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Students Keep Peace Vigil for Iraq

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  • Students Keep Peace Vigil for Iraq

    Harvard Crimson, MA
    Feb 9 2005


    Students Keep Peace Vigil for Iraq

    By JENNIFER XIN-JIA ZHANG
    Contributing Writer


    Every Wednesday at noon, in sun, rain or heavy snow, about 30 people
    congregate at the John Harvard statue for a few minutes, but they are
    not tourists. They have gathered to discuss the war in Iraq.
    Their meetings, commonly known as the Harvard-Cambridge Walk for
    Peace, generally begin with five to 15 minutes of discussion about
    the most recent events in the war: attacks in Fallujah, uproar over
    the first elections, handing over authority to a provisional Iraqi
    government, or the latest bit of American reporting on the subject.
    Afterwards, the group walks silently around Harvard Yard, single
    file, each person holding up a sign with the name of someone who has
    been killed in Iraq.

    And since last May, the Walk for Peace has attracted high-profile
    liberal speakers like Howard Zinn, James Carroll, and Noam Chomsky.
    Most recently, Plummer Professor of Christian Morals and Pusey
    Minister in Memorial Church Peter J. Gomes offered a pacifistic plea
    despite the January snow.

    Steven B. Bloomfield '77, associate director of the Weatherhead
    Center for International Affairs, decided to organize the weekly walk
    nine months ago as a response to the Abu Ghraib scandals.

    "I had a moment of conscience in which I was reacting to the Abu
    Ghraib prison torture and abuse that Americans were perpetrating,"
    Bloomfield says. "I came to think it was a behavior that needed to be
    recognized, there needed to be a public coming together of people,
    and the awareness that the people of Arab nations were not being
    served by these acts."

    Bloomfield contacted his colleagues and friends. News of the group
    has since spread by word of mouth and e-mails over house lists. Soon,
    participants as diverse as Harvard undergraduates, members of
    Veterans for Peace, and Harvard faculty and staff began to show up.

    The meetings are not loud, but rather a moment for students and other
    members of the Harvard community to contemplate the events overseas,
    and share their thoughts with like-minded people.

    "Each little step might not make much of a difference, but its the
    cumulative effect that does. If nothing's done, then the war will
    never stop," says Eva S. Moseley, a Cantabrigian who has been a
    regular participant in the walk for peace since last summer.

    "It reminds anyone who sees us and gets the message that not all
    Americans are behind whats happening in Iraq. I hope that it helps to
    give people the courage to speak out," she adds.

    Daphne Abeel, a reporter for the Armenian Mirror-Spectator and a
    parishioner of Reverend Gomes, attended her first Walk for Peace on
    Jan. 26 to hear him speak.

    "I opposed the war from the very beginning and I took part in much
    larger protests prior to what I call 'the invasion,'" she says.

    While Abeel says that she has noticed fewer students than she would
    have expected, and has been surprised by the lack of involvement by
    many undergraduates, Bloomfield commented that certain speakers drew
    a larger turnout.

    When Zinn spoke last June, Bloomfield estimated that at least 90
    people came to listen and walk. Zinn was delivering an address about
    the transference of power to Iraqi authorities, as well as the
    historical significance of student movements, according to
    Bloomfield.

    On the whole, however, Bloomfield feels that undergraduate
    participation is an area where we need to grow.

    Participation by Harvard students has been low, says Henry G. Walters
    06, adding that only about two or three Harvard undergraduates come
    regularly, despite weekly e-mail announcements.

    "I know a lot of students were critical of the war in Iraq, or
    willing to be critical during a dinner conversation, but I wish that
    more of them would carry their opinions outside the safety of their
    houses," he says. "We can deplore suffering and we can deplore the
    loss of a life, but I think that we have to keep this as a part of
    our everyday consciousness."

    Walters says that the weekly walk is ultimately more contemplative
    than political for him. He does not consider himself a pacifist in
    general, but says that these vigils allow him a moment of
    contemplation about the suffering occurring overseas.

    "I think its very easy to get caught up in the bubble of school and
    not ever have time to think seriously, and I think this offers a
    chance to do that," Walters says.

    Bloomfield says that he hopes that his walk for peace will spread
    more widely throughout the Boston-Cambridge area. He has no plan to
    stop the gatherings in the foreseeable future.

    He says that the seeds are already planted for similar gatherings at
    Boston University, Boston College, and Suffolk University, where
    vigils are also held likewise every Wednesday at noon.


    Feb 9 2005
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