|
March to End the War in Iraq - January 27, 2007 Poets Turned out in Droves! Special bulletin: Read a report of high school student poets who marched with DC PAW: www.archbishopcarroll.com/published/student_life/peace_in_three_moments.html Watch a short video of poets at the demonstration, by Cloudy Day Art,here. Thanks to the incredible organizing energy and vision of Melissa Tuckey, the poets were out in droves, with spirit and verve, at Saturday's march. We joined at least 100,000 other Americans calling for an end to this illegal and immoral war. What a privilege and a joy to be there! We topped off the day with a spectacular reading by poets from near and far. Read Melissa's report of the day below. Be sure to read to the end for her call to get involved. Only together can we end this war! Go to our Flickr page for more photos: www.flickr.com/groups/dcpaw Read the lines of poetry the poets carried through the streets here.
The sign makers. Photo by Sarah Browning
Melissa Tuckey, signs. Photo by Dave Phillips Ben Browning, son of DC PAW Coordinator Sarah Browning. Photo by Neil Hertz "A poet is the gardener and the blight, poetry is beauty and dissent."
Sarah Browning & Melissa Tuckey. Photo by Ben Browning We gathered again at the corner of 4th and Madison on the Mall, as part of the Arts Bloc (alive with puppets and drums), where we were joined by too many poets to list here, including Martin Espada and his wife Katherine, who had made beautiful signs with photos of poets and their quotes and poetry handbills for the protest. We were joined by Ethelbert Miller, Esther Iverem, Joseph Ross and two other teachers and students from Archbishop Carroll High School, Will Brown, who interviewed some of the poets for his poetry podcast (more news on that to follow), Henry Braun and his friend Tom Bulger from Maine, Terry Murko from Ohio, William Kennedy, also from Ohio, Jody Bolz, Eric Pankey, Jennifer Atkinson, Susan Tichy, and many, many more!
Photo by Ben Browning Once the march began, we poets (each marching to a different beat) filtered out into the loud and colorful crowd. It was difficult to stay together and we found ourselves moving with the march, meeting one another here and there, calling each other on cell phones, running into old friends we haven't seen in years, becoming one with the rest of the protest. Next time we'll walk behind a banner and hopefully that will make it easy to stay together. Either way, it was wonderful to see poetry walking among the slogans and signs.
Photo by Ben Browning
Esther Iverem and her son Mazi. Photo by Ben Browning
Sign by Katherine Gilbert-Espada. Photo by Ben Browning
Bert Neri (with Neruda) and Judy McCombs. Photo by Ben Browning
The poets gather on the Mall. Photo by Ben Browning
Sam Bell with his own poetry. Photo by Ben Browning We rejoined one another again in the evening for a lively and inspiring reading at Busboy and Poets. We began the reading with our featured reader, Martin Espada, poet/activist extraordanaire, author, editor, translator. Martin's reading was passionate and spirited and the readers who followed were equally alive and present.
Photo by Ben Browning The reading was videotaped - YAY! Thanks to the Institute for Policy Studies for lending us the equiptment, Heather Holliger for taping, and Nathaniel Kerksick for help with editing.
You can read the lines of poetry the poets carried through the streets here.
Read about the poets contingent at the September 24, 2005, demonstration! Note: To inquire about having DC Poets Against the War read at your event or collaborate on a project, please contact Melissa at: melissa.dcpaw@gmail.com |
|
All text and images & copy 2003, DC Poets Against the War.
Site designed by Nicole M. Lucier. |