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Fw: [ANSWER]: Black Commentator: An Anti-Racist Peace Movement
- To: "pace peacelink" <pck-pace@peacelink.it>
- Subject: Fw: [ANSWER]: Black Commentator: An Anti-Racist Peace Movement
- From: "Nello Margiotta" <animarg@tin.it>
- Date: Fri, 24 Jan 2003 08:11:53 +0100
----- Original Message -----
From: "A.N.S.W.E.R." <answer.general@action-mail.org>
To: <answer.general@action-mail.org>
Sent: Thursday, January 23, 2003 10:20 PM
Subject: [ANSWER]: Black Commentator: An Anti-Racist Peace Movement
> AN ANTI-RACIST PEACE MOVEMENT
>
> From The Black Commentator
> http://www.blackcommentator.com/26/26_issues.html
>
> The A.N.S.W.E.R. coalition is serious about creating a
> genuinely multi-racial movement against the pirates who
> control the U.S. government. Of the 30 or so speakers that
> addressed hundreds of thousands of anti-war protesters in
> Washington, January 18, at least 17 were African
> Americans. Native-born whites were a distinct minority on
> the microphone, also sharing the historic moment with an
> international cast of activists from Latin America, Asia,
> the Pacific, the Middle East and Africa.
>
> A.N.S.W.E.R. is the acronym for Act Now to Stop War and
> End Racism
> (http://www.internationalanswer.org/news/update/011903j18rpt.html).
> Folks with experience in coalition building understand
> that nothing, nothing is more politically sensitive than
> compiling a speakers list for a tightly scheduled event.
> It is the public face of the movement - or the movement
> that is envisioned - an irreducible statement.
> A.N.S.W.E.R. stated plainly, for all the world to see,
> that anti-racism is a core principle of the movement they
> seek to build.
>
> The crowd, which organizers numbered at 200,000 by noon,
> before many contingents had even arrived, was
> predominantly white, although otherwise quite varied by
> age, region and lifestyle. We at The Black Commentator
> have no problem with the preponderance of white marchers.
> After all, there are a lot more of them. Blacks ushered in
> the modern era of Washington mega-demonstrations in 1963
> and held the nation's capitol as if we owned it in the
> 1995 Million Man March. African Americans are the most
> consistently anti-war demographic, by far. African
> American representatives comprise the core of the Peace
> Party in the U.S. Congress. Ten thousand Colin Powells
> could not alter the anti-war character of Black America.
>
> What is most important - and what the anti-war movement of
> a previous generation failed to fully understand - is that
> white people who seek to build a movement must be prepared
> to accept leadership from the ranks of those who have
> always been in motion. There can be no hint of privilege
> in the struggle against Power.
>
> The Black contingent - a majority on the speakers platform
> - was, itself, a coalition, comprised of politicians,
> religious leaders, union activists, students, scholars -
> veterans of a thousand marches against a multitude of
> grievances, a non-sectarian reflection of Black America as
> a whole.
>
> George Bush was elsewhere, shielded from the bitter cold,
> but his ears must have burned red. "You can't rob us of
> health care, by spending billions of dollars on this dumb
> war in Iraq," declared Mahdi Bray, of the Muslim American
> Society Freedom Foundation.
>
> "We must fight the terrorism of lack of economic
> development in our communities," said Brooklyn City
> Councilman John Barron.
>
> Everywhere, placards like "Money for Jobs, Not War"
> proclaimed the class issue. So did 18 year old
> A.N.S.W.E.R. Youth and Student Coordinator and Howard
> University freshman Peta Lindsay: "We are not the
> executives of Exxon and Mobile, and this war is not in our
> interests."
>
> Black labor grapples with issues of race and class, daily.
> "Workers and working people want jobs, but we want jobs in
> an economy that is built on peace, not war," said Fred
> Mason, AFL-CIO statewide president for Maryland and
> Washington, DC.
>
> New York City Labor Against War co-convener Brenda Stokely
> sees the connections, clearly. "Our fight for justice in
> the workplace has to be part of our fight for justice in
> the world."
>
> Former Georgia Congresswoman Cynthia McKinney, displaced
> from her seat by a Hard Right cash juggernaut last summer,
> denounced the Bush family war on domestic democracy. "We
> won't forget that your brother trampled on the voting
> rights of the poor and people of color" in Florida, said
> McKinney. "Dr. King warned us that we have guided missiles
> and misguided men."
>
> King was omnipresent, universally invoked. Rev. Jesse
> Jackson recalled a meeting on the civil rights leader's
> last birthday, January 15, 1968. At the top of the day's
> agenda were two items: civil rights enforcement and an end
> to the war in Vietnam. "Today we have come full circle,"
> said Rev. Jackson. "We're not fighting about security.
> We're fighting about hegemony and oil and defense
> contracts."
>
> Bill Fletcher, the scholarly president of TransAfrica
> Forum, senses madness in the air. "We stand on the edge of
> a precipice of catastrophe, and if it were not so serious
> it could be a skit on Saturday Night Live," said Fletcher,
> also co-chair of United for Peace. Bush is enflaming the
> world. "What will he do when the hordes of the
> dispossessed are at the gates of the United States?"
>
> Presidential candidate Rev. Al Sharpton scoped the game in
> Bush's plan. "Are we talking about weapons of mass
> destruction, or a political game of mass distraction?"
> Deficits rising, child care disappearing. "You can't fight
> in our name. We will stand up, we will not back down, we
> will fight the fight."
>
> Detroit's John Conyers, dean of the Congressional Black
> Caucus, was the sole U.S. representative on-site. "You are
> the truest patriots in this country, here today," Conyers
> told the crowd, by now at least half as large as the
> population of a congressional district. "Only American
> citizens can stop this war, now. There is still time,
> brothers and sisters, but not much."
>
> Pam Parker and Lucy Murphy, introduced as "cultural
> workers," sang their own composition, "Mothers Day," with
> the moving refrain
>
> You take our money
> You think I don't see
> You use it to fire
> On women like me
>
> Other African American speakers included: Larry Holmes,
> International Action Center; Rev. Graylan Hagler, Plymouth
> Congregational Church, United for Peace; Rev. Herbert
> Daughtry, House of the Lord, Brooklyn; Viola Plummer,
> December 12 Movement; Damu Smith, Black Voices for Peace;
> Imam Mousa, Masjid Al-Islam; and the Reverend Lucius
> Walker, who read an anti-war statement from Rep. Charles
> Rangel (D-NY).
>
> Organizers put the crowd at half a million. DC police say
> they no longer do estimates.
>
> Barbara, Barbara!
>
> San Francisco A.N.S.W.E.R. headcounters claim 200,000 took
> to the streets on Saturday - most of whom seemed to know
> the local Black Congresswoman by name. "Barbara, Barbara,"
> chanted the crowd as Rep. Barbara Lee took the microphone.
> "The silent minority has become the vocal majority because
> of you," said Lee, the only member of the House to vote
> against giving Bush sweeping anti-terrorism powers in the
> immediate aftermath of September 11, 2001. "It's not too
> late for the administration to heed our call. It takes
> leadership to resolve conflicts peacefully. It does not
> take leadership to drop bombs."
>
> For more from The Black Commentator, go to
> http://www.blackcommentator.com
>
> --------------------
>
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> A.N.S.W.E.R.
> Act Now to Stop War & End Racism
>
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