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The Family-Friendly Easter Bomb Hunt
Near the White House, Activists Lacing the Fun With a Political Message
WASHINGTON - Seven-year-old Alvin Mitchell worked intently yesterday on what looked to be a blue balloon wrapped around a tennis ball. It was a fake version of a cluster bomb, and the real thing, he pronounced, can "blow you up and kill you."The fake bombs Alvin and a dozen other children were making at a peace workshop will be put to use Monday in Lafayette Square. As hundreds attend the White House Easter Egg Roll on the South Lawn, a smaller group will gather at the park on the north side for what is being billed as a "family-friendly Easter cluster-bomb hunt."
It used to be that an Easter egg hunt was just an Easter egg hunt. It had no message beyond cute kids playing with colored eggs. Now the venerable White House Easter Egg Roll, which dates to the 1870s, has become an occasion for at least two groups to make a statement that is as much about politics as it is about the spring holiday.
"Obviously, we're trying to spoof a little bit what will be happening on the South Lawn," said Brian Hennessey of the Vineeta Foundation, a local human rights group founded in 1995 that is the lead sponsor of the cluster-bomb hunt. "We're not trying to hit kids over the head with this; we want them to have fun. We also want to bring attention to the fact that our munitions cause a lot of death and destruction to civilians, especially children."
Last year, gay and lesbian parents were in the media spotlight, when a group of about 100 families donned rainbow-colored leis and waited in the overnight line for egg roll tickets. Their goal was visibility. "Our families just want to participate in a great American tradition," said Jennifer Chrisler, executive director of the Family Pride Coalition, the group that led the effort.
This year, about 100 families again plan to attend, with considerably less hoopla. "The fact that there is less of a frenzy or outcry about our participation is a good thing," Chrisler said.
She said she understands why the White House event attracts groups with agendas to promote. "I think the fact of the matter is, politics has gotten infused into a lot of parts of American lives," she said. "This is a White House that has been fairly unresponsive to the sentiments of its people, and I'm not surprised that folks are going to great lengths to get the president's attention."
Hennessey acknowledged that the cluster-bomb hunt invites criticism from some areas. He said he has reported "threats of violence," found on a right-wing Web site, to the U.S. Park Police.
"This is supposed to be funny," he said about the hunt. "We're not trying to be confrontational. We're not going to be in anyone's face. People are welcome to reject what we say or think about it."
He said he has read a few comments from people wondering if it is right to expose children to thoughts of bombings and death when all they are after is a pleasant holiday experience. "I think a more important question is whether we should be exposing other people's children to these bombs," he said.
Cluster bombs, in which a larger weapon releases several hundred smaller bombs that might explode or linger on the ground as landmines, continue to maim and kill civilians around the world, he said. In February, Sens. Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.) and Patrick J. Leahy (D-Vt.) introduced legislation that would ban the use of American-made cluster bombs in civilian areas. The U.S. bombs reportedly have been used in a number of countries, including Iraq, Laos, Lebanon and the former Yugoslavia.
Hennessey said he got the idea for the Easter hunt at the March 17 antiwar rally at the Pentagon. As he stood on the stage and looked out at hundreds of like-minded protesters, "I realized we were preaching to the choir," he said.
He set about to organize the Lafayette Square event, hoping to draw participants from the 40,000 people the Park Service estimates will be in the immediate area Monday. Other peace groups, such as Code Pink and the Coalition for Justice and Accountability, came onboard.
"When you look at the message of Easter, it's about life and love and peace," said Linda Schade, executive director of Voters for Peace, another co-sponsor. "We're trying to emphasize how our actions are not in step with our values."
The event, which runs from 8 a.m. until 2 p.m., the same hours as the White House Easter Egg Roll, will include a search for weapons of mass destruction for the adults. "They'll all come back looking confused five minutes later, saying they couldn't find anything," Hennessey said.
Another search, for Osama bin Laden, will turn up only photographs of Saddam Hussein, he said. A hulk of a large bomb will be filled with toy bombs, and a prize will be given to whoever guesses the number inside.
At a "teach-in" yesterday at a Northwest Washington community center, Hennessey and others helped the children fashion the fake bombs, using balloons, tennis balls and brightly colored clay. The adults told the children they could write their names on the "bombs" and take them home after Monday's event. And they tried to explain what the concerns were all about.
"In these countries far away from here, kids find them and they look just like toys," said Radia Daoussi, a Vineeta worker, holding up a ball covered in swirls of orange, blue and yellow clay. "If you saw this, wouldn't you want to pick it up and play with it?"
© 2007 The Washington Post Company
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7 Comments so far
Show AllAnother idea: Find the President.
One hint: it isn't GWB. Nor is it Cheney, but he's a bit closer to the goal.
Is it the munitions makers?
Wal-Mart?
Halliburton? Oops, they're moving to Dubai.
And it ain't GM, Ford, or Chrysler, 'cause they're on the skids.
Take your nation back, US citizens.
i don't know much about kids. how old do you have to be before you should be introduced to the inherent cruelty of the notion of a cluster bomb?
and yes, find out who is making these presidential decisions that are so ruining our country--OUR country.
impeach bush/cheney and let pelosi preside.
Children are the ones being killed and maimed in the greatest numbers so it seems only right that we teach our own children what goes on in the world and that other children are not so "fortunate" as they are... Kids have a lot more sense than we give them credit for.
Today is Good Friday. Lots of people, children included, are thinking about the cruelty of death by crucifixion. I heartily agree with lover of peace: "it seems only right that we teach our own children what goes on in the world," not so that they become insensitive to cruelty but rather sensitized to it so that they are passionately, actively opposed to the cruelty that we humans inhumanely visit upon one another without giving thought to our insane barbarity.
It takes the presidency(occupation)of George W. Bush to turn Easter into Hallowe'en. This man has disgraced our country at every turn.
It would be somewhat reassuring to think the message the Vineeta Foundation sends would effectively reach the conscience of George W. Bush. Highly unlikely. Hunting for cluster bombs is much different than the shock and awe that excites Bush and his crusaders.
Perhaps a good Saddam Hussein impostor would do the trick. Isn't Easter about resurrection, after all?
These people sound like the same crew that morphed Halloween from a chance for kids to dress up and collect candy into some depraved, "needles in apples", aborted fetues nightmare, only these people are at the other end of the activist spectrum!
Why don't you just leave the kids alone and let them have some fun. They'll be adults soon enough.
I think it's great to raise awareness of the cluster bomb issue through an Easter egg hunt. How else will it become common knowledge? Most adults around here (west Texas) have never even thought about cluster bombst, especially if their news source is that foxy one.
I teach 9 and 10 year olds and they are very able to both enjoy an egg hunt and have an awareness of feven-harsh world issues. (Though we didn't egg hunt in our class, about every other class in this public school had one) Kids care deeply about world peace, other children in the world, and are startled to learn incongrous facts they've never been presented. For example, the interesting facts of US consumption alongside other nations.
They will ask their parents, and a dialog will start. What parent blue or red could defend using cluster bombs unless they portray children themselves as being evil? Maybe it will start a turn in thinking of adults.
I try not to insert my political views into my classroom, but there are human politics that go so beyond our two party system, like endangered species, deforestation, lack of clean water, and children in war zones. Even quelling stereotypical behavior like laughing about ching-chong-chinamen, calling one another ragheads, and seeing terrorists in any swarthy skin, we teachers work in small ways. Much too small.
Currently I see some kids trying to solve arguments with a might makes right approach. Isn't that the way the USA does things? They say their parents told them to clobber anybody bullying them, that's the way to make it stop. When Peace becomes a dirty word, one to avoid for fear of being subversive, it's time to say it loud and proud. Diplomacy, compromise, peacemaking, what's that? Ultimatums, they understand. Way to go, egg-hunt organizers. Christians themselves must stand up for Jesus being the Prince of Peace. Say it again and again.
Kids generally think as their parents do, hearing what is discussed around the house. But they are putting 2 and 2 together and forming their own opinions, too. I think their outcry and pleas for peace will echo more loudly than those the media protrays as agitators and troublemakers. At least the media can't or surely wouldn't slant children as being contrary for doing this. THey'll just ignore the issure.