Every social
movement faces choices about who or what to target, who are their friends,
enemies and in between. When a group
picks the right spot – such as Wall Street – they can ignite a movement. ACT
UP targeted Wall Street for its first action in 1987 and they changed the
social discourse about HIV/AIDS. The
same thing happened on September 17th, 2011 when Occupy Wall Street
(OWS) targeted Wall Street. In the weeks
to follow, the movement targeted banks, billionaires, Goldman Sachs, connecting
the struggles of immigrants, health care activists, and community gardeners in
a larger call for both social and economic justice. They laid these claims by establishing a call
to access public space. This progression continued December 17th, the
three month anniversary of the movement.
Yet, instead of targeting a bank, OWS set its eyes on a space we had
already attempted to access: Duarte Square and Park on 6th Ave and
Canal. This space was owned by a Trinity
Church, an organization which has been a friend of the movement. The whole weekend would be about claiming or
reclaiming spaces – from Duarte Square to CHARAS El Bohio Community Services
Center – fenced off from the public.
The call of
action for December 17 declared:
SATURDAY, DECEMBER 17th at 12PM
DUARTE SQ. PARK, 6th AVE & CANAL
PROTECT & CELEBRATE THE OCCUPY
MOVEMENT
FOR SOCIAL AND ECONOMIC JUSTICE
OCCUPY
Join artists, musicians, and local
community members for an
all-day performance event in support of
Occupy Wall Street’s
re-occupation
of space in downtown Manhattan.
FREEDOM
OF EXPRESSION and right to assemble are sacred human freedoms. Occupy Wall
Street has renewed a sense of hope, revived a belief in community and awakened
a revolutionary spirit too long silenced. To Occupy is to embody the spirit of
liberation that we wish to manifest in our society.
On
Saturday, December 17th – the 3 month anniversary of Occupy Wall Street, the
birthday of Bradley Manning, and the 1 year anniversary of the self-immolation
of Mohamed Bouazizi – the act that sparked the Arab Spring – Occupy Wall Street
will liberate another space.
Occupations
create space for community, values, ideas and a level of meaningful dialogue
absent in the present political and social system. They have allowed us to
realize that we cannot fix our crises isolated from one another. We need
collective action, and we need civic space. We are creating that civic space.
Outdoor
public space plays a crucial role in this civic process and encourages open,
transparent organizing in our movement, unbeholden to a broken political
system. As we saw in Liberty Square, outdoor space invites people to listen,
speak, share, learn, and act. It is a source of inspiration and empowerment.
Over the last month we have seen a
series of coordinated attacks on occupations across the nation in an attempt to
stop the growth of a movement for social and economic justice. Outdoor space is
a threat because it is a visible form of
dissent– a visible challenge to the system, visibility that screams liberation.
We
occupy to liberate. We move forward in the grand tradition of the
transformative social movements that have defined American history. We stand on
the shoulders of those who have struggled before us, and we pick up where
others have left off. We are seeking a better society for us all.
Join
us as we liberate space and deepen this moment into an enduring movement.
I fully concurred
with a call to celebrate the movement and to reclaim space. For the first few months, the strength of the
movement was to highlight the loophole in the zoning laws allowing privately
owned public spaces, such Zuccotti Park, which had to be open to the
public. Yet, with D17 the movement was
targeting a friend, Trinity Church, a revered Episcopal Church which has long
supported the movement as well as progressive causes. Trinity offered material aid to OWS, including
a space for those camping to use its bathrooms for some two months. Trinity is also a
real estate player in New York, with assets rumored to be in the billions. This makes it a target. In recent weeks, Judson Church has supported the
movement, and asked the Trinity to do more, just as it recognized it needed
to. Chris
Hedges posed challenge Trinity Church to put its rhetoric into action.
It was
the church, and especially the African-American church, that made possible the
civil rights movements. And it is the church, especially Trinity Church in New
York City with its open park space at Canal and 6th, which can make manifest
its commitment to the Gospel and nonviolent social change by permitting the
Occupy movement to use this empty space, just as churches in other cities that
hold unused physical space have a moral imperative to turn them over to Occupy
movements. If this nonviolent movement fails, it will eventually be replaced by
one that will employ violence. And if it fails it will fail in part because good
men and women, especially those in the church, did nothing.
Where is
the church now? Where are the clergy? Why do so many church doors remain shut?
Why do so many churches refuse to carry out the central mandate of the
Christian Gospel and lift up the cross?
Some day
they are going to have to answer the question: “Where were you when they
crucified my Lord?”
Many of us
concurred with this message. But we also
recognized that Trinity is not a bank.
Banks and Wall Street are the most pressing targets of the
movement. There are many New York
groups who have not offered their spaces to the movement, the YMCA, Housing
Works, for example. Yet, this does not
make them targets of the movement’s ire.
The topic of OWS
has been a constant point of reference during sermons at Judson since the
movement began three months ago. In
recent weeks, so has the controversy with Trinity. Many in the congregation have taken pride in
the movement’s successes and Judson’s strong solidarity with the movement. Yet, there has also been ambivalence about
taking on Trinity. On December 18th, Donna Schaper, of Judson, would point out that conflicts over Trinity's wealth and the right of human beings dates back to Melville's day.
In her essay, "From Wall Street to Astor Place: Historicizing 'Bartleby," Barbara Foley notes:
A chapter in the debate over land rights in New York that
bears specific relevance to “Bartleby” is the scandal that erupted in 1846–1847
over the Episcopal diocese’s management of its real estate. Trinity
Church—situated on Broadway at the foot of Wall Street—was the headquarters of
the diocese and gave it its name. A wealthy institution and a major owner of
real estate throughout lower Manhattan, Trinity began in the mid-1840s to be
heavily burdened with debts incurred in constructing both a new building at the
Trinity site and Grace Church, a luxurious church at Broadway and Tenth Street
that was to be patronized by wealthy parishioners. Trinity had, moreover,
extended long-term leases at below-market rates to a few affluent New Yorkers—central
among these the Astor family, which “paid $269 a year for some 350 lots on a
lease that would not expire until 1866.” There occurred a public outcry when,
in the mid-1840s, Trinity retrenched by closing down a number of its missions
in the poorer parts of the city, such as the Bowery and Five Points. Some
ministers—including a relative of Melville’s friend Richard Henry Dana Jr.—quit
the diocese in protest. In 1846 some church members charged that Trinity had
failed to use its wealth “to sustain the feeble, and to supply the destitute”;
taking their own church fathers to court, they challenged Trinity’s “moral and
legal right to its lands.” In 1847, the courts upheld Trinity’s title—but “not
before the public was treated to the spectacle of a high-toned brawl over the
use and abuse of wealth.” Radicals of the time added their commentary, verbal
and symbolic. Mike Walsh, whose two “pet evils” were Trinity and Astor,
“declared that Trinity’s property, ‘enough to make every person in the United States
comfortable and happy,’ should be confiscated for public use, and then followed
this up by urging the city to take over St. John’s Park on the grounds that it was an exclusive and privileged
preserve from which the laboring class was excluded. Walsh demonstrated his
contempt for Trinity’s exclusiveness by
climbing over the park’s fence and walking on the forbidden ground.” Squatting,
a time-honored practice in rural Anti-Rent movements, was also, it would appear, a weapon
in the arsenal of urban radicals.
A century and a
half later, OWS planned to contribute their own chapter to this radical
story. As word about the plans made its
way through OWS organizing circles, many I know voiced concern about this
direction for the movement. Some talked
about concern with organizing for an occupation in the coldest months of the
year; others suggested that taking on a friend was foolhardy and counter
productive. And still others worried
that some in the movement seemed to be pining for a conflict with police. While many have praised the tactical
decisions, as well as some of the luck enjoyed by the movement,
supporters came to question the decision to target a space for an occupation,
which activists had already failed to gain access to the morning after the
eviction. I worried that there were only
so many times a movement can fall on its sword. This was our experience in the New York chapter of the international party protest group Reclaim the Streets, active from 1998-2004. The lessons
of the global justice movement are many.
Movement sage: LA
Kauffman muses:
The movement had done an impressive job of raising public
awareness of global trade issues and arguably derailed some of the most
destructive trade schemes under consideration during those years. But we were
so filled with adrenaline from the extraordinary events that unfolded on the
streets that we missed something crucial: just because you leave a protest
feeling exuberant about your experience there doesn’t mean it was a success.
The Occupy movement has, on the whole, been more nimble than that so far, more willing to shift tactics and approaches to maintain public sympathy and sidestep dreary wars of position with the police. Mirth keeps a movement going; self-importance makes it abrasive and clumsy. The great success of Occupy has been setting things in motion. It will win not because it sustains an encampment or shuts down a port or takes over a foreclosed home. Change happens when what a movement inspires shifts in other forces, other institutions. The bold actions that make a movement inspiring are always necessarily temporary and symbolic. Their power lies outside them, in their potential to catalyze lasting change.
The Occupy movement has, on the whole, been more nimble than that so far, more willing to shift tactics and approaches to maintain public sympathy and sidestep dreary wars of position with the police. Mirth keeps a movement going; self-importance makes it abrasive and clumsy. The great success of Occupy has been setting things in motion. It will win not because it sustains an encampment or shuts down a port or takes over a foreclosed home. Change happens when what a movement inspires shifts in other forces, other institutions. The bold actions that make a movement inspiring are always necessarily temporary and symbolic. Their power lies outside them, in their potential to catalyze lasting change.
Saul Alinski
always argued movements must assess their work; they have to digest it and look
at what actually worked and did not and try to learn the difference. I’m not sure we did that ten years ago. Every
action creates a reaction. What was the
reaction we were anticipating with D17?
Last Tuesday, I
posted a question on my blog. “With the Folks
chime in, is battling Trinity Church a smart move for the movement? I'm not
sure. I have any number of criticisms, but I worry we may be inviting a
backlash?
What do others think?” While certainly not a formal measure or
unbiased scale, sixteen people responded suggesting they felt the target was
off track.
Several suggested
the movement was taking on a friend, a group which had supported the
movement.
One friend put me
in touch with Susan Mareneck,
a member of Trinity Church, who I reached out to to get a feeling for what
people were thinking at Trinity. “Here’s what I know,” noted Mareneck. “there is some concern at Trinity that the
Occupy Movement specifically wants to camp in Duarte Square to keep control
over who is allowed to join them. I believe the line of thinking at
Trinity is that - like the church itself, for whom being open to the public,
however inconvenient that is when people with different motives present
themselves - the Occupiers need to continue to grapple with an obligation to be
inclusive. From what I can gather the OWS representatives have been
straightforward about their desire to keep difficult people (addicts, mentally
ill, criminal elements) out and see the configuration of space with the enclosure
at Duarte Square as allowing them to do so. Trinity believes that as the
church is called to love and be open to all, they are therefore, on principle,
unwilling to provide a restricted space for the purpose of keeping even
disruptive people out.
Others I know in
the harm reduction community have expressed similar misgivings about the
movement’s approach to baring drug users from the OWS encampment, when it was
located at Zuccotti. Still, many such as
members of VOCAL and Housing Works have long supported the movement. Building community is complicated. While
we hope for it to be inclusive, all too often community spaces include dynamics
of exclusion, according to who has what, owns which space, and sleeps where
. These lines become increasingly vexing
in New York where real estate is perhaps the purest form of capital and
exclusions according to class, drug use, and place of origin become sources of inordinate
policy debate.
As this debate
about the action took shape over the week, I reached out to members of Judson
Church, where I am a member. I wrote the following letter to their list
serve.
I have watched this debate for several days now. I am
excited by Desmond Tutu's statements in support of this effort. I am also aware
there are many in this movement who have grave concerns about targeting
Trinity, instead of the banks, or instead of moving the occupation to a
privately owned public space (POPS) like Zuccotti. Those opposed to
this choice are smart direct action people aware that we have to pick our
targets carefully. Wall Street is a great target. Goldman Sacks is a
great target. Is Trinity a great target?
Every action creates a reaction. I hope and pray we
are not inviting an ill timed, counter-productive reaction. Trinity has
been a friend. And they do own the land. Why not take this to a place where
we know we have a right to be - such as another POPS?
When ACT UP stormed St Patrick’s in 1989, they invited a
similar reaction and they were ready to counter. Are we ready to
counter if there is a backlash?
I hope there is not one and I could be wrong. But
have people thought of what the counter response might be if papers around the
city bring their weight to attacking the movement for making an enemy of
a friend?
I could be wrong, but I’d love to hear from others about
this?
Members of Judson would reach out off line and share similar
concerns. By this point, Desmond
Tutu had written supporting the movement.
Trinity
Church is an esteemed and valued old friend of mine; from the earliest days
when I was a young Deacon. Theirs was the consistent and supportive voice I
heard when no one else supported me or our beloved brother Nelson Mandela. That
is why it is especially painful for me to hear of the impasse you are
experiencing with the parish. I appeal to them to find a way to help you. I
appeal to them to embrace the higher calling of Our Lord Jesus Christ--which
they live so well in all other ways--but now to do so in this instance...can we
not rearrange our affairs for justice sake? Just as history watched as South
Africa was reborn in promise and fairness so it is watching you now.
By Friday the 16th, Tutu would reach out to
clarify his point, that he did not support direct action against Trinity. By this point, Judson and members of Occupy
Faith made a decision to further their support for OWS but not civil
disobedience. Michael Ellick of Judson
would report that
OccupyFaith has an eventful few days coming
up. Tomorrow,
beginning at noon at 6th Ave & Canal, there will be an OWS celebration of
the 3-month anniversary of OWS. As many of you know, this event will also
discuss the OWS request to Trinity Church for permission to "occupy"
an empty lot owned by Trinity. To clarify, Occupy Faith NYC has always
supported the OWS ask of Trinity, and will continue to do so, but there is no
clear consensus on actions like civil disobedience. Without this
consensus, we will not be endorsing such actions, and individual faith leaders
who may choose to go this route will be doing so autonomously. That said,
I encourage all of you to join us tomorrow for this event, which will be a
large day of community support for OWS expansion into Community Board 2 territory
While there was little consensus to move ahead with a civil
disobedience action at Duarte Square among movement supporters, the story of a
planned action for N17 had made it to the papers. And instead of OWS targeting banks and
corporations, the Saturday New York Times
would report: “Occupy Group Faults Church, A One Time Ally.” “Charity is not enough,” Rev. Michael Ellick
of Judson, was quoted . “Charity keeps
things the same.” While charity has its
obvious limits, it does make a difference for those with little else. For many,
it is the difference between life or death. The article was not particularly flattering to
the movement, which was left looking like it was out to smear a one time
supporter because they had not done more to help them. Part of the goal of movements is to engage in
actions which generate debate about ideas.
When
ACT UP stormed St. Patrick’s, their action inspired a debate which the movement
was ready for. As OWS prepared to act up at Duarte Square, few seemed quite ready for the reaction or the debate the action
would inspire about a movement which had gone to great lengths to engage the
99%, labor, church groups, and the like.
And if they were, the story line was out there for supporters to engage
or support.
Still, I planned to attend the action Saturday after
organizing class, as did many supporters who had been unable to attend GA
meetings or block. The movement has
built a great deal of good will and passion among those, such as myself, who
show up and try to lend a hand in whatever way we can. Arriving Saturday, friends
from the VOCAL as well as members of the Performance Guild were there. No one had any idea of what was going to
happen. Word on the streets, the General
Assembly that morning had voted against the direct action to try to get into
the space. Some suggested, an alternate
venue had been identified. Others
were filming and setting the story of the day.
In the meantime, the Performance Guild had scheduled their
own version of Dickens, with
Occupy: A Christmas Carol.
We began the show singing the anti consumer holiday classic from the
Church of Stop Shopping.
Toys for the World (tune of Joy
to the World)
Toys for the world are made by
kids... and not by elves at all!
they work them night and day, for
very little pay,
And little tiny hands.....make all
your fav'rite brands
That fill up the shelves in every
shopping mall!
Toys for the world that Santa
brings......So your sweet kids can play!
What's underneath your tree....Is
our economy.
And all those girls and
boys.....Who make you're children's toys
Are not getting squat from us on
Christmas Day!
Are not getting squat from us on
Christmas Day!
Pepper spraying the Statue of Liberty and anyone else I can find. Photo by Erik McGregor |
I learned a long time ago that when it comes to theater that
I do better as a member of the chorus.
So, I was more than happy when someone in the Guild said I could play a
cop, armed with pepper spray, ready to take out activists, the status of
liberty, and anyone else in my way. I
enjoyed vamping it up with my pepper spray, doing my best UC Davis Pepper
Spraying cop. A journalist asked what I
was doing. Protesting the
people’s freedom by taking some of it away I assured them.
Members of the Performance Guild drafted the notes for the
impromptu performance.
Opening Arrest Prelude
Characters are playing out scenes
simultaneously in the space and the audience can move around to catch them all
(circus style).
-3 kings- arrested for being illegal
immigrants
-Rudolf- use of electricity
-menorah lighting- open flame
-Santa- breaking and entering
-playing dreidel- illegal betting
-carolers- blocking pedestrian
traffic
-drummer boy- violating noise
ordinance
once all the arrests are made the
arrestees are brought to the center by the police where they are condemned by Bloomscrooge.
The police are an omnipresent piece of the scenery and carry elaborate weapons
(a mace, a nutcracker, etc). They move like robots.
Bloomscrooge is the head of StateCorp.
Scene 2- Bobbi Cratchet is counting
Bloomscrooge’s huge pile of money all day long (she is his money counter). She
goes to receive her pay for the day and finds that she has accrued debt from
her work.
Scene 3- Bobbi Crachet is a single
mother and goes home to her son Tiny Tim who is a marionette with health
problems. She begins to think about organizing StateCorp employees into a
union.
Scene 4- Bloomscrooge goes home to
bed and is visited by John D. Rockefeller who tells him that no matter how much
of a great philanthropist he thinks he is he will be doomed to hell like
Rockefeller (who is in hell), who was a much better philanthropist than
Bloomscrooge. And he tells him that he will be visited by 3 ghosts.
Scene 5- Ghosts of Occupations
Past- This is a pop-up book that is presented and opened by the librarian where
painted scenes emerge that actors speak through by inserting their mouths into
the holes. The four scenes are:
-The Tea Party (the revolutionary
one)
-Seneca Falls Convention
-Bonus Army
-Rosa Parks and the Freedom Riders
There are also signs displayed for
mom and pop shops
Scene 6- Ghosts of Occupations
Present- Bobbi Crachet is facilitating a GA meeting where the audience has
become employees of StateCorp. The Zapatista movement, Tahrir Sq and Spain are
mentioned in the meeting. The proposal being brought to the group is whether or
not to strike. Bloomscrooge is able to briefly hypnotize the group his melodic
voice and waving money in front of their faces. Maybe a song about how you
could be a millionaire too? Tiny Tim is resting on the arm of the Lady Liberty
puppet. The signs for mom and pops are turned into corporate signs- Duane
Reade, Chase, Starbucks etc.
Scene 7- Ghosts of Occupations
Future- This is the city of Bloomscrooge’s dreams. All the signs denote
Bloomscrooge Park and Bloomscrooge School, Bloomscrooge Prison etc. The people
are going to the work camp in a chain gang style. Bloomscrooge is confronted by
the police and asked for his papers (which he doesn’t have). He cannot
communicate or show his identity in this world so he is treated like an illegal
and sent to the work camps. Lady Liberty is bound.
Scene 8- Bloomscrooge awakes from
his dream and feels relieved that it’s just a dream and such a thing could
never happen. While Bloomscrooge has been asleep Tiny Tim in a tinkerbell
moment has been empowered by the power of the people and has become a real boy.
Tiny Tim becomes the facilitator of the GA and dismantles Bloomberg’s box seat
(throne) and turns it into things people need (housing, heath care, education)
and distributes it to the group. Bloomscrooge is lead away in chains.
Pepper spraying the Little Drummer Boy Photo by Erik McGregor. |
Cameras and people circled us as we performed. Being a policeman was fun. I could do anything I wanted, taking on
whoever I felt like without recourse. The gesture was not out of left field. Throughout the last few months, the NYPD had pepper sprayed activists, put their knees on their
heads, punched people, and the like, with little to no recrimination.
I was also surprised how well as Christmas Carol worked with
Bloomberg. The performance was so much
fun. But its social conflict is
real. Every day, the poor face neglect
and social desolation in this country. And
many have grown weary of being told to wait, to be patient and polite while the
rich get richer. While Trinity is
thought to have billions in real estate holdings which makes them a player in New
York social and economic circles, those in OWS are pushing for a different
narrative of urban living. Many work
with a different political calculus.
While traditional politics organized in terms of mobilization of
resources, OWS has built
itself around anarchist principles of direct democracy. Its logic involves those who are part of the
conversation opening a space anyone wanting to take part into the conversation. As Francesca Polletta says, freedom
is an endless meeting. This is a
meeting which I am not often able to be part of, because of so many
things. Democracy is time intensive. As
labor historian Stanley Aronowitz points out, the challenge for such a
structure is to find ways to incorporate working people with responsibilities
at home and at work which keep them away from the movement. I was not able to make it to the general
assembly meeting earlier in the morning, as a I had to teach.
What’s going to happen?
I don’t know, people mumbled throughout the afternoon. This was the conversation I had over and over
with people I walked around the space for the next two hours, talking,
listening, interviewing, gossiping, and so on.
Bill Dobbs and I talked about the encroachments of the city, of
privatization, into regular people’s lives, and public spaces over the last
decade. These conversations are part of what I love
about this movement. It creates a space
for retail politics, for ideas, conversations, politics, interviews, stories,
rallies, art, controversies and ideas. This
is the stuff of democracy. It is part of
why the movement needs a space.
“Everyone, we’re about to march,” someone mic checked around
3 PM. A group was circling and doing the “A Ati Anticapitalista” dance. By
this point, near a thousand people started to meander out of the park, chanting
all the way. Chants of “Bloomberg beware, the 99 are everywhere!” and “For
every eviction, another occupation!” filled the air as we walked a few streets
up 6th Ave, took a left, and back down 7th. We stopped in front of the fence in front of
Duarte Square, where a direct action person called for everyone to hold
up. Looking around I saw a huge mass of
people between the fence and the street and then rushing and excitement. The crowd was lunging toward the fence where a commotion was now taking shape. More and more pushing and I saw someone
produce a ladder, which a man in purple started to climb up, to cheers,
gestures of defiance, and clenched fists.
Only later would I learn that man was retired Bishop George Packer. He was the first to climb the wall. More and
more people started to climb over to cheers.
People started pushing on the fence.
Watching the fence ripple, I thought about the scene in Quebec ten years ago when
anarchists tore down the fence during the FTAA meetings of 2001. Many would describe the action, with prankers
shooting teddy bears and tear gas canisters back and forth over the wall, as a
high point of a global justice movement.
Watching these scenes, journalist Naomi Klein would note that fences
serve as “barriers separating people from previously public resources, locking
them away from much-needed land and water, restricting their ability to move
across borders, to express political dissent, to demonstrate on public streets…
Fences have always been part of capitalism.” They
are also part of contests over public space in New York City. And this
was part of what activists were fighting as they charged over the fence
on Saturday. “For every eviction,
another occupation” the crowd screamed.
“Whose city? Our City?” we
screamed as the iconic action took shape.
“I feel liberated, but also imprisoned,” one man commented from the
other side looking through the fence.
“We are unstoppable, another world is possible,” people screamed, louder
voices echoing through the streets, as people tricked over the fence and danced
on the other side. “I
think the consciousness of America has been lifted,” another continued. By this point, several of the fences had been
cut open. I started to climb up the
stairs. Just as I was climbing a panic of screams followed as everyone pushed back under the
fence, getting away from the police rushing to arrest whoever they could.
Bishop George Packer was the first to climb the wall. He was a supporter of direct action the whole day. Photo by Erik McGregor |
Down on the other side of the fence, people were screaming
and police were pushing in. I started
to circle the space. The temporary
autonomous zone hadn’t lasted long, a few minutes.
People dancing, celebrating, and climbing the wall, while the police did their best to keep those images out of public discourse. Photo by Erik McGregor |
“That was a completely narcissistic action,” one man
commented. “Basically they were saying,
if you don’t let us have your space, we are going to hold our breath and scream
and have a hunger strike and jump over.”
I didn’t quite think it was that bad. It felt great to scream at the machine. But we wanted more.
My head said the gesture was not well targeted, my heart
felt good about taking on big real estate in New York, even if it was from a
church which had been very supportive. It still felt great to tear at the wall,
to climb over, and see what it might look like on the other side.
“Looked like some kids thumbing their nose at people who
allowed them to piss for two months,” noted another friend. Part of what made OWS so smart for so long
was how many friends it was making, reaching out to labor, healthcare,
religious groups, and so on. Everyone
seemed to understand the movement’s goals.
This time, it felt like OWS was more than comfortable to alienate friends.
“We really burnt a bridge there,” another long time movement
participant chimed in.
Walking back to the space, I ran into Jeremy
Brecher one of the author’s of Anonymous
Writers for the 99% book Occupying Wall Street: the Inside Story of an Action
That Changed America. We were supposed to meet at 4 PM to donate books to the
library. This is part of what makes this movement so important. It
is about a place, which creates countless stories.
Austin mic
checked. “When we have fun, the police
seem to get scared. So what are we going
to do? We’re going to have fun and
dance!”
Austin and Michael mic check. Photo by Erik McGregor |
Looking around the space, there was a lot of love. Some people had unfolded a huge carboard
layout with words, Occupy, which people were dancing on. We didn’t even need a sleeping space if we
could do this all afternoon, I mused to a friend.
“But you’re twenty years older than everyone here who want
to sleep over,” my friend chimed in.
Austin metaphorically handed the mic over to Michael
Ellick of Judson. “The police don’t seem to like it when we get together,”
he noted. “Lets not meet their institutional violence with anything but love
and commitment to justice.”
Media around
the world would
report on the action. “Arrests as
Occupy Protest Turns to a Church,” noted the Times. A
video of Bishop Packard on the way to booking documented the conversation and
rationale for the action. Yet, many would grumble
about the action. Sur Plus posted on a note on facebook declaring:
I didn't believe (this time round) that
there was a hope in hell of occupying this space. I think all the organizers
all pretty much knew that everyone going over the fence was going to arrested
and that this was going to be project of storytelling after the fact. I don't
believe this square was a strategic target and I'm really hoping that the obsession for this particular
space dies with this second (or is it 3rd?) failed attempt. There are smarter
things to concentrate limited resources on, as was evidenced by the D6
foreclose defense - which btw continues. I vote that OWS in NY concentrates is
Winter energy on building neighborhood assemblies in preparation for the warmer
season.
We did need a space to organize. In years past in New York, we have lost
countless spaces, such as CHARAS, where we were able to meet, organize, talk,
hang out and dance. And I rode home back
to Brooklyn.
Sunday, December 18th, we planned to celebrate
the ten years since the city had taken this squatted space away.
PRESS RELEASE: Friends and Supporters of CHARAS/ El Bohio
Create a Community Center in the Street to Mark the Ten-Year Eviction Date
Sunday, December 18, 2011
12pm: Rally at Tompkins Square Park
12:30pm: Procession to CHARAS - 605 East 9th Street
L.E.S. TO MAYOR: GIVE US BACK OUR COMMUNITY CENTER!
With performances by Great Small Works, Hungry March Band, Reverend Billy & the Church of Stop Shopping, and the People's Mic. Kid Friendly Activities include Face Painting, Dancing and Art!
To mark the ten-years that has passed since the eviction of an historic East Village community center, protestors and local residents will be creating a “Curbside Community Center.” Their “Center” will feature live music, a potluck and a speak-out outside the fenced-off former public school building at 605 East 9th Street, where the CHARAS/ El Bohio Community Center had operated from 1979 until the police eviction on December 27, 2001.
“The building has been locked and empty for the last decade,” said Carlos 'Chino’ Garcia, Executive Director of CHARAS. “It once was once a hub for community activists, artists and Lower East Siders. Now it’s just an eyesore.”
But the hundreds of people who are expected to gather on Sunday aren’t just celebrating the history of CHARAS. Their fiery-colored banners speak to what they hope will be its future. “Community Dreams, Not 1% Schemes,” one banner reads. Another references the blue construction fence enclosing the property with a riff on Ronald Reagan’s iconic Cold War quote: “Mr. Bloomberg: Tear Down This Wall.”
They want the building back, and believe that CHARAS has the community support and proven track record to make this transfer of property possible.
Sunday, December 18, 2011
12pm: Rally at Tompkins Square Park
12:30pm: Procession to CHARAS - 605 East 9th Street
L.E.S. TO MAYOR: GIVE US BACK OUR COMMUNITY CENTER!
With performances by Great Small Works, Hungry March Band, Reverend Billy & the Church of Stop Shopping, and the People's Mic. Kid Friendly Activities include Face Painting, Dancing and Art!
To mark the ten-years that has passed since the eviction of an historic East Village community center, protestors and local residents will be creating a “Curbside Community Center.” Their “Center” will feature live music, a potluck and a speak-out outside the fenced-off former public school building at 605 East 9th Street, where the CHARAS/ El Bohio Community Center had operated from 1979 until the police eviction on December 27, 2001.
“The building has been locked and empty for the last decade,” said Carlos 'Chino’ Garcia, Executive Director of CHARAS. “It once was once a hub for community activists, artists and Lower East Siders. Now it’s just an eyesore.”
But the hundreds of people who are expected to gather on Sunday aren’t just celebrating the history of CHARAS. Their fiery-colored banners speak to what they hope will be its future. “Community Dreams, Not 1% Schemes,” one banner reads. Another references the blue construction fence enclosing the property with a riff on Ronald Reagan’s iconic Cold War quote: “Mr. Bloomberg: Tear Down This Wall.”
They want the building back, and believe that CHARAS has the community support and proven track record to make this transfer of property possible.
For over 20 years, CHARAS had served the low-income, activist, and artist communities of the Lower East Side, providing space for studios, performances and galleries, as well as workshops, English classes, after-school programs, and meetings for countless neighborhood organizations. In 1999, despite widespread opposition, the City auctioned CHARAS to private developer Gregg Singer. After a five-year battle, CHARAS was evicted on December 27, 2001. The building has sat vacant and derelict ever since.
The property is restricted for community use, and the terms of sale required Singer to submit a development plan within 45 days of purchase. Mr. Singer has spent the last decade attempting to get special permits, tenants and funding to develop a nineteen-story youth hostel and also a dormitory. In 2007, in an effort to stop the building from being landmarked, Singer destroyed several of the building’s decorative cornices. The Landmark application was approved despite the damage; however the building has remained open to the elements and the roof has been compromised.
“We kept the building alive for twenty years, and Singer has been unable to create anything for the community in ten,” Howard said. “It's time we get our building back.”
Sunday was another
lovely New York day. Dodi and Scarlett and
I went to Judson for the holiday service, where they lit the fourth week of
Advent Candles, sang and enjoyed the service. “We are preoccupied,” Donna Schaper preached. “We’re just beginning to understand what god
means by terrain, human terrain.” We
enjoyed some cookies, carols and fellowship. I wished everyone the best for the
holidays and the girls and I grabbed a cab for the CHARAS Celebration.
For years now, New Yorkers have danced and celebrated in impromptu parades to and from CHARAS. We did so after Seattle in 1999. And we did so December 18th. Photo by Erik McGregor |
Charas was the
place where the opponents of neoliberalism met and organized. And that’s part of why it was a target for
Giuliani. We used to say that all the
time. Groups
I was involved with including More Gardens!, Reclaim the Streets, Lower East
Side Collective. We all used to meet,
plan, make giant caterpillars, rehears for political theater, watch the
pipebomb sonatas, sing, hold fundraisers, dance, plot convergence actions in DC
and Quebec, defend community gardens, and hang out. I used to love to work the door at LESC
events just to see all my friends there.
This was one of my first hubs of activism and community in NYC. Certainly it wasn’t perfect. But what space
is? I remember the last prop making
party we had there for RTS before a post 9/11 candlelight vigil. Half of the events in my ethnography of Lower
East Side Activism, Play, Creativity, and Social Movements: If I Can’t Dance
Its Not My Revolution, took place there.
Dancing and singing, making signs, meeting friends, organizing, this is what CHARAS was all about . It is part of what made the space a target. Photo by Erik McGregor |
I used to love to see who would show up at a CHARAS defense
action because it seemed like everyone in the Lower East Side would come. And many of them were here Sunday. Tim, Rev Billy, Mark, Christine, Julian, Melanie,
Ron, Erik, Nikki, Susan, Eric, Seth, Barbara, Aresh, Brook, Chino, and so many
more. We told stories, listened to the
story of CHARAS, painted, beat drums, and the kids started to freeze. In the time my kids have been alive Charas
has never been open. It’s been sitting
rotting, fenced up, like the fence around Duarte Square, and so many other
community spaces, with fences keeping the community and its democracy inspiring
organizers out. Without public space, it
is difficult to think about democracy thriving and this is part of why
opponents choose to keep such spaces boarded up.
The police, who had listed the event as a Code 1 riot, were arriving just as we left. They were there to protect and preserve the shit out of democracy by arresting and beating those standing on the sidewalk. Mark, who explains the history and significance of CHARAS, and another four would spent 32 hours in jail.
The police, who had listed the event as a Code 1 riot, were arriving just as we left. They were there to protect and preserve the shit out of democracy by arresting and beating those standing on the sidewalk. Mark, who explains the history and significance of CHARAS, and another four would spent 32 hours in jail.
The attack on activists at CHARAS was not unlike other attacks on regular people peaceably assembling. For many, the memories of the Tompkins Square Park Riot of 1988 still loom large. |
The girls and I had no idea this was taking shape as we ate chicken and rice soup and perogies at Odessa, across from the park, running into friends, telling stories, laughing, and enjoying a little bit of the story telling capacity which is left of the old neighborhood. New Yorkers need their public spaces. The passion and rage to tear down the walls at Duarte Square is very much about the impulse to break down all that separates us. The immigrant rights march the same afternoon was about breaking that fence between insiders and outsiders that divides us. Vaclav Havel, who inspired the Velvet Revolution against the divide between East and West, was shuffling off as we agitated against the wall in New York. I assume he would have understood what we were doing.
OWS has impacted
the policy conversation about banking and income inequality in countless
ways. “We
don’t know where it is going but we’re going to continue tracking America’s injustices
which lead us to Wall Street” noted Rev
Phillip Lawson on December 17th.
As of now, police continue to
brutalize those opponents of neoliberalism. Thanks for an amazing year OWS. You’ve
changed our conversation and helped inspire so many stories.
PostScript
Just out of jail, Mark Read sent the following note, published with permission.
PostScript
Just out of jail, Mark Read sent the following note, published with permission.
NYPD’S#OWS Arrest Protocol and Movement Suppression Strategy
CompaƱeros,
So, last night I got out of jail after a 31 hour stint on a charge of Disorderly Conduct which did not even rise to the level of a misdemeanor. I was charged with merely a “violation.”
Being fully processed (taken to central booking at 100 Center Street and arraigned before a judge) for a charge of this kind is highly unusual, but it is certainly not an isolated case for #ows protesters. In fact, for #ows arrestees this is now the norm, which is clearly the result of a protocol put in place sometime in the last two months, and applied citywide. Such a protocol is a violation of our constitutional rights, and is no doubt part of a wider movement-suppression strategy probably being coordinated with homeland security. We need to understand all of this clearly, and respond to it as a movement to try and stop it and hold the policymakers accountable. Below is a brief account of my arrest, followed by initial suggestions for how to respond.
While in custody several NYPD officers revealed the existence of this protocol to myself and my co-arrestees with explicit statements. We asked them why we were not being given desk appearance tickets (DATs) for our minor charges. We were told by one officer (Arresting Officer Lisa Stokes of the 9th Precinct) “I don’t know, I’m just doing what my bosses tell me. If it’s an Occupy Wall Street arrest, you go downtown. Just the way it is.” We asked the same question to a different officer (Didn’t mark his name, a mistake), who told us “You guys were with Occupy Wall Street Right? Well, you guys gotta go downtown. Sorry about that.”
Later on (We were held at the precinct for 11 hours. This is an extraordinarily long stay at the precinct. Twice as long as the longest I’ve heard of), we were paid a visit by a homicide detective (again, didn’t memorize his name, another mistake. He wasn’t wearing a badge, though, so its unclear if he would have been telling us the truth. We don’t even know if he was really from homicide). He told us “Hey, so I’m a detective with Homicide. I need to ask you a few questions about Occupy Wall Street. It’s not a big deal, we’re doing this with all of you Occupy Wall Street protesters now.” He seemed a bit chagrinned that he had to do it at all. We were never mirandized.
It has been clearly established that treating one population of people differently from another, on the basis of their political beliefs or associations, is a violation of the first amendment rights to speech and assembly. The fact that the NYPD has a protocol in place that dictates to precinct captains how they must handle #OWS-related arrests, and which mandates that #OWS arrestees will be handled differently than non #OWS arrestees that have been booked on identical charges, is a very clear violation of our civil rights. And there is precedent within the NYPD on this very issue. In the wake of the murder of Amadou Diallo, and the 1700 arrests that happened in protest, the NYPD top brass issued a memo that protesters were to be processed differently than non-protesters with identical charges. This resulted in a lawsuit which the protesters won, on first amendment grounds (others will know more specifics of this case).
So, what can we do? Several things. First and most important is that arrestees make a note of every conversation that they have with an officer while in custody, and write it down as soon as they are released before they forget. Get names and badge numbers if you can. Share it with your lawyers. Have your fellow arrestees do the same, and corroborate your stories. I would suggest that all of us share this with the legal working group, who should also weigh in on this ASAP. I would also recommend to everyone to plead not guilty to their charges rather than take an ACD (Adjournment Contemplation and Dismissal). I would further suggest that as many of us as possible insist on a jury trial. Through this we can put a real strain on the judicial system. If they are going to bog us down and make our lives miserably inconvenient, we ought to respond in kind. Muck up the works. I would further suggest that this is an expense that #ows should bear. (In my humble opinion it would be a far more legitimate expense, from a movement perspective, than spending $10,000 a week feeding the homeless and giving out $100 a week to any working group that asks for it, for cigarettes and metro cards. I don’t think that #ows ought to function as a social services agency, as much as I support social service agencies. And no, I don’t think its reasonable to expect volunteer lawyers to do trial work pro-bono). Last but NOT least we all need to be aware that this is going on, and we need to support each other with committed jail support. It was an incredible relief to have friends waiting for us when we got out. I will be returning that kindness to my brothers and sisters in the future, and I want to urge everyone to do the same.
We are a young movement, full of dynamism and commitment, and we will change things. Those in power find that threatening and they are behaving accordingly. The more of a threat we become, the more they will attempt to suppress us. This is a fact, and we need to keep our eyes wide open about it. We don’t need to be afraid of it, but we do need to be intelligent in the way that we move forward. I hope that this sparks some conversation as to how we do that.
Love and Rage,
-Mark