IN D.C. AND CALIFORNIA: TENS OF THOUSANDS MARCH  AGAINST WAR

By John Catalinotto
Washington, D.C.

10/4/01--Tens of thousands of people in Washington, San Francisco and  Los Angeles, and thousands in other cities worldwide,  demonstrated Sept. 29 against the Bush administration's  drive to war and in defense of Arab and Muslim people living  in the U.S. who have been subject to racist attacks.

Since the Sept. 11 destruction of the World Trade Center in  New York, the Pentagon has moved 28,000 troops, dozens of  warships and hundreds of bombers to the Persian/Arabian Gulf  and the Indian Ocean, threatening to strike Afghanistan and  perhaps other countries.

The Sept. 29 protest actions in the U.S., called by a new  coalition--Act Now to Stop War & End Racism, or ANSWER-- attracted a rainbow-like gathering of civil rights, anti- war, religious, solidarity, community and student  organizations, with some participation from organized labor.

Brian Becker, an ANSWER spokesperson, said the  demonstrations showed "there was a real coalition, broad enough and solid enough to build a powerful movement in the  United States against the war that Bush and the Pentagon are  planning." He announced at a meeting following the  Washington protest that ANSWER was proposing follow-up mass  actions for Oct. 27.

Increasing the significance of the demonstrations is that  they happened in the midst of a super-patriotic media  campaign. The media gave 100-percent backing to Bush's war  moves. Some also stridently red-baited and violence-baited  the demonstration's organizers. But they failed to stifle  the new coalition.

On the contrary, the movement for peace--as reflected by  dozens of speakers as well as the marchers--was broader  Sept. 29 than it has been since the last years of the U.S.  war against Vietnam.

At the Washington, D.C., rally, speakers from the area  included Vanessa Dixon of the D.C. Healthcare Now Coalition,  Eleiza Braun of the George Washington University Action  Coalition and Rev. Graylan Hagler, Senior Minister of the  Plymouth Congregational Church, showing that community,  student and religious organizations were strongly supporting  the anti-war coalition.

The mass anti-war sentiment in the Black community was also  represented by the Rev. Curtis Gatewood, president of the  Durham chapter of the NAACP. Rev. Gatewood had spoken out  the week before against U.S. military action, despite the  patriotic stance of the NAACP national leadership. When the  national leadership chastised him for his statement, the  members of the Durham NAACP reaffirmed their support for  Gatewood.

Here's a short sample of the diversity among the speakers in  D.C.: James Creedon, an emergency medical technician who  rescued people at Ground Zero; James Terry, Queer Youth for  Social Justice; Sam Jordan, International Concerned Family  and Friends of Mumia Abu-Jamal; Amer Jubran, Al Awda Boston;  Sunita Mehda, Sakhi for South Asian Women; Marina Alarcon,  Mexican Support Network; Ray LeForest, District Council  1707, AFSCME; Yoomi Jeong, Korea Truth Commission; Rusty  Fabunana, Bayan Philippines Forum; and Eric Le Compte,  School of the Americas Watch.

MARCH BREAKS THROUGH ISOLATION

ANSWER organizers had told Workers World three days before  the march that the major purpose of the coalition event was  to break through the isolation people were feeling under the  pressure of the pro-war media campaign.

As the rally ended, the demonstrators took the advice of  Mara Verheyden-Hilliard, Co-Director of the Partnership for  Civil Justice, and marched out of the rally area at Freedom  Plaza with determination, despite the heavy presence of  thousands of riot police, some armed with automatic rifles  and all armored.

They headed along Pennsylvania Avenue toward the Capitol.  The realization that they had succeeded in their goal  flooded over the marchers as their route climbed a hill  alongside the Capitol.

As the front of the march neared the top of the hill, people  turned around and looked back. A cheer went up as they saw  that the march stretched for blocks and blocks, tightly  packed across the width of Pennsylvania Avenue.

"No war in our name," read one sign. "U.S. out of the Middle  East," read another. And everywhere, "Stop the war" and  "Stop racist attacks." The organizers would soon announce  that some 20,000 people were there.

The sight of the vast crowd increased the excitement. As if  invigorated by the discovery that they had plenty of company  in the fight against a new war, students from dozens of  universities accepted ANSWER's invitation to announce their  school's name and how many students had come.

"Vassar, 100!" "Gettysburg, where tens of thousands died in  the U.S. Civil War." "University of Minnesota." "Columbia  College." "Bard College in New York, 200!" Students streamed  to the podium to shout out their affiliations. There was  Oberlin, Howard, four campuses from the University of  Wisconsin, plus dozens more. High-school students, too,  spoke out their presence.

It was another sign that people were motivated to bring the  mood of the demonstration back into their communities, where  they would continue to organize opposition to the war and  racism.

HOW THE COALITION GREW

Before the Sept. 11 attacks on the World Trade Center and  Pentagon had altered the political climate in the country,  anti-globalization groups had planned protests in Washington  for the week from Sept. 28 to Oct. 4. Some estimates were  that as many as 100,000 youths would come to denounce the  responsibility of the International Monetary Fund and World  Bank for keeping close to 2 billion people in the world near  starvation while a handful of big capitalists grew rich  beyond all imagination.

The International Action Center--a key initiator of the anti- war march--had scheduled a demonstration Sept. 29 to  surround the White House, focusing the protest against the  Bush administration.

Then the attacks took place. The Bush administration and the  U.S. government in general used the events to put the  country on a war footing, while pressuring the media to whip  up a patriotism and anti-foreigner sentiment among a stunned  population.

When the IMF and World Bank then decided to postpone their  meetings, most of the groups in the anti-globalization  movement also cancelled their protests. The IAC, said  Becker, who is an IAC Co-Director, "decided it was important  to keep the date and turn its focus against the war, while  opening it up to all those who wanted to oppose the war  drive and the virulent anti-Arab and anti-Muslim attacks."

"We consulted with others and issued the ANSWER call," said  Becker. "We thought that even a few thousand protesting the  war would show the world--including the population here-- that there was more than just the official pro-war opinion.  From our point of view the turnout was a tremendous success  and the broad organizational support shows that a real anti- war coalition exists and can grow.

"In the original call we suggested further action on Oct. 12- 13. But it became apparent that we needed more time to use  the impulse of the Sept. 29 march to organize other national  or regional actions, so we have adjusted this to Oct. 27,"  Becker said. "There will be a hard struggle before us, but  we have now seen what is possible and the potential support  that exists."

Streaming Video: CSPAN - 'Rally Against War & Racism' (Sept. 29, 2001) Listen to speeches from Freedom Plaza rally (RealPlayer required)


PROTESTS AROUND THE COUNTRY

News of more anti-war demonstrations on the weekend of Sept. 29-30 keeps coming in. There was a very multi-national march of 1,300 in Denver on Sept. 29. The same day in Pensacola, Fla., a major Navy operations center, three dozen people rallied at the Escambia County Courthouse. A significant March for World Peace and Justice, called by some of the most prominent African American churches in southwest Atlanta, brought out 1,000 people on Sept. 30. Their main chant was "War is not the answer. Justice is the answer. Peace, not war."Motorists honked and flashed peace signs at the blocks-long march.

***

PROTEST IN BIG OIL COUNTRY

Houston ANSWER's call for a demonstration against war and racism on Sept. 29 was answered by people from many organizations. Gathering in front of the headquarters of the Armed Forces Reserves, some 70 people carrying signs and banners urged passing drivers to "honk for peace," which many did. Peace signs and friendly waves far outnumbered hostile gestures. Rally chair Gloria Rubac held the sound system while speakers addressed demonstrators, media and passersby. Youth activist and journalist "Chickpea", University of Houston professor Bob Buzanco and Cristobal Hinojosa of Mexicanos en Accion were among the speakers. --Joanne Gavin

 

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