to a Nuclear Free World.” Forty years ago, at the height of the Cold War thirty-three counties of Latin America and the Caribbean sent a valentine to the world by joining together to create the world’s first nuclear weapons free zone. At the official celebration of the Treaty of Tlatelolco in Mexico City, the Atomic Mirror delegation of Pamela Meidell, Monika Szymurska, Carmen Ramirez and Rosa Gascoigne launched the campaign by presenting Valentines for a Nuclear Free World to Ambassador Edmundo Vargas Carreno, the Secretary-General of OPANAL (The Agency for the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons in Latin America and the Caribbean).

Between Valentine’s Day 2007 and 2010, the Atomic Mirror invites people around the world to send Valentine Thank You cards to the countries of the Treaty of Tlatelolco. We aim for 40,000 valentines to be delivered to the office of OPANAL: 1,000 valentines for each of the forty years we celebrate this year. We issue a special invitation to artists, writers, and musicians to honor Latin America’s wonderful tradition of sending artists out into the world as its ambassadors.

This three-year-long campaign will promote awareness of the successful and positive contribution of nuclear-weapons-free zones to nuclear disarmament and non-proliferation. It will form the heart of a global initiative, in collaboration with the international Abolition 2000 network, to explore how nuclear weapons free zones can contribute to the fulfillment of a nuclear weapons free world. We will encourage the expansion and development of new zones, both locally and globally.

Treaty of Tlatelolco – A Valentine to the World!
14 February 2007
Mexico City, Mexico

Congratulatory Remarks by Monika Szymurska
Speaking on behalf of the Atomic Mirror
on the occasion of the
40th Anniversary of the Treaty of Tlatelolco

Mr. Secretary-General, distinguished delegates and invited guests,

Gratulacje i pozdrowienia z Polski, congratulations and greetings from Poland, where I was born, and where also the idea for nuclear weapons free zones was born. In 1957, at the United Nations, Polish Foreign Minister Adam Rapacki proposed a nuclear-weapons-free zone in Central Europe. At the time, the Cold War did not allow the seed to take root in Europe. Instead, the seed flew across the Atlantic, where it sprouted and flourished, as we celebrate here today.

Thank you to the Mexican government for your hospitality, and especially to Minster Andrea Garcia Guerra and her staff. Thank you to OPANAL for all of your work for the past 40 years. Thank you for inviting us to join the festivities honoring the day this transformative idea took root in the soil of our Western Hemisphere. The Treaty of Tlatelolco shows the world that it is possible to transform situations of potential paralyzing fear (such as the Cuban Missile Crisis) into opportunities where governments and peoples can create zones of safety where life can flourish.

The Atomic Mirror delegation has come to Mexico City to honor this day when the vision of a nuclear weapons free zone became reality. On Wednesday, February 14, 1967, your countries [of Latin America and the Caribbean] gave our planet a magnificent valentine: the world’s first nuclear weapons free zone. Together, you have already accomplished what the rest of the world is attempting to do: abolish nuclear weapons.

Forty years ago, the Treaty of Tlatelolco transformed our world and showed us the way to live nuclear free. You have inspired other countries and regions to do the same. Today, nuclear weapons free zones continue to transform our planet: in the Southern Hemisphere and in Central Asia, linking together countries that seek safer, more secure societies for their people.

Today is February 14, Valentine’s Day, celebrated around the world as a day of love, with gifts of chocolate, poetry, and flowers. To honor your vision and daring, we offer the following greetings and congratulations from Ventura County in Alta California:

We offer you the gift of chocolate. We give you these hearts full of chocolate because you gave chocolate to the world, and as even doctors have told us, everybody needs chocolate.

We offer you the gift of poetry in the lyrics by Uruguayan singer, Jorge Drexler. We believe him when he says:

Nada se pierde,
Todo se transforma

(Nothing is lost
Everything is transformed)

We offer you the gift of love, in the form of valentines. All over Ventura County children, adults, community groups, peace coalitions, made and signed these valentines that we bring to you.

They are just the beginning. Right now, at this party celebrating the 40th Anniversary Year of the Treaty of Tlatelolco, the Atomic Mirror launches “Valentines to Tlatelolco: The Nuclear Weapons Free Zone Path to a Nuclear Free World”. We invite people around the world, and especially artists, writers, musicians, to send Valentine Thank You cards to the countries of the Treaty of Tlatelolco. We aim for 40,000 valentines to be delivered to you by February 14 next year in 2008, 1,000 valentines for each of the forty years we celebrate today. We are asking artists because we are inspired by Latin America’s wonderful tradition of sending artists out into the world as its ambassadors.

This year-long campaign will raise awareness of the successful and positive contribution of nuclear-weapons-free zones to nuclear disarmament and non-proliferation. It will form the heart of a global initiative to explore how nuclear weapons free zones can contribute to the fulfillment of a nuclear weapons free world. We will encourage the expansion and development of new zones, both locally and globally.

Today, we present these gifts as tokens of our promise of partnership in the creation of a nuclear free world. We offer you the partnership of the over 2,000 civil society groups in the Abolition 2000 network. We need your genius, your creativity, your vision. We offer you ours in return.

It’s a custom on a birthday to make a wish. We wish for our beautiful planet to follow your example and turn the entire world into a nuclear weapons free zone. You have showed us the way. Let us begin.

¡Feliz Cumpleaños, Tratado de Tlatelolco!