Monday, January 29, 2007

Tikkun Blog, Saturday, January 27 2007 @ 07:05 PM PST)

http://files.tikkun.org/blog/article.php'story=20070127190503328

Tikkun to heal, repair and transform the world

Our March on Washington exceeded my wildest dreams--as well as the media's
lame, subdued coverage.

"Tens of thousands" protested in Washington, they are saying. The news media
got this number from an unofficial, un-named police source, while the
organizers of the event themselves were seemingly not consulted. I walked
right up to Leslie Kaufman (President of United for Peace and Justice and
chief organizer of today's protest) after the event was over and asked her
how many people she thought attended today. She said 500,000 was their
estimate, but she expected the media would report only half that number. But
"tens of thousands"? Come on, news! There were masses of people from forty
states, three hundred busloads, over 1000 organizations, not to mention all
the people who just showed up because they had to. The media does a grave
injustice in under-reporting our collective force. We came from all parts of
the country to represent the majority of Americans in our call to end the
war in Iraq and withdraw our troops. This was not some fringey little
gathering--we had Congresspeople, grandmothers, Democrats and Republicans,
veterans of the Iraq War, men still serving in the army, celebrities,
children, people of all faiths, ethnicities, color. It was the most enormous
gathering of people I've ever seen, and most certainly the biggest and most
diverse protest held in Washington, D.C. since the Vietnam Era.

I suppose I should be grateful that the media didn't do what it has done
over the last few years and photograph the lady on stilts, the giant paper
mache puppet and some potheads playing hacky sack and use these images to
represent the peace movement. But I can't help but feel pissed off returning
after this incredible, massive, exuberant March on Washington and seeing
lengthy coverage of the theft of Crysal Gayle's tour bus and even lengthier
coverage of the poor kid who got a ten-year prison sentence for getting a
blow job. Look, I'm sorry about that kid, he's a victim of a most bizarre
form of sexual oppression, but wouldn't it behoove CNN--our Cheerleader in
Chief for this war--to analyze the meaning of this day with at least as much
fervor as they are dissecting this blow job? It is almost comical that on
the very day we were gathering to call for the impeachment of our current
President, the press should obsessively dissect the nuances of a blow job
gone awry. Smacks of something familiar.

Well, I'm here to bear witness to reality, the facts on the ground. We were
not in the "tens of thousands," we were in the "hundreds of thousands."
Quote that, damnit. We did not gather to protest the surge (though it was
certainly one object of our protest); we gathered to protest the immorality
of the Iraq War. We came to mourn the hundreds of thousands of lives lost to
this meaningless war and to express our fears about being thrust against our
will to the very brink of global chaos. We did not come to "march against
Congress" as some of the media are claiming; we came to hold our elected
officials accountable and to use the leverage we have in this so-called
Democracy to try to correct for 5 years of political lunacy. We came to let
our elected representatives know that if they press forward with their
mandate to end the war, we will be here to support them. We came not only to
protest, but to engage in dialogue with our elected officials (we will be
"lobbying" on Capitol Hill on Monday). And, yes, we came to ask for a
Presidential impeachment.

We came in the hundreds of thousands. Counterprotestors: 40 or so. They
called us "Commies" as we walked by. They were so last-century and out of
touch that people stopped to take pictures of them, curious remnants of a
bygone era.

It was an inspired day. Beautifully warm and sunny, there were people
crowded on the Mall as far as the eye could see. There was joy and a sense
of collective humanity and purpose. There was sadness and indignation and
cries for help. There were small children and elderly people in wheelchairs,
unions and religious congregations , celebrities and tireless-but-anonymous
peace activists. We came out of love, fear, anger. We came to bear witness
to the current reality and invoke the possibility of an entirely diffferent
reality. And we came in the hundreds of thousands.

This was gathered by Sylvie Kashdan and posted by Miriam V.

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