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Harlem's Anti-War Rally Eyes Troubles at
Home
By Mosi Secret Village Voice Writer
Last Saturday, demonstrators in Harlem braved
hand-numbing cold and rain to raise their voices against the war.
Organized by the Black Solidarity Against the War Coalition, the crowd was
comprised largely of people of color, and their placards and chants
stopped local residents in their tracks. It was the most successful
demonstration in the city to date to organize blacks and Latinos against
the war.
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Demonstrators assembled at Marcus Garvey Park, at Madison and 122nd
Street, and marched in a circuitous route through Harlem’s busiest streets
to the Adam Clayton Powell, Jr. State Office Building. What was initially
a crowd of only a handful grew to 1500 people, with large numbers from the
Muslim community and various unions. Demonstrators walked almost three
miles, drawing curious gazes from onlookers in shops and on stoops, and
from residents perched in windows above the street.
Harlemites opened their doors to the commotion and the cold to accept
flyers, talk to marchers, and some even join the procession. A 25-year-old
woman who jumped in the march from a beauty salon told the Voice
that she did so because “the ones that are going to be suffering after the
war are the blacks.”
At the State Office Building plaza, speeches echoed off of adjacent
buildings and filled the streets. Congressman Charles Rangel, Roger
Toussaint, head of Local 100 of the Transit Workers Union, spoke, along
with Council members Bill Perkins and Charles Barron. Calls for Black
Power punctuated a clear message: Harlem is against the war and the Bush
administration should refocus on domestic issues.
Judging by the enthusiastic response, Barron seemed to capture the
sentiments uptown: “This is not a war about stopping terrorism, because
some of the greatest terrors have occurred right here in America—when they
do not educate our people, house our people, clothe our people, or employ
our youth. It’s disgusting that we have to sit here and see a single black
youth, or Latino youth come home in a body bag. . . . Our youth joined the
armed services to get better education, not to be somebody’s cannon fodder
for oil.”
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