Monday, November 12, 2007

Statement of Solidarity for the Columbia Hunger Strikers


As fellow students, we look on with deep moral outrage as the administration of Columbia University callously harms the students, faculty and members of the community that the university is designed to help. Its goal of displacing thousands of Harlem residents and its inability to provide an atmosphere opposing bigotry has greatly saddened many onlookers across the country, defaming the school’s reputation and hurting its image. We are dismayed that the core curriculum lacks viewpoints suppressed by Western thought. We are also dismayed that the university took no stance against a noose being hung on an African Studies professor's door.

It is for this reason that we throw our full support behind the hunger strike being conducted at Columbia. The brave students sacrificing for a just university are not alone. We recognize that universities need the compliance of the students to function. As a result, it is the moral imperative of the students to tell their administration that their university will not function with their silence. We support the efforts of the Columbia Students who are voicing everyone’s concern at the present situation.

Members of Rutgers Against the War supported Columbia students in their protest against David Horowitz and his “Islamo-facism Awareness Week.” We stand with them now when they are sacrificing their bodies to send a message to the world that our universities will not be used as a tool of oppression, propaganda, and bigotry. We will continue to support the hunger strikers with information, solidarity rallies and whatever else is required until justice prevails at Columbia University.

Signed,
Rutgers Against the War

Wednesday, October 10, 2007

Some Reflections on the “Marching Home” Conference (Rutgers University Oct. 5-7)












(From Left) Jimmy Massey and Suzan Sanal
Picture by Maggie Astor (copyright)


After months of work raising money, finding speakers, preparing the logistics and doing outreach, the Marching Home Conference began. It was immediately apparent that this event was different from any other event Rutgers Against the War (RAW) had ever organized. Shortly before the event, RAW was notified that Amy Goodman had developed bells palsy. Yet even without her, the initial speaker, Iraq War veteran and former military recruiter Jimmy Massey, drew over 125 people as well as the press.

Though the event was largely attended and publicized in various press outlets, the Friday presentation was only the precursor for the conference. Throughout the conference, community activist, members of Iraq Veterans Against the War, Veterans for Peace, Campus Antiwar Network members (UPenn, Cornell, NYU, Columbia, CCNY, and The College of New Jersey) as well as SDS students from Delaware converged on New Brunswick.


On Saturday morning a plenary convened a ceremony to remember Dave Cline. In front of a display of pictures, a helmet and an m16, two members of Veterans for Peace spoke about their involvement with Dave. They stressed his participation in forming Vietnam Veterans Against the War and brought up the fact that Charlie Sheen’s character in Platoon was based on Dave. The inspirational message of veterans who brought an end to a war resonated with the crowd and brought a segue into the panel.


Titled “A discussion of the Iraq War Inside the Military”, the panel included Iraq War Veterans Liam Madden and Logan Laituri, as well as Retired Colonel Ann Wright. It was moderated by Iraq War veteran Patrick Resta. They talked about the horror that they witnessed in Iraq, the hardship of veterans speaking out, and the difficulty of adjusting to life back in the United States.



(from Left)Liam Madden, Patrick Resta,
Logan Laituri, Ann Wright
Picture by Keith Krebs (copyright)

At 11:30, the workshops commenced:

THE HUMANITARIAN COSTS IN IRAQ with Dr. Dahlia Wasfi, Iraqi-American doctor who testified before Congress on conditions inside Iraq.


Dahlia Wasfi - Picture by Keith Krebs (copyright)


NAVIGATING THE VA: HOW TO GET WHAT YOU DESERVE. with Bill Perry, Vietnam War Combat Veteran, Delaware Valley Veterans for America.

COMING HOME: TRANSITION AND POST-TRAUMATIC STRESS DISORDER with Iraq War Veteran Patrick Resta, nationally certified vet services officer from After the War, Inc.

EFFECTS OF DEPLETED URANIUM EXPOSURE with Dr. Thomas Fasy, a pathologist at Mt. Sinai School of Medicine and an expert on depleted uranium.

MILITARY RECRUITMENT AND YOUTH with Oskar Castro, American Friends Service Committee Coordinator of Militarism and Youth and Sue Niederer, Gold Star Families Speak Out and mother of US Army 1st Lt. Seth Dvorin, a 2002 graduated from Rutgers with a degree in criminal justice, who was killed In Iraq in 2004.
(From Left) Oskar Castro and Sue Niederer - Picture by Maggie Astor (copyright)
THE ECONOMIC IMPACT OF THE WAR with Larry Hamm from People's Organization for Progress in Newark.

GI RESISTANCE IN VIETNAM with Richard Moser, author of The New Winter Soldiers: GI and Veteran Dissent during the Vietnam Era and, Greg Payton, Vietnam veteran and international peace and comunity activist.
(from left) Greg Payton and Rich Moser
Picture by Keith Krebs (Copyright)

CONSCIENCIOUS OBJECTION with Logan Laituri, Iraq War veteran, conscientious objector, and member of Iraq Veterans Against the War

WOMEN IN THE MILITARY with U.S. Army Colonel Janis Karpinski, the former head of Abu Ghraib Prison and retired US Army Reserve Colonel Ann Wright. (Video: http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-5100449571583041948&q=janis+karpinski+marching+home&total=1&start=0&num=10&so=0&type=search&plindex=0)

HIGH SCHOOLS AND MILITARY RECRUITMENT with Maggie Astor, Counter-recruitment Coordinator of New Jersey Peace Action.

RACE AND THE MILITARY with Margaret Stevens, Army veteran and representative of Iraq Veterans Against the War.

COLLEGE CAMPUSES AND MILITARY RECRUITMENT with Ian Chinich and Justino Rodriguez of Campus Antiwar Network.
OUTREACH TO SOLDIERS with Tod Ensign, director of Citizen Soldier, Liam Madden, co-founder of Appeal for Redress, and Ellen Whitt, Central Jersey Coalition Against Endless War.
Liam Madden
Picture by Keith Krebs (copyright)

WAR TAX RESISTANCE with Bryan Nelson, war tax resister, Ed Hedeman, author of War Tax Resistance, and Ruth Benn, National War Tax Resistance Coordinating Committee.


PROTEST AND STUDENT RIGHTS with Steven Latimer, attorney with the American Civil Liberties Union

MILITARY FAMILIES SPEAK OUT with Kay Jones and Anna Berlinrut of Military Families Speak Out

The NJ chapter of Veterans for Peace held their state-wide meeting while the rest of the participants adjourned to dinner.

Once the participants had returned from dinner networking, they were treated to a political concert comprising Remo Concious, Evan Greer, and Son of Nun. The concert brought out many additional Rutgers students who had not participated in the conference and who were called to action by the artists. Many of the new concert goers threw up their fists in solidarity and student power while singing along to “Hey FEMA, FUCK YOU!” and “Free Free Palestine!” The party that followed drew many non-activist students into political discussions and networking. Several New Brunswick veterans spoke about forming a chapter of Iraq Veterans Against the War.
On Sunday, over 70 Vets, Students, and Community members gathered in the Graduate Students Lounge to strategize on a way forward. The session was led by a veteran and a member of Rutgers Against the War/ Campus Antiwar Network. It produced strategies for helping the GI antiwar/resistance movement as well as strategies for building the student antiwar movement. Civil disobedience was also talked about at some length with much agreement over the potential of its future use.

IVAW bus parked at Rutgers - Picture taken by Elena Callahan

"Marching Home" was the first time that a weekend long conference had been dedicated by student and community members purely to the growth of the veterans movement. Conference organizers remain confident that this movement will grow larger and eventually put an end to the wars being fought as well as the culture of war.

Monday, September 10, 2007

Marching Home Conference

Marching Home: A Conference on the Iraq War & Its Consequences for Veterans

Friday, October 5, 7:00PM – Sunday, October 7, 1:00PM
Rutgers University, New Brunswick


For information and registration: www.MarchingHome.org

Description
Marching Home is the first major conference on the Iraq War that is focusing on veterans' experiences and issues, with dynamic workshops to bring together veterans, students, and community members.It opens FRIDAY NIGHT with notable Iraq War Veteran, former marine and military recruiter, Jimmy Massey.

SATURDAY is being kicked off with an Opening Plenary on the Discussion of the War Inside the Military with Liam Madden, co-founder of Appeal for Redress, a campaign of military service members to halt the war, and retired Colonel and former diplomat Ann Wright who resigned in protest against the invasion of Iraq. This will be followed by a number of workshops including: "Navigating the VA: How to get what you deserve," “Coming Home: Transition and PTSD”, "Military Recruitment and Youth," "Women and the Military” with former Brigadier General Janis Karpinski, "Effects of Depleted Uranium," “The Humanitarian Costs in Iraq” and many more (see the website for a complete listing).SATURDAY NIGHT, 8:00PM Remo Conscious, Evan Greer, and Son of Nun are droppin beats not bombs at a free live concert hosted by Universol.SUNDAY, we will have a strategy session where vets, students, and others can talk to each other and set goals.There will be food!

Please reserve your spot by October 1. Register online at http://www.marchinghome.org/ Coming from afar or planning on staying the weekend? Contact us about possible housing options at MarchingHomeConference@yahoo.com.

Sponsored by Rutgers Against the War, Central Jersey Coalition Against Endless War, and others. See website for complete listing of sponsors and endorsers.