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Report on the Jan 10th forum
"Shut Down Guantanamo! Drive Out the Bush Regime"
On Thursday, January 10th in Los Angeles, seventy people gathered at the
Echo Park United Methodist Church to hear Michael Rapkin, an ACLU lawyer who
represents a Guantanamo detainee, Dennis Loo PhD. who is a member of the World
Can't Wait national steering committee, Sunsara Taylor, writer for Revolution
newspaper and member of the World Can't Wait advisory board, and John Heard, a
noted actor and activist, speak about the horrors of codified torture and why
we must all act to put an end to it and the Bush program that seeks to justify
the unjustifiable. Michael Rapkin
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Michael Rapkin shared his profoundly disturbing first-hand experiences in
coming face to face with atrocities visited on detainees as they languish in
inhumane conditions at the prison in Guantanamo, and have little legal recourse
or hope toward a day of release and return to their homes and families. The
depth of the cruelty that he has uncovered toward detainees as he has worked
tirelessly for their release left the audience breathless with horror at times.
John Heard Photo by John Gannon
Sunsara Taylor
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John Heard's reading of a poem selected from the recent compilation of writings
of detainees, Poems of Guantanamo, was intensely delivered. People in the
audience were visibly moved and some fought back tears as he finished and read
the bio of the author: Al Anazi, a humanitarian worker who had been arrested by
bounty hunters on his hospital bed after undergoing a leg amputation, who is
forced to walk painfully on ill-fitting prosthetics held together with duct tape and has been suffering in
that prison since 2002, with no hope of release.
Sunsara Taylor spoke about the importance of understanding this critical period
in our history, finding opportunities to break through the din of the electoral
process that immobilizes people, and pointed to the necessity of sharply
truthful discussions throughout society about mobilizing a mass movement from
below to break out and demand an end to all of this.
Dennis Loo Photo by John Gannon
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Dennis Loo PhD discussed the pivotal importance of 2008, the nature of
group dynamics in the face of the abdication of moral leadership, and gave
examples of the difference that even one individual can make in dramatically
altering "pluralistic ignorance." He painted a picture of what "a scene seen by
all" would look like, with orange evident everywhere, and counterposed
traditional ways of looking at political organizing to the endemic change that
DIN/333 reflect.
Click here to read more reports from around the country
Report from UCLA Jan 11th
Photo by Elsy Benitez
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UCLA Campus: At noon on Jan. 11 at UCLA, the everyday rush between
classes was pierced by the sharp shouts of two men, as they grabbed a student
and accused him of being a terrorist. Despite his repeated insistence that he
knew nothing of what they were talking about, and as a crowd gathered around,
the men quickly forced him to wear an orange jumpsuit and threw the student
onto a reclining board. To the crowd's shock, they then proceeded to pour water
onto his face, causing him to choke and feel as if he were drowning.
This was, of course, a simulated waterboarding,conducted by 3 students from a
nearby arts college. A local radio station covered the enactment, and reported
it in the afternoon. The reporter asked students what they thought about the
demonstration; manjority talked about how disturbing it was to see adding that
this was torture. While some students hurried past without missing a beat, others
stopped to watch, and some took orange, and a few signed up. A German student
thanked us for doing this, and was to get involved. A high school student who
met us during IFAW Week came in orange tights and an orange scarf, and made
plans to work toward Jan. 31.
Photo by Elsy Benitez
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Incredible black & bright orange stenciled pictures of a kneeling
Guantanamo prisoner were seen around campus on banners hung from stairwells and
buildings, on posters that read "Stop Torture" taped on walls, and on
butcher paper on the sidewalk. Plans are being made to produce many more of
these to transform the scene.
More photos are available at the following link
http://picasaweb.google.com/elsymay/WorldCantWait
Waterboarding demonstration at UCLA w/ Sunsara Taylor from World Can't Wait
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