WaPo on demo
Washington Post - January 28, 2007
Thousands Protest Bush Policy
Actors, Activists, Politicians and a Presidential Candidate Among
Demonstrators
By Michael Ruane and Fredrick Kunkle Washington Post Staff Writers
A raucous and colorful multitude of protesters, led by some of the
aging activists of the past, staged a series of rallies and a march
on the Capitol yesterday to demand that the United States end its war
in Iraq.
Under a blue sky with a pale midday moon, tens of thousands of people
angry about the war and other policies of the Bush administration
danced, sang, shouted and chanted their opposition.
They came from across the country and across the activist spectrum,
with a wide array of grievances. Many seemed to be under 30, but
there were others who said they had been at the famed antiwar
protests of the 1960s and 70s.
They came to Washington at what they said was a moment of opportunity
to push the new Congress to take action against the war, even as the
Bush Administration is accelerating plans to send an additional
21,500 troops to Iraq. This week the Senate will begin debating a
resolution of disapproval of the president’s Iraq policy, setting up
a dramatic confrontation with the White House.
Some protesters plan to stay and lobby their representatives in
Congress. Other antiwar activists intend to barnstorm states this
week urging senators to oppose the troop escalation.
While yesterday’s crowd was large and vociferous, its size was
unclear because there was no official crowd estimate. It was filled
with longtime opponents of the conflict and the administration.
“Its primary value is that it keeps up the pressure,” said former
Senate Democratic leader Tom Daschle of South Dakota. “There is a
sense that, by summer, a march like this will be two or three times
as large.”
The demonstrators were garbed in many colors — pink, green, red and
black — and T-shirts and buttons of many sentiments. “Think,” read
one shirt. “It’s not illegal yet.” A button read: “Kill your lawn.”
Read another: “Trees Hate You.”
But the overriding complaint was the U.S. prosecution of the war in
Iraq.
“Peace is controversial,” civil rights and community activist Jesse
Jackson, 65, said in a rousing address to the crowd gathered at the
east end of the Mall. “But so is war. The fruit of peace is so much
sweeter.”
Some came on behalf of relatives who were in the service. A New York
woman came on behalf of her younger brother, who she said was about
to be deployed to Iraq. She had a framed picture of him in a
knapsack. An Akron, Ohio, woman came with her infant son, saying his
father, in the Navy in Kuwait, had yet to see him.
Oriana Futrell, 21, of Spokane, Wash., came with a sign that said:
“Bring my husband home now.” She said her husband, Dan, an Army
lieutenant, was in Baghdad. They were married in April. She said she
was weary of attending military funerals.
Among the celebrities who appeared was Jane Fonda, the 69-year-old
actress and activist who was criticized for sympathizing with the
North Vietnamese during the Vietnam War. She told the crowd that this
was the first time she had spoken at an antiwar rally in 34 years.
“I’ve been afraid that because of the lies that have been and
continue to be spread about me and that war, that they would be used
to hurt this new antiwar movement,” she told the crowd. “But silence
is no longer an option.”
Fonda said she was with her daughter and two grandchildren. “I’m very
proud that they’re here, but I’m so sad that we still have to do
this, that we did not learn the lessons from the Vietnam War,” she said.
She concluded, saying, “God bless.” And someone in the crowd yelled:
“All right, Janey!”
But Fonda’s presence drew counter protesters. Members of the
conservative Free Republic group picketed an antiwar rally at the
Navy Memorial where Fonda spoke earlier in the day. “Hanoi Jane,” one
of the conservative group’s signs read. “Wrong then, wrong now.”
The day’s events unfolded peacefully. And after a cold morning with
temperatures in the mid-20s, the day quickly warmed, and protesters
were unzipping jackets as the mercury topped 50 degrees.
The crowd, while exuberant, seemed significantly smaller than the
half million people organizers said were present, and may not have
matched similar protests in September 2005 and January 2003. The
throng filled much of the Mall between Third and Fourth streets NW,
but thinned toward Seventh Street.
It was big enough, though, that during the march that followed the
rallies, it stretched the length of the route from the Mall, up
Constitution Avenue to the east front of the Capitol and back to the
Mall.
The day’s events were organized chiefly by a group called United for
Peace and Justice, which describes itself as a coalition of 1,400
local and national organizations. Among them are the National
Organization for Women, United Church of Christ, the American Friends
Service Committee, True Majority, Military Families Speak Out, Iraq
Veterans Against the War, Farms Not Arms, CODEPINK, MoveOn.org and
September 11th Families for Peaceful Tomorrows.
The day began with a 10 a.m. rally at the Navy Memorial sponsored by
the peace group CODEPINK. There, several thousand activists heard
speeches by actor Sean Penn, presidential candidate and U.S. Rep.
Dennis J. Kucinich (D-Ohio), and Reps. Maxine Waters (D-Calif.) and
Lynne Woolsey (D-Calif.), and a brief greeting from Fonda.
But the most moving words were Futrell’s.
“My husband deployed last June to Iraq,” she said. “He is an Army
infantry officer currently patrolling the streets of Baghdad. And I
just have to say I’m sick of attending the funerals of my friends. I
have seen the weeping majors. I have seen the weeping colonels. I am
sick of the death.”
“I don’t know what else to say, other than: Bring them home,” she
said. “It is time. We need to bring them home where they can be safe.”
The main rally began at 11 a.m. on the Mall and featured more
speeches and a crowd that seemed to grow as the weather warmed.
In addition to Fonda and Jackson, actors Susan Sarandon and Tim
Robbins addressed the protesters.
Robbins mocked President Bush, urging Congress to impeach him.
“Let’s get him out of office before he’s ruling from a bunker,”
Robbins said.
“Impeach Bush!” the crowd began to chant, interspersed with a few
shouts of “And Cheney!”
“Richard Nixon talked to the walls,” Robbins continued. “But George
Bush is talking to God. But it is not a God I recognize. This God
seems to be giving Bush a pass” on some commandments.
Colin Fallon, who works at the Government Accountability Office, and
his wife, Melinda, a history professor at George Mason University,
went to the demonstration from Fairfax with their three children.
Melinda Fallon guided her son through the crowd, talking about
Americans. “They can say when they don’t agree with what’s going on,”
she told him.
“We’re looking at more or less a 30-years-war here,” Colin Fallon
said. “All the indications are bad. I think about these kids. If they
were asked to fight, would I think they would be able to help the
situation as soldiers? I don’t think so. I think it has become
something of a war of attrition.”
Laura Sinderbrand, 79, and her husband, Alvin, 84, of New York, said
they attended dozens of Washington protests against the Vietnam War
during the 1960s and early 70s.
“The biggest difference back then, of course, was the draft,” said
Alvin Sinderbrand, a retired patent lawyer. “That made everything
much more emotional. There was a sense that everybody was vulnerable.”
The Sinderbrands were opposed to involvement in Iraq from the
beginning, they said, and attended a 2003 protest here. Yesterday,
the couple rode down on the train, and were returning home in the
evening.
“We’re doing it with the hope that it’s going to be the last time we
need to protest this,” said Laura Sinderbrand, a retired museum
director.
Kim Brenegar, 46, went to the march from her Capitol Hill townhouse
with her son Julian, 12.
“Of late, I’ve become very numb to the front-page reporting of
deaths,” she said. “And that’s kind of problem for me. We’ve all
become so used to it, it’s the norm. I hope today’s event will wake
up a lot of people and demonstrate that this doesn’t have to go on,
we can stop this.”
Julian said: “I don’t like the war. I just think it’s so stupid that
we’re there and it’s pointless.
As the events went on, Johnny “Satchmo” T., of Northeast Washington,
sat on a plastic bucket at Seventh Street and Constitution Avenue –
his regular spot — and played a haunting version of “When Johnny
Comes Marching Home” on his bent trumpet.
“They’re lucky that they can do stuff” like that, he said of the
protesters. “Some countries don’t even let people do stuff like that.”
Staff writers Michael Laris, Ruben Castenada, Rick Weiss, Sue Anne
Pressley Montes, Katherine Shaver and Megan Greenwell and staff
researcher Karl Evanzz contributed to this report.