Bouteflicka

  • Bouteflika Wants You
    Photos of President Bouteflicka and his cult of personality campaign.

Assad

  • Syrian Border - Dual Portaits
    Photos of Hafez Assad and his son Bashar Assad are festooned all over Syria and Lebanon. This gallery documents how a cult-of-personality for the Assads has been established by the Syrian regime in both countries. The photos come from a variety of sources.

September 25, 2007

Little Rock Integration: 50 Years Later

Flav1 A half-century ago today, 1,000 troops from the 101st Airborne Division deployed... to Little Rock, Arkansas. Their mission: ensure nine black teenagers could enter Central High School to attend classes. The "insurgents" they faced: an unruly mob of angry whites. Arkansas Governor Orval Faubus had decided not to protect the black students, whose mere presence in the school was deemed a cultural assault. So the president reluctantly sent soldiers to escort the teenagers.

The whole drama played out on TV, and Americans followed each development every night on the news as the stand-off dragged on for weeks. Every morning, the "Little Rock Nine" were accompanied by troops past a gauntlet of screaming whites into the doors of Central High. Less than 100 years after the end of the Civil War between North and South, it seemed that political tensions could boil over into full-on confrontation again.

Fifty years later, it seems a lot of sound and fury over a most trivial matter. The rage of the mobs looks insane. The high-pitch tensions between the Arkansas authorities and the President look so outdated. And the notion that the nine black students wouldn't be allowed into class seems ridiculous.

Or does it?

July 14, 2007

8th Anniversary of the Iranian Student Uprising

A retrospective on this week's anniversary:

Iran1 The July 9, 1999 Tehran student rebellion was the single most important movement against the Islamic Republic government. The student movement had steadily got more and more furious against the useless Islamic government who had failed to bring about any changes, even under the name of Khatami’s ‘reformist government’.The students were ready to rebel against the fundamentalist dictatorship. This regime had taken away every beautiful thing from their life.

The July 9 rebellion was triggered by a series of events, including the closing down of the popular reformist newspaper “Salam”. A number of students were key figures in starting the protests however all student groups and movements united together quicker than anyone had thought of, resulting in the sudden attack of the police and the security forces, as well as repeated attacks by the Ansar-e Hezbollah militia who came, killed, and handed what was rest of the freedom loving students of Tehran to take to torture camps at the notorious Evin prison.

The streets near the Tehran University campus were filled by riot police, burnt cars, and Ansar-e Hezbollah thugs who came on motorbikes in series of attacks - they used whatever weapon they had (mainly chains, but also with batons, guns), and did whatever they wanted. The riot police stood back and watched as the huge number of students came in human waves and scared the revolutionary guards away.

The protest in the end was crushed. Will the next round of protest meet a similar fate?

June 17, 2007

Justice 43 Years Late in Civil Rights Murder

A former member of the Klu Klux Klan has been convicted of murdering two black teenagers back in 1964, at the height of the civil rights struggle in the US. It's a sign of hope that perhaps those perpetrating civil rights abuses today will eventually face justice:

A jury on Thursday convicted reputed Klansman James Ford Seale of kidnapping and conspiracy in the 1964 deaths of two black teenagers in southwest Mississippi, grisly drownings that went unpunished before federal prosecutors re-examined the forgotten case.

Seale, 71, faces life in prison in the deaths of Charles Eddie Moore and Henry Hezekiah Dee. The 19-year-olds disappeared from Franklin County on May 2, 1964, and their bodies were found later in the Mississippi River...

Edwards testified that Dee and Moore were stuffed, alive, into the trunk of Seale's Volkswagen and driven to a farm. They were later tied up and driven across the Mississippi River into Louisiana, Edwards said, and Seale told him that Dee and Moore were attached to heavy weights and dumped alive into the river...

Lampton described for the jury how Dee and Moore were hitchhiking, stopped by Klansmen and taken to a forest where they were beaten. Klansmen were trying to find out if blacks were bringing firearms into Franklin County, Lampton said.

The killings of Moore and Dee are among several decades-old civil rights cases reopened by federal investigators. In February, federal officials announced they were reopening investigations into about a dozen such cases.

May 05, 2007

Segregated Prom: Change Long Time in Coming

Granted the thought of even holding a prom in countries like Iran or Saudi Arabia seems unfathomable (right now), but in one Georgia town the public high-school prom has been until last month a civil rights disgrace. The story out of Ashburn, Georgia, shows just how long change can take - and even then can remain incomplete. Check it:

Prom Students of Turner County High School started what they hope will become a new tradition: Black and white students attended the prom together for the first time on Saturday. In previous years, parents had organized private, segregated dances for students of the school in rural Ashburn, Georgia, 160 miles south of Atlanta

"Whites always come to this one and blacks always go to this one," said Lacey Adkinson, a 14-year-old freshman at the school of 455 students -- 55 percent black, 43 percent white... But this year's upperclassmen -- 213 students total --voted to have just one official prom.

"It's been a dream of all of ours," Senior Class President James Hall said. "We didn't want to put emphasis on integrated blacks and whites coming together. We just wanted to put emphasis on this was our first school prom," Principal Chad Stone said...

Another tradition that ended this year -- having two separate homecoming queens. "You pick the homecoming queen for their personalities and being a role model," explained Roshunda Pierce, 16, as she waited to get her nails done for prom. In the past, two queens were chosen -- one white, one black...

But not everyone in the town of 4,400, famous for its peanuts and Fire Ant Festival, was breaking with the past. The "white prom" still went on last week.

"We did everything like a regular prom just because we had already booked it," said, Cheryl Nichols, 18, who attended the dance. Nichole Royal, 18, said black students could have gone to the prom, but didn't...

Valerie McKellar echoed that sentiment as she watched white and black students pose together. "That is so fake. There is nothing real about that," she said. "That's just like you're cooking a half-baked cake, putting the icing on it, and when you cut the cake, the cake ain't no good. That's how this prom is," she said. McKellar said the prom was a good step, but more needs to be done. "There is a time and season for all things, and right now it's time for Turner County to make a change..."

Inside the auditorium, students put the controversy aside and danced for hours... Aneisha Gipson, who was crowned prom queen, said the night could not have been better. "Amazing. It was absolutely amazing. It was perfect."

It's taken over 40 years, but at last the prom in this Georgia County is desegregated, even if not everyone attends. Congratulations to prom queen Aneisha Gipson!

January 30, 2007

Where Rosa Parks Sat

Care of the National Archives in Washington comes this diagram of where Rosa Parks sat on the bus in Montgomery, Alabama one day in 1955. If you look closely, her seat was not at the very front of the bus. But it was far enough. And that made all the difference.

January 15, 2007

MLKing Jr. - the young activist

Americans today celebrate the birthday of Martin Luther King, Jr.  Here he is at age 34 in front of hundreds of thousands at the Lincoln Memorial during the March on Washington:

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And here he is seven years earlier during his first foray into activism, as a 27-year-old leading a bus boycott in Montgomery. This mug shot from his arrest in February of 1956 was recently discovered in the archives of the police department. Someone there clearly delighted in King's assassination 12 years later.

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He looks so young.

October 30, 2006

A Lunch Counter Monument to Inspire Us

Check out the story behind his seemingly bizarre public statue in Kansas:

Counter1

In Wichita, Kansas, near the corner of Broadway and Douglas, there is a small plaza tucked in between two buildings. On one wall of the plaza is a sculpture of a lunch counter with several people sitting at it. It's so very life-like that in nice weather people routinely sit down on the empty stools to eat their lunches at the counter. There is no plaque to explain the sculpture.

If there were, that plaque would note that on July 19, 1958, several black teenagers, members of the local NAACP chapter, entered the downtown Dockum Drug Store (then the largest drug store chain in the state) and sat down at the lunch counter. They were ignored. They kept coming back and sitting at the counter, from before lunch through the dinner hour, at least twice a week for the next several weeks. They sat quietly, creating no disturbance, but refusing to leave without being served.

The store tried to wait them out by ignoring them. They kept coming back and sitting there, silently, day after day, waiting to be served. On one occasion three police officers tried to coerce and intimidate the teenagers to leave, and succeeded. But they came back, and the police did not return. They were breaking no law, only a store policy, and the store was not willing to challenge them directly.

A group of local white toughs came by trying to intimidate them. The police were called to break it up but left immediately without challenging the whites, saying they had instructions to keep their hands off. After an emergency phone call a group of local black men arrived, armed, to defend the protesters. The white youths retreated, leaving the store.

And the young people kept coming back and sitting there at the lunch counter, silently, day after day, waiting to be served.

They asked for help and support from the national NAACP, but the national organization refused to endorse or even acknowledge their actions. The confrontational tactic was against NAACP policy. The national newswires picked it up and the story ran nationwide, but quickly vanished.

On August 11, while the early arrivals were sitting at the counter waiting for their friends to show, a white man around 40 walked in and looked at them for several minutes. Then he looked at the store manager, and said, simply, "Serve them. I'm losing too much money." He then walked back out. That man was the owner of the Dockum drug store chain...

Something important started there in Wichita near the corner of Broadway and Douglas. Those who started it were almost forgotten by history. Almost, but not quite. And today, on a small plaza tucked in between two buildings in downtown Wichita, Kansas is a sculpture of a lunch counter with several people sitting at it. It has no plaque to explain it.

February 09, 2006

Can a Video Game Spark a Movement?

In less than two weeks, the video game "A Force More Powerful" will be released:

A unique collaboration of experts on nonviolent conflict working with veteran game designers has developed a simulation game that teaches the strategy of nonviolent conflict. A dozen scenarios, inspired by recent history, include conflicts against dictators, occupiers, colonizers, and corrupt regimes, as well as struggles to secure the political and human rights of ethnic and racial minorities and women.

A Force More Powerful is the first and only game to teach the waging of conflict using nonviolent methods. Destined for use by activists and leaders of nonviolent resistance and opposition movements, the game will also educate the media and general public on the potential of nonviolent action and serve as a simulation tool for academic studies of nonviolent resistance.

The civil rights struggle, of course, is no game. But simulations can only help strategic planning. The development of this game is just the latest sign that civil rights activists have more tools at their disposal than any time in history.

January 16, 2006

MLK Jr. and Civil Rights in the Middle East

Ok, so this post's title sounds like the title of a mediocre college term paper. But check out some semi-random thoughts on the holiday Americans celebrate today in light of contemporary repression in the Middle East. Think about what sounds eerily familiar today.

Mlk_2 The problem MLK faced in 1955:
Enormous obstacles stood before anyone seeking to challenge the repressive status quo. Antagonism – fueled by harsh legal repression, horrifying violence, and debilitating social ostracism – was compounded by apathy from free people on the outside. The result: abdication by decent people living in freedom.

A Region Frozen in Repression: In 1963, King opened the third chapter of his new book Why We Can’t Wait by describing a time-warp: “If you had visited Birmingham before the third of April in the one-hundredth-anniversary year of the Negro’s emancipation… you might have concluded that here was a city which had been trapped for decades in a Rip Van Winkle slumber; a city whose fathers had apparently never heard of Abraham Lincoln, Thomas Jefferson, the Bill of Rights, the Preamble to the Constitution, the Thirteenth, Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments, or the 1954 decision of the United States Supreme Court outlawing segregation in the public schools.”

Understanding the Human Experience of Repression: King challenged his readers to experience this time warp from the standpoint of a young black growing up inside it. “If your powers of imagination were great enough to enable you to place yourself in the position of a Negro baby born and brought up to physical maturity in Birmingham…” was his kick-off for a litany of degradations and obstacles faced in the struggle for civil rights, including

  • the banning of civic organizations like the NAACP (National Association for the Advancement of Colored People), which Alabama’s attorney general in 1956 declared an illegal “foreign corporation” and fined $100,000;
  • the on-going denial of blacks’ right to vote;
  • 17 unsolved bomb attacks against blacks in “Bombingham, Alabama” (most targeting churches and private homes) and the recent castration of a black man;
  • Eugene “Bull” Connor, Birmingham’s Commissioner of Public Safety, who in 1958 crushed a quiet demonstration of 12 black college students by instructing police to detain, fingerprint, and warn the students to “be good”;
  • the arrest of a white bus station manager in 1961 for daring to serve blacks who flaunted the segregation regulations of the station’s café;
  • the public silence of decent white citizens, a “silence born of fear – fear of social, political and economic reprisals.”
  • "You would," King concluded, "be living in the largest city of a police state."

The failure of compassionate whites to confront repressive leaders: “I must confess that over the past few years I have been gravely disappointed with the white moderate,” King wrote in his 1963 “Letter from a Birmingham Jail.” Though concerned about abuses, the moderate “is more devoted to ‘order’ than to justice… prefers a negative peace which is the absence of tension… [and] paternalistically believes he can set the timetable for another man’s freedom.”

Birmingham63_4 Conventional Wisdom Cautioned Against Advocating for Change: The Washington Post dismissed King's 1963 campaign against segregation in Birmingham as “untimely” because many local blacks and liberal white clergymen saw the protest as inflaming tensions just when the city seemed to be making progress. A New York Times editorial observed that enlightenment would not come to Birmingham “overnight” and that King “ought not to expect it either.”

Winging It: King identified the problem of civil rights repression and quickly became an icon of the struggle to end it. But that didn't mean he had a clear plan from the beginning. During the spring of 1956, in the heat of the Montgomery boycott, King traveled to New York for his first northern fundraiser. 10,000 people turned out to hear him at Concord Baptist Church and contributed $4,000 toward the boycott. But privately the 27-year-old King struggled to make sense of what was happening. After his presentation, he huddled privately with Harry Belafonte, who had just recorded the calypso hit single “Day-o.” King sought to enlist Belafonte’s support, but confided his deep fears. “I need your help,” King confessed. “I have no idea where this movement is going.”

The solution MLK helped advance: Despite all the obstacles, small pockets of activists began to confront injustice and indifference. They struggled in several states, initially without grand ambitions or a long-term strategy. Eventually they united to adopt a philosophy of non-violence and slowly opened up civil society. Despite many setbacks, they persisted and after years of struggle broke the back of institutional repression to secure basic civil rights.

Outside support: The movement relied on outside support, mostly from young people. Some wrote checks, some wrote letters, and some left behind the safety of home to march beside activists in the civil rights desert. Their financial contributions, raised voices, and physical presence provided vital air cover for the indigenous civil rights movement. Though denounced as outside agitators, they felt compelled to use their freedom to help liberate those democracy had left behind. They led, and their government followed.

Observations on the Middle East: King only visited the Middle East briefly in 1959 and rarely addressed the region. Holding out hope for “progressive Arab forces,” he did observe that “some Arab feudal rulers… neglect the plight of their own peoples” and that the “Arab world is in a state of imposed poverty and backwardness that must threaten peace and harmony.”

Do King's perceptive comments about the Middle East's repressive forces and their threat to "peace and harmony" make you depressed at how little has changed? Or does the fact that King largely succeeded in his struggle (with all the caveats of work remaining to be done in the United States) inspire you? Is there a model here to draw upon for techniques and moral encouragement?

January 15, 2006

How the Montgomery Method Works

A page from the Montgomery Bus Boycott comic book:

"First, remember that you can do something about the situation. Not just the government, or so some big organization, but you..."

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