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Operation: Peace 
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Antiwar movement reflects a different America than in past eras, but
diverse allies keep the spirit alive.

By REED JOHNSON
TIMES STAFF WRITER

October 1 2002

http://www.latimes.com/la-lv-peace1oct01,0,2831291.story 

  "We want to poison your mind," teases the woman with slate-colored
hair outside First Baptist Church in Koreatown. Swathed in natural
fibers and sporting an anti-Dubya button, she's minding a table piled
high with books, pamphlets and stickers decrying the sorry state of the
planet--wars, corporate malfeasance, environmental
disasters-in-the-making, and so on--along with half a dozen copies of
the revolutionary rabble-rousings of Chairman Mao.

  Change a few names and haircuts, and the scene could be an outtake
from the American peace movement's tie-dyed past--Berkeley or Chicago,
circa 1960-something. But inside the Romanesque-Revival church's packed
sanctuary, a fired-up multilingual L.A. crowd mirrors the complex and
rapidly changing profile of Americans opposed to a new war with Iraq.

  As the Bush administration turns up the rhetorical heat on Saddam
Hussein and an anxious world braces for a possible Desert Storm redux,
American peace activists are busy marshaling their own forces. And
while the choreography of dissent sometimes stirs up ghosts of Selma,
Vietnam and the anti-nukes protests of the early 1980s, the current
peace movement seems eager to find a voice and image suited to a very
different America than existed 40 or even 20 years ago.

  In that process, some observers say, peace activists are moving
beyond a singular, post-Vietnam cultural stereotype that depicts them
as clueless hippies hopelessly mired in the peacenik past, as
apologists for whatever power-mad dictator is on the prowl, or as
cynical trouble-makers of questionable patriotism whose "fringe" antics
give aid and comfort to America's enemies, as Atty. Gen. John Ashcroft
has suggested.

  "Dissident political activity that's portrayed in this country leads
people to believe that anyone who gets out in the street must be kind
of crazy," says Robert Jensen, a professor of journalism at the
University of Texas at Austin, who became a marked man in the Lone Star
State last fall after writing several columns attacking U.S. military
policy in Afghanistan.

  There was a vague feeling of the torch being passed at First
Baptist's recent two-hour rally, an evening of agitprop theater that
mixed old-time progressive sentiments with a newfound sense of urgency.
And if anyone present was worrying aloud about finding the peace
movement's next Martin Luther King, Tom Hayden or Helen Caldicott, it
was drowned out in a poly-lingual chorus of shared convictions.

  Filling the pews of the 1,500-seat church were the movement's
traditional shock troops: trade unionists, middle-age progressives of
various creeds, battle-hardened veterans of the civil rights and
Vietnam War struggles. But clapping and singing alongside them were
young anti-globalization activists, interspersed with many Central
American and Asian immigrants, some of whose countries have suffered
their own, albeit less publicized versions of 9/11-style terrorist
atrocities.

  Many of the speakers and much of the symbolism were familiar. Labor
leader Maria Elena Durazo extolled a union member who perished at the
World Trade Center. Syndicated columnist Bob Scheer chastised Taliban
brutality and Washington demagoguery. Hollywood star Alfre Woodard gave
soothing line-readings from the Koran, the Bible and the Bhagavad-Gita.
Between speakers, a mixed-race choir delivered a thin but plucky
rendition of "Down by the Riverside."

  But the rally's emotional climax occurred when Kelly Campbell and
Barry Amundson, members of September Eleventh Families for Peaceful
Tomorrows, a group composed of relatives of 9/11 victims, embraced
beneath a giant video screen where images of the burning twin towers
had flashed by moments earlier. Barry Amundson, 32, is the brother of
Craig Amundson, a 28-year-old Army multimedia specialist who was killed
when the hijacked American Airlines Flight 77 crashed into the
Pentagon; Campbell is his sister-in-law. Both were in Los Angeles to
voice their conviction that the response to last year's attacks on New
York and Washington shouldn't be more mangled bodies and grieving
relatives.

  "Join us in a new peace movement," exhorted the Rev. George Regas,
catching the evening's forward-looking tone. "We will change the face
of this earth!" Rising to its feet, the congregation roared its
approval.

  Less easily pigeonholed than their predecessors, and more reliant on
Internet mailing lists than sloganized placards, today's peace
activists are more globally attuned and media-savvy than the bearded
and sandaled legions of yore, some say.

  "Our general argument is the same one: that we've got to find
alternatives to war because we don't like the notion of killing
people," says Medea Benjamin, a former U.N. economist and Green Party
candidate for U.S. Senate whose face was on front pages from New York
to Hong Kong last week after she and a colleague heckled Defense
Secretary Donald Rumsfeld while he was testifying on Capitol Hill.

  But her group's message, Benjamin says, "has to be tailored almost on
a daily basis to what is the message of those who want to go to war."

  "They have so much more access to the media and to the American
people that we're always on the defensive."

  Unfazed by polls that show a majority of Americans would support
going to war with Iraq to stop Saddam Hussein from amassing weapons of
mass destruction, today's activists say their aims aren't that
different from those of previous generations. What's changed is the
movement's composition, focus and tactics, which have been conditioned
by a sound-bite culture where world politics gets simplified and
perceptions often rule.

Nonviolence Isn't a Fad

  In the calculus of the contemporary peace movement, two numbers have
logarithmic power: 9/11 and the 1960s. The first is a date that no
American will soon forget. The second is a cultural epoch that simply
refuses to go away.

  Campbell, co-director of Peaceful Tomorrows, says that while taking
part in marches over the last year she's been taunted by people
yelling, "Go back to the '60s! This is the '90s!" Never mind that the
'90s went out with the Clintons and high-tech start-ups. What Campbell
objects to is the hecklers' presumption that nonviolence is somehow
pass�, a fad with no more intellectual staying power than a lava lamp.

  "I was born in 1972. I don't appreciate being considered a
throwback," says Campbell, speaking by phone from her Bay Area home. "I
don't think war is a good idea under any circumstances. So partially I
believe that nonviolent alternatives to war are always better. And that
doesn't mean doing nothing. That means taking actions."

  While professing their abhorrence of the Iraqi dictator, Peaceful
Tomorrows members have been crisscrossing the country this year
preaching nonviolent alternatives to the Baghdad street-fighting
scenarios being aired in Washington. Some members also have visited
Afghanistan to meet with families who lost loved ones during the U.S.
bombing campaign to oust the Taliban regime and Osama bin Laden's
terrorist network.

  Their pacifist stance has surprised and angered those who thought
revenge and retaliation the only sane response to 9/11. But group
members say they don't want their personal tragedies used to justify
more bloodshed. "We don't really want to live with Saddam Hussein in
charge of Iraq," Campbell says. "On the other hand, what's the price of
killing a whole bunch of other people to get rid of Saddam Hussein?
That is not going to make us any safer in this country. It is going to
promote terrorism, if anything."

  Activists acknowledge that "make love, not war" can be a pretty tough
sell when Americans still live in fear of stepping on commercial
jetliners or taking a high-rise elevator. But David Krieger, founder
and president of the Santa Barbara-based Nuclear Age Peace Foundation,
predicts that more people will find the nerve to speak out for peace if
war draws nigh.

  "Many Americans have felt reasonably comfortable with going after Al
Qaeda and the Taliban," he says, "but I think doubts crept in with the
number of civilians that have been killed in Afghanistan. And I think
now, shifting gears to Iraq, that's a disconnect for many, many
people."

Young Recruits

  Despite the grizzled image some have of it, the peace movement gained
new recruits during the prosperous, relatively peaceful '90s from young
people who came to the cause via environmental and
globalization-related issues, says Jeff Guntzel, 27, co-coordinator of
Voices in the Wilderness, a 6-year-old Chicago-based group.

  "Some of these folks are experienced in the anti-globalization
movement, and bring a new environmental awareness that we're wanting to
build on," he says. "But it has to go further than that."

  Guntzel says that Voices in the Wilderness devotes its resources less
to marching and picketing than to bearing witness to acts of war and
human rights violations. It also tries to be a conduit for anecdotal,
firsthand reports from areas of conflict and strife, the kind of
e-mail-like, personalized reportage that isn't always available from
the mass media. "We want to kind of learn the lesson of the first Gulf
War, when there was such a black hole of information coming on Iraq,"
Guntzel says.

  Since 1996 the group has sponsored four dozen trips to Iraq by
members bearing small quantities of medicine--technically in violation
of U.N. sanctions that bar trade with the regime.

  "I had been to a protest here and there, but I was always frustrated
by protests because I felt like it didn't give me the right venue for
discussing an important issue," Guntzel continues. "I'm very
anti-slogan."

  Looking at this new generation of activists, professor Jensen
suggests that popular perceptions of the peace movement need updating.
"There's an image in people's minds of what a left-progressive
political activist is: a young person with green hair and multiple
piercings out in the streets of Seattle throwing rocks," he says,
referring to demonstrations against the World Trade Organization
meeting in Seattle in 1999. "These movements are much more complex,
much more deep."

  Jensen believes that the current movement against war with Iraq
comprises at least three distinct elements: traditional American peace
groups rooted in faith traditions, such as the Quakers; the
left-progressive wing of American politics; and Muslims and people of
Middle Eastern heritage.

  So far, he believes, serious, informed debate over the possibility of
war has been stifled by a simplistic mass-media culture and a quiescent
Democratic Party. "No one in the peace movement that I know really
looks to the Democratic Party to kind of carry the banner for a global
justice movement," he says.

  Some question whether the American left even functions as the peace
movement's base camp anymore. In an essay in the Aug. 23 issue of the
Nation, Adam Shatz observed that the 9/11 attacks and their aftermath
had created a crisis for the American left, wrecking intellectual
friendships and causing rifts not seen since the McCarthy-Stalin era.

  "What the left needs to cultivate is an intelligent synthesis, one
that recognizes that the United States has a role to play in the world
while also warning of an imperial foreign policy," Shatz wrote.

  With or without the Democratic Party, the Old Left, the New Left,
love beads, the Port Huron Statement or the collected works of Herbert
Marcuse, the American peace movement has leapt into the post-9/11
political fray. And what's wrong, some ask, with having a peace
movement that's made up of many different pieces and no clear leaders
or spokespersons?

  Krieger, briefly at home in Santa Barbara last week before heading
off to address an Indiana church group, argues that going to war or not
going to war shouldn't be a decision left only to preachers,
professional agitators and the relative few in any generation willing
to take a controversial stand or take to the streets. "I don't think
it's the responsibility of peace organizations to provide a conscience
for people," he says. "It's a responsibility that we all share in a
democracy." 
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