But now I noted in my diary everything that related to the struggle that was taking place between the new idea and the old institutions; this was the red thread which I followed in weaving the history of the day, a thread which assuredly has quite escaped those who have not kept their eyes expressly fixed upon it.
Bertha von Suttner (1843-1914), first woman to with the Nobel Peace Prize (in 1905) who coined the term "Red Thread". She and her fellow peace activist friends met with the (secret) Korea Delegation to the 1907 Hague Peace Conference.
Bertha von Suttner (1843-1914), peace activist and author who inspired Alfred Nobel to create his Peace Prize, writes of the "Red Thread” in her Memoirs. There, in response to the criticism that her work merely repeats what has already been published in the newspapers, she mentions the “Red Thread” — the connecting narrative that runs through all of the different events, ideas and personalities of the Peace Movement. Suttner confesses that even she did not perceive the Red Thread until she started keeping a diary. In fact, it was because she kept a personal record that enabled her to see the connections that, like beads on a string, made up the Peace Movement. Suttner published her Memoirs because she realized that doing so would enable others to see The Red Thread. The Red Thread helps us to remember the narrative of positive history, but in order to see it we have to "keep our eyes expressly fixed upon it."
Think of the "Red Thread" as the trans-generational, transnational chain of people, ideas and labors aimed at values that conduce to a vision of Peace through Law. The Red Thread can be understood either broadly or narrowly, depending not only on one's definition of peace (is it simply the absence of war, or is it the presence of something ?), but also on the question of intention. Regard intention, does the Thread only include people who are intentionally laboring for peace ? Or can the "Red Thread" include accidental encounter, stumbling upon a book, and/or unexpectedly meeting someone from whom one learns about a movement?
To learn more about Bertha von Suttner, click here for a podcast focused on Bertha from the UN Library & Archives, Geneva (January 2021); Click here for a webinar hosted by the UN Library & archives Geneva (January 2021); and click here to access "The Bertha von Suttner Project" - a website on which many of her writings in English can be found.
Watch the short video below to introduce you to the concept of the Red Thread in a way that broadens it to include the philosophy of Ham Sok Hon.