Camp Caseys, Nat’l Day of Outrage slam war in Iraq
Published Sep 15, 2005 10:06 PM
The anguished cries of those who have lost relatives and friends in Iraq grew
louder in early September as Camp Caseys continued to spring up across the
country.
Opposition to the reactionary Bush administration could also be
seen in coordinated actions Sept. 12 in scores of cities and small towns as the
Troops Out Now Coalition (TONC) and the International Action Center organized a
National Day of Outrage around the slogan “Money for hurricane relief, not
for war in Iraq!”
Here are some highlights:
NEW YORK CITY
As pickets marched outside the Jacob Javits Federal Building in downtown
Manhattan Sept. 12, City Council member Charles Barron, housing rights organizer
Nellie Bailey, residents
of New Orleans and Larry Holmes of the Troops Out
Now Coalition told the crowd that money now earmarked for the war on Iraq must
be used instead to rebuild housing for the poor of the Gulf Coast, that the
government’s response to Katrina exposed its racism and classism, and that
the people of the region must participate in all decisions regarding how
government funds are spent and the region is rebuilt.
SAN DIEGO, CALIF.
Motorists coming home from work on Sept. 12 slowed down at a main
intersection to read a banner proclaiming “No war on the poor! Solidarity
with the Katrina survivors,” then took TONC leaflets on the upcoming Sept.
24 united anti-war demonstration. Some spontaneously offered donations to help
the hurricane victims. Five hundred copies of Workers World newspaper were also
given out.
BUFFALO, N.Y. The National Day of Outrage drew hundreds
of people and
was sponsored locally by the Interna tional Action Center. The
all-day event also dove tailed with the arrival of the Cindy Sheehan Bring Them
Home Now Bus Tour.
ROCHESTER, N.Y. Many leaflets were handed out
in downtown Roches ter on Sept. 7 by the International Action Center. Their
banner saying “Money for hurricane relief, NOT war in Iraq” was seen
on local television.
DETROIT: Two hundred people gathered on Sept.
10 in Grand Circus Park to greet military families from Camp Casey in Crawford,
Texas. For 20 days around the clock Detroit anti-war activists have occupied the
downtown site with their own Camp Casey. In the photo, Michi gan military
parents join the touring families and speak out against the war. Second from the
right is Apolonia Rosas holding a picture of her son, Ricardo Rosas, who was
killed in the Iraq War. She is joined by Lila Lipscomb, whose son also was
killed in Iraq. The women are comforted by the Rev. Edwin Rowe of
Detroit’s Central United Methodist Church.
OHIO: Half a dozen
events in Cleve land, Akron and Oberlin brought hundreds to packed halls to
greet the Camp Casey delegation as it passed through Ohio. Audiences were moved
to tears by speakers, including an Ohio mother of a 19-year-old Marine serving
in Iraq; Bill Mitchell of Gold Star Families for Peace, whose son died the same
day as Cindy Sheehan’s son; recently returned veteran Hart Viges, who is
now haunted by the atrocities U.S. troops were ordered to commit; and others who
have lost loved ones or who have family members still in Iraq. Little over a
month has passed since 22 Ohio Marines were killed within a space of two days.
Rosemary Palmer, mother of one of them, welcomed the Camp Casey
delegation.
John Catalinotto in New York, Bob McCubbin in San Diego,
Ellie Dorritie
in Buffalo, Lydia Bayoneta in Rochester, David Sole in
Detroit, Martha Grevatt in Cleveland and John Parker in Los Angeles contributed
to this article.
—Deirdre Griswold
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