Photos by Remy K. (CCMEP) - click on picture for bigger format

More Photos: [1] by W. Dungey (CCMEP), [2] by B. Klocke, [3] by E. Herzoff & T. James (Indymedia)

Audio report of the rally (Indymedia - 5 min): CLICK HERE

Audio recordings of the FIRST SPEAKER (4 min) and the LAST SPEAKER (13 min) (Indymedia)

Video report of the rally (9news - 1 min 26):

List of 220 communities around the world that held an anti-war demonstration on Oct. 26 - CLICK HERE

 

Iraq rally draws 4,000
Civic Center crowd rips potential war
By Jim Kehl
Special to The DenverPost

 
- "Bombs kill babies," read 15-month-old Bailey Cope's tiny T-shirt.
The Denver Post
Anti-war demonstrators join the "No-War-for-Votes" rally in Denver’s Civic Center Park.
 

Her mother, Heather, wore a shirt that read, "No blood for oil."

The two were protesting a potential war with Iraq at Denver's Civic Center on Saturday afternoon as part of a diverse crowd of protesters at a "No War for Votes" rally.

Organizers estimated about 4,000 attended; police declined to estimate the number of protesters.

"I don't support a war with Iraq," Cope said as Bailey sat in her arms. "I'm a mom."

Cope and two friends, Anjanett Payne and Lorrie Spoering, called themselves "girlmoms." They said they are members of a radical leftist activist organization of women who are also teen mothers, Payne said.

"We're about empowering teen moms and making sure they don't get marginalized in society," Payne said.

She also opposes war. "We didn't attack Russia during the Cold War," said Payne, a 21-year-old English major at Rutgers University in New Jersey. "If Iraq really had the capabilities Bush says it has, I don't think the U.S. would attack."

Although the crowd filled the amphitheater and spilled onto the grass surrounding it, most protesters sat peacefully in the warm afternoon sun and listened to the lineup of speakers.

The most active part of the demonstration occurred at the end, when protesters marched around the park, beating drums and chanting slogans such as "Drop Bush, not bombs" and "It's time for a regime change here."

As they marched, passing cars honked and passengers flashed peace signs at the protesters.

The rally, which coincided with similar rallies in San Francisco and Washington, D.C., was "very peaceful and respectful," Denver police spokeswoman Virginia Lopez said.

No arrests were made, Lopez said.

"It was a marvelous display of democracy," said Alan Gilbert, who spoke at the rally.

Gilbert, an international studies professor at the University of Denver, said he would liked to have seen the rally spread beyond the park.

Protesters Bonnie Kueffner and her husband, Fred, brought her two toddlers from Longmont along with about 20 members from their church, First Congregational United Church of Christ.

"I'm not saying Saddam Hussein isn't someone who should not be watched," she said from behind a colorful stroller. "I just feel we need to be peacemakers in the world."

If the United States can invade Iraq, Kueffner said, it can use those same tactics to invade other countries.

"I think there are other options," she said.

About 40 Cherry Creek High School student activists who staged a 24-hour fast last week added their support to the rally.

"As students, we feel like we are the ones who are going to have to deal with the consequences of this war," said 18-year-old Nick Salter, one of the founders of the anti-war group Students Taking Opposition Peacefully.

Helen Kress, in town from Arlington, Va., to visit her son and daughter-in-law, said she agreed with the young activists.

Kress said she and her husband wanted to attend a demonstration in Washington, D.C., but since they couldn't, chose to join Denver's rally.

"It's only the beginning," Gilbert said. "I think people are actually in a state of horror about this war."

Organizer Ethan Hemming acknowledged that the crowd was relatively calm, but he said they responded to the speakers with energy.

"Like last time, I was particularly impressed by the diversity of the crowd," said Hemming, a member of the Colorado Campaign for Middle East Peace. "We had parents, children, elderly people."

 

Protest provides echoes of Vietnam

By Diane Carman
Denver Post Columnist
 
- I looked around Civic Center on Saturday and wondered where the years have gone. There were dreadlocked young people and kids with pink hair and pierced faces. But most in the crowd were graying antiwar veterans of the 1960s.

Thirty-five years later, they still had the old fire.

They danced to reggae music, wore "No war" buttons and chanted "No blood for oil" on cue. They carried signs saying, "No war for votes" and "Who would Jesus bomb?" They hugged old friends and, I may have been imagining things, but I thought I caught a whiff of ganja in the air.

It was like a flashback, a reunion.

Just like the last time they protested a war, these folks can expect to be trivialized, ridiculed, dismissed.

They obviously don't care.

They had come to rile things up and to rediscover their counterculture roots.

Speakers called for "regime change in the United States" and the crowd roared. They announced plans for another protest Monday outside of the hall where President Bush will be speaking in Denver, and they cheered some more. They vowed to vote, to protest, to take to the streets, and they clenched their fists and jabbed them in the air.

Bob Musil of Physicians for Social Responsibility called war in Iraq "immoral." Civil rights activist Alvertis Simmons called it the moment of "revolution we've been waiting for." Lucia Guzman, former director of the Colorado Council of Churches and a Denver school board member, said the people waited too long to stop the war in Vietnam and she won't let that happen again.

But Vietnam and Iraq are very different.

When I stood in a crowd of protesters in Madison, Wis., in 1969, I knew that every one of us could name a casualty - and, even more importantly, we could look around at the potential casualties among us.

My brother had been drafted not long after our neighbor's son had come back in a body bag. I knew exactly why I was there.

The '60s demonstrators were angry, scared and tired of being taken for granted. The war was real. It was personal.

War with Iraq is only theoretical. It's abstract and political, a faceless debate.

At least it was until now.

On Friday, the Minnesota Democrat who vigorously opposed the resolution to authorize war in Iraq became the conscience of the peace movement.

Sen. Paul Wellstone, who died in a plane crash, was remembered by leaders in both parties as a man of conviction, a characteristic that even his colleagues in Congress admit has become rare in American politics.

The former Vietnam-era antiwar activist was considered one of the few who never sold out for a vote or a buck.

The crowd at Civic Center remembered Wellstone with a moment of silence and then, more appropriately, with a moment of noise - a cheering, chanting call to action.

Alan Gilbert, a professor of international affairs at the University of Denver, reminded the protesters that they can make a difference in the world.

"Here is democracy," he said, spreading his arms to acknowledge the crowd spilling out of the amphitheater.

"This is what it means to live in a democracy."

He called upon them to find the power of conviction in a desolate landscape of cheap opportunism. "Make your voices heard," he said.

"Wellstone lives."

Diane Carman's commentaries appear here Thursday and Sunday. E-mail: dcarman@denverpost.com .

 

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