|
Cover
story 12,000 call for closing of SOA
By PATRICK MARRIN
Special to the National Catholic Reporter Columbus,
Ga.
María Rangel-Alarcón
is only 17, but her passion for justice in Latin America has made her an
eloquent witness in a growing student movement that swelled the ranks of the
annual protest Nov. 20 and 21 here at the School of the Americas at Fort
Benning.
At least two thousand college students gathered to join older
protesters who have maintained the annual protests calling for the closing of
the U.S. Army-run school for military officers from Latin America. Graduates of
the school have been implicated in a long history of human rights abuses and
atrocities in their own countries.
This year marked the ninth protest at the gates of Fort Benning
and the 10th anniversary of the 1989 murders of six Jesuits, their housekeeper
and her daughter, at the Jesuit-run University of Central America in El
Salvador. Nineteen of the 26 soldiers involved in the murders were graduates of
the SOA. It was the 1989 murders of the Jesuits that inspired Maryknoll Fr. Roy
Bourgeois to begin his campaign against the SOA.
Rangel-Alarcón visited El Salvador in 1997, as part of a
class at Archbishop Mitty High School in San Jose, Calif. While there, a
Salvadoran friend her own age said he wanted to be a lawyer but knew that he
would never have the resources to do that. You must become a lawyer for
me, he said. A girl named Angel warned her: Do not fall asleep in
the American dream.
We are all waking up, Rangel-Alarcón said in a
speech during the demonstration at Fort Benning, and our voices here
today are the voices of those who cannot be here.
Thousands risked arrest and imprisonment by trespassing onto Fort
Benning property, but officials arrested fewer than 100, and cited only 23 for
possible prosecution.
If the point of the protest was not made in large numbers engaged
in civil disobedience, it certainly came through in the words and actions of
those new to the protest.
The passing of the flame from one generation to the next was
especially evident when two aging giants of peace activism took the platform
facing some 12,000 people moments before the protest reached its climax with
the symbolic funeral procession across the line into Fort Benning. Folk-singing
legend Pete Seeger, 80, led the crowd in the songs of earlier movements,
Whose Side Are You On, and Down By the Riverside, music
that moved other generations in their struggles to unionize, for civil rights,
for nuclear disarmament, telling the cheering crowd these songs now belonged to
the SOA movement. Seeger warmed the stage for Jesuit Fr. Dan Berrigan, 78, who
read a poem dedicated to the marchers, that they not lose heart or forget those
they had come to represent. In remarks to NCR, Berrigan said, The
School of the Americas is only the tip of the iceberg. Closing it down would be
a wonderful first step. But I will be ready to meet my maker when they close
the Pentagon.
Rangel-Alarcón, a high school senior, spoke to a gathering
of young people in a large tent pitched along the Chattahoochee River near the
convention center here. The gathering was sponsored by the Ignatian Companions,
a network of former Jesuits who over the years have renewed solidarity with
active Jesuits in the orders many justice ministries.
Large student network
The Jesuit teach-in was only part of a much larger student network
that has been slowly forming. Carol Richardson, who along with Bourgeois, has
helped to bring the SOA protest from the first event nine years ago to the
status of a recognized movement, said that an estimated 5,000 protesters, or
almost half of the new arrivals this year, represent young people and organized
labor.
Student and labor groups have brought an established network of
communication and recruitment capable of reaching large numbers.
This years crowd, estimated by organizers at 12,000
protesters, included busloads of students from 242 colleges and universities in
42 states, from hundreds of high schools, representatives from labor unions in
both the United States and Mexico, peace and justice activists, veterans
groups, churches, clergy and sisters and a wide range of faith-based and other
human rights organizations.
This years gathering showed many that young people, once
dismissed as apathetic or too immersed in pop consumer culture to care about
anyone but themselves, have emerged as more attuned to the global justice
issues than their elders might have imagined. Students have become teachers,
not just of their peers but also of adults, their own teachers and parents, who
themselves were losing hope in meaningful social change.
Young people are deeply concerned about the Third World
sweatshops, and they see it simply, in terms of how other people are being
treated, said Marie Dennis, director of the Office for Global Concerns
for the Maryknoll Missioners. They see the connection between poverty and
global debt, between militarism and economics.
Dennis finds great hope in realizing that many of the youth
passionately engaged in the SOA protest will also be in Seattle for the meeting
of the World Trade Organization Nov. 30-Dec. 3, and in Washington to press for
cancellation of the debts of impoverished nations.
These are all expressions of the same commitment to righting
our relationships with others, she said. Young people are learning
to see the world through a different lens.
The unexpected large number of young people heartened veteran
protesters. In 1997, when the protest was made up mostly of graying activists
from the religious community, the talk was whether the protest would outlive
its members. In 1998, when the crowd suddenly jumped to over 7,000, with 2,300
entering the fort as part of a solemn funeral procession to mark the Jesuit
murders, it was apparent that years of organizing and witness, including a
packed schedule of speaking appearances by Bourgeois and others, when they were
not in prison for their protests, was reaching into an awakening student
population nationwide.
This years demonstration held special significance for
Jesuits, because of the murders in El Salvador 10 years ago. Bob Holstein, a
former Jesuit and now a lawyer in California, met last year with Jesuit Fr.
Charles Currie, president of the Association of Jesuit Colleges and
Universities, and campus ministers from the 28 Jesuit colleges and
universities, representatives from the Jesuit Volunteer Corps and the
orders many high schools and parishes.
The result was a nationwide effort that brought almost a thousand
young people from Jesuit schools to Georgia.
Jesuit Fr. John Dear, longtime peace activist and executive
director of the Fellowship of Reconciliation, said this years protest
reflects something new in Jesuit education, a public commitment to use its
institutional influence in the United States to oppose a militarism that
supports the kind of free market capitalism being advanced throughout the
developing world as synonymous with democracy. This is something new, Dear
said. Jesuit schools with deep ties to corporate America and the U.S. military
establishment, he said, are challenging the premise of American foreign policy
around the world, that we will provide military training and support to
countries that protect our access to cheap labor and resources.
A new generation of students is helping us to rediscover our
Jesuit mission -- that education is about justice. I never thought I would see
this historic moment. This is new.
The momentum that has been growing around the protests in Georgia
has apparently had an effect in Washington. In a show of support that stunned
the Pentagon, the House of Representatives voted in July to cut $1.2 million,
or nearly half the SOAs budget. Though the money was restored in a close
conference committee vote, it sent a strong message that the growing protest
was reaching the media and broad public opinion. On the eve of this years
protest, the Pentagon announced that it was considering changing the name of
the School of the Americas and the curriculum to draw more civilians to its
courses.
In August, the executive council of the AFL-CIO unanimously passed
a resolution calling for closure of the School of the Americas. A similar
resolution was passed by the Sixth District of the United Electrical, Radio and
Machine Workers, representing some 35,000 workers. Union support has grown
since the passage of the North American Free Trade Agreement, which shifted
thousands of U.S. jobs south of the border.
Maryknolls Dennis said that all the years of passionate but
steady resistance by the religious community to Pentagon involvement in Latin
America, where hundreds of Maryknoll priests and sisters have served, has
shaped a commitment to see this through. The SOA protest is not some
knee-jerk cause but represents a deeper connection with the people of Latin
America whose suffering has touched so many of us directly.
The staying power of groups like Maryknoll, and the effectiveness
of the books and videos they produce about Latin America, are having an effect.
The video School of the Assassins and Jack Nelson-Pallmeyers
book of the same name have reached large audiences through public television
and by being handed off from one student group to another. The result appears
to be a kind of rebirth for the peace and justice community at the precise
moment when its veterans, weary of prison, marches, meetings and sometimes even
of each other, had started to ask if they had failed to get their message
across.
Students as organizers
Among the thousands of students at the protest were 20-year-olds
who are already skilled organizers. Jacqueline Downing, a sophomore at Oberlin
College, after doing a research paper on the SOA, helped attract 100 students
to the SOA protest. She told a crowd of thousands that young people were
surprising even themselves. People dont expect this from my
generation and, even worse, we didnt expect it of ourselves.
Downing said that something is happening to a whole generation of youth.
We are not poster children for a self-centered, apathetic
generation, she said. We have seen and felt in our own lives the effects
of the great line of disparity separating the world into haves and have-nots.
We are not here to cross that line, but to abolish it.
Downing said that her group is connected with hundreds of other
groups around the country via the Internet, using e-mail to stay in touch and
coordinate their efforts.
For 23-year-old Eric LaCompte, a Chicago native and a graduate of
St. Johns University in Minnesota, the greatest challenge is how to
capture and extend this youthful energy beyond a weekend of protest or even the
focused but temporary community college life sustains.
LeCompte said he took part in a moving retreat experience led by
scripture scholar Ched Meyers sponsored by Pax Christi USA and held during the
Jubilee Justice gathering last June in Los Angeles. He and other participants
convinced Pax Christi and several other national justice organizations to
sponsor another retreat before the SOA protest. Sponsors included Catholic
Worker and other houses of resistance in the Atlantic Life Community, American
Friends Service Committee and the Fellowship of Reconciliation.
The retreat for about 150 young people between the ages of 14 and
28 was held at Koinonia Farm in Sumter County, Ga., long regarded as the
birthplace of the civil rights movement in the South. LeCompte described the
meeting as a powerful dialogue among faith-based and other justice groups
representing a variety of causes.
Dave Robinson, program director for PAX Christi USA, said that the
meeting represented a new organizing effort that brought together four
long-standing organizations and their agendas, infusing them with a new
openness and energy.
If the protest could claim celebrities -- a repeat appearance by
activist and actor Martin Sheen, star of NBC networks series The
West Wing, who led this years memorial funeral procession with
Berrigan -- it also offered the sobering presence of two eyewitnesses to the
violence in Latin America.
Rufina Amay was one of only two survivors of the massacre of over
800 civilians at El Mozote, El Salvador in 1981. Adriana Portillo-Bartow, a
Guatemalan mother, lost most of her family during the war against the Indians
there that claimed over 200,000 lives. Portillo-Bartow told the crowd of a
terrible dream she had the night before the SOA protest: I dreamt that as
we walked into the fort, the road was completely paved with the bones and
skulls of the children. No matter how carefully we walked, we could not help
stepping on and crushing them. Portillo-Bartow, in a roll call of the
disappeared and killed in the countries throughout Latin America, called on the
spirits of the dead to be with the protesters.
Crossing the chalk line
The procession across the line -- an actual chalk line
on the highway beyond which all partisan political speech is forbidden on the
military base -- was led by some 60 protesters wearing black mourning robes and
white death masks and carrying mock adult and child-sized coffins.
They followed three protesters, one dressed as a red-robed celebrant carrying
incense and the others dressed as acolytes. As this advance group, referred to
as the High Risk 100 before the march, reached a point on the
highway about a half-mile inside Fort Benning, they poured bottles of blood-red
fluid on themselves and fell to the road among the coffins.
Waiting Department of Defense police and journalists surrounded
the fallen protesters. The officers courteously asked the protesters to get up
and proceed to the long lines of buses waiting to carry them to a processing
center inside the fort. When it was clear that the protesters would have to be
carried, an Army official, after talking with some of the hundreds of
peacekeepers, SOA protesters who had been trained to walk with the
marchers, called out Will the corpses please move to the side of the road
so the rest of the marchers can get on the buses?
By 5 p.m., 4,408 protesters had relinquished the main road after
peacefully occupying it for over four hours. Circling buses carried them off
the base by another exit, releasing them without formal processing to walk back
to the main protest site. Fort officials, who said before the march that they
intended to process for possible prosecution every repeat offender, arrested
only the first 65 protesters, releasing all of them but citing 23 with summons
to await future court dates. These individuals could face prison terms of 6
months and fines of $3,000 for trespassing.
Fort Benning officials stepped up their efforts this year to get
more favorable media treatment. SOA Commandant Glenn Wiedner acknowledged that
the protest goal has moved beyond just closure of SOA to a much broader
challenge to American foreign policy being supported by the military.
Wiedner steadfastly denies that the School of the Americas has
contributed to anything but greater democratization in Latin America through
its human rights training and by exposing its yearly class of about 800
students to the U.S. system of military under civilian control. Weidner
concedes that a small number of SOA graduates have engaged in atrocities in
their own countries in the past, but that the school cannot be held responsible
for this. The protesters, Weidner said, are simply misinformed.
The school got a boost in religious quarters last month when
Bishop Francis X. Roque, an auxiliary bishop with the U.S. archdiocese for the
military services, called the school a precious asset. Fort Benning
was happy, Weidner said, that another Catholic military bishop, Joseph Madera,
had accepted an invitation to officiate at a First Holy Communion service for
Spanish-speaking children and their families on the base this same weekend.
Weidner denied any connection between the religious service and the protest,
scheduled for the same hour. I am saddened that this event is marred by
the presence of the protesters, Wiedner said. Madera spoke briefly with
NCR after his arrival at Fort Benning. The soft-spoken 70-year-old
bishop, who was raised in Mexico, said that if he had concrete evidence
directly linking the SOA to human rights abuses in Latin America, he would
speak out against it. He supports the school as a good influence in Latin
America.
Madera attended the Nov 14 and 15 meeting of Catholic bishops in
Washington at which a resolution calling for closure of the school was
circulated and signed by 140 of the 250 bishops in attendance. I cannot
judge their hearts, Madera said of the bishops who signed the resolution,
but perhaps they are not well informed.
A
difficult invitation |
Columbus, Ga., is not an easy place to live if you
dont support Fort Benning. Many of its citizens have strong ties to the
U.S. Army and its place in the local economy. Rev. Joseph Roberson, pastor
of South Columbus United Methodist Church, knows well the difficult line the
city has walked over the past decade. When Carol Richardson, one of the
protests organizers and herself a United Methodist minister, called him
two years ago, Roberson saw a chance to extend both Southern and Christian
hospitality. The mostly African-American church became the only church to
house students and adults coming to Columbus for the protest, Richardson
said. Roberson knew that many church members were apprehensive. I
decided not to articulate a position that could divide us, but that we could
educate ourselves, not with books, but by opening ourselves to experience these
people. We learned that many were not just outside agitators but committed
Christians just like us. Though the SOA protest is notable for the
absence of African-Americans, Roberson said he thought this could
change. There has to be more dialogue between the SOA Watch leaders
and the leadership of civil rights groups, and not just among clergy but
political leaders as well. An understanding could be forged with civil
rights organizations such as the Southern Christian Leadership Conference and
PUSH (People United to Save Humanity) with leaders like the Rev. Joseph Lowrey
and Rev. Jesse Jackson, Roberson said. Very little education has taken
place in the black community on this issue. We have to do more to educate our
own people that our struggle for civil rights is the same struggle people in
Latin America are engaged in, Roberson said. -- Patrick
Marrin |
National Catholic Reporter, December 3,
1999
|
|