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SOA Watch: Protest Could Be Celebration
This year protesters commemorating a massacre may feel so jubilant that keeping a straight face for a vigil could be a challenge.
Rosemary Marston of Cincinnati, Ohio, works on one of three giant flowers Friday afternoon that will be part of the puppetistas performance this weekend during the SOA Watch protest at the gates of Fort Benning. She and others were busy Friday constructing and painting pieces for the show. Photo by Mike Haskey / Ledger-Enquirer As they again mark the anniversary of the Nov. 16, 1989, killings of six Jesuit priests, their housekeeper and her teenage daughter - gunned down by El Salvadoran soldiers, most of whom had attended what was then known as the School of the Americas - those protesting what's now called the Western Hemisphere Institute for Security Cooperation will have something else in mind: Hope, and change.
They hope the Nov. 4 election will so change Congress that it closes the institute.
"The members of Congress who in the past voted for the School of the Americas, to keep it open, they lost their seats on Nov. 4," said Eric LeCompte of SOA Watch, the group that has protested the training institute at Fort Benning since 1990. "The last time we had a vote for funding cuts, we lost by six votes. We've had a 30-vote turnover."
He can't claim mission accomplished, but he's hopeful: "I would call it guarded optimism," he said Tuesday.
If the institute is closed, the annual protest at the post's Benning Boulevard entrance next year would become a celebration. Whether the institute's closed or not, the rally held here each November since 1990 might in two years move to Washington, D.C. Next year marks the 20th anniversary of the massacre. "We're going to be talking about it this weekend," LeCompte said. "The soonest it would move, if it moved, would be 2010."
Downtown
This year, it will be occupying not only its usual spot Saturday and Sunday at the Fort Benning gate off Victory Drive, but also holding sessions Friday-Saturday at the Columbus Convention & Trade Center at 801 Front Ave., and at the Howard Johnson Inn at 1101 Veterans Parkway, and one event Saturday morning at the Days Inn at 3170 Victory Drive.
Along with the God Bless Fort Benning rally created to counter the protest, it's an economic boost for downtown.
"I think, just like I do, most of the people who come, they have their favorite things to do in Columbus, their favorite restaurants to go to," LeCompte said. "A lot of people like some of the museums here in town; they come in early for that. There's a very dedicated group that always goes to Country's and goes to Ruth Ann's."
SOA Watch regulars have noticed the changes here, the emphasis on the arts and the street improvements, the fountains that have been fixed up and are flowing again, he said. "Many people have been down here before, because Fort Benning, since it's the infantry and basic training, a lot of people have had family members come through Fort Benning at one point or another," he said.
Survivor
This year SOA Watch has a special guest, and it is not, as in the past, actor Martin Sheen, folk music icon Pete Seegar, or rock duo Amy Ray and Emily Saliers, the Indigo Girls.
It's Jon Sobrino, who survived the 1989 massacre - not because he recovered from gunshot wounds, but because he wasn't there.
"He was traveling," said LeCompte. "He still lives in El Salvador. He was pretty lucky. It's probably just a miracle. The order to kill the Jesuits and their housekeeper and her 14-year-old daughter actually came down at that point all the way from the president of El Salvador. That's because they believed the Jesuits were challenging the status quo, that they were encouraging people that the Gospel was as much about them as about the rich. That gets to be kind of dangerous stuff."
SOA Watch maintains that such cold-blooded killing continues in Colombia, which targets union activists, an issue Barack Obama brought up in one of this year's presidential debates. "In the third presidential debate, he spoke about Colombia trade unionists, when John McCain said, ‘You know what? You're not even into free trade with Colombia.' And I think many of us were heartened to see that that was an opportunity which Obama took to say, ‘You know what? We're not going to be doing trade with a country that has its military killing trade unionists.' He went right at it," LeCompte said.
It's this kind of rhetoric from the president-elect that gives SOA Watch hope that a change in Washington will be a triumph for their cause.
Hard times
Whether that optimism will swell or constrict their numbers this year remains to be seen - as does the sour economy's effect on travel costs.
"It's hard to tell," LeCompte said. "I'll tell you, in 2004, after the last election, we saw a dip in some of our attendance. Part of that was because there was just a lot of melancholy. People were upset with the election. I think that what we've seen from our movement is because so many people in our movement were involved not only in the presidential election but in the House races and the Senate races, I think there is a heightened sense of optimism, a sense that we can do it, we can change this country, we can close this school."
Some students coming for the protest volunteered for election campaigns, he said: "Now more than half of all people who come are from high school or college. And it's many of those same people who were knocking on doors during the presidential campaign."
LeCompte expects a higher turnout this year, but admits high travel costs may keep some groups home. Typically the event draws more than 10,000 people, and whether the total's just a bit more than that or more than double that is often a dispute between organizers and police. Last year Columbus police thought about 12,000 protesters showed up. Organizers estimated 24,000-25,000.
Said LeCompte: "I think we're going to see a turnout even despite the economic woes that so many are dealing with around the country right now. Many buses in some places in the country were almost twice as expensive this year as last year. The good thing right now, with gas prices going down, is that people have been able to renegotiate over the past few weeks."
Last summer he feared a significant loss.
"I would talk to groups in Chicago, and they would tell me that they had a bus for $4,000 last year and it was $8,000 this year. But after the presidential election, the gas has gone down, after hearing from a lot of people who haven't been with us in a while who are coming this year, my spirits have been up the past few months."
Lee Rials, the institute's public affairs officer, said some groups have canceled reservations to tour the school. One from a California college said travel costs were "way out" of its price range. A group from Connecticut is bringing 14 people because that's how many fit in two minivans, he said.
Still, the institute has 715 visitors signed up for tours Saturday, Rials said - comparable to the 764 last year.
Familiar with SOA Watch's claims of institute graduates' crimes in Latin America, Rials said the school's aim is to offer specialized training to professional soldiers and police:
"We bring them to a variety of courses that make them more proficient in their jobs. And in every course we do that, about 10 percent of that course is devoted to human rights and democracy issues," he said.
Soldiers do come here from Latin America, he said, "but so do U.S. soldiers, in one of our courses. So do Canadians, so do Caribbean nations. It's all throughout this hemisphere."
LeCompte said the protesters' hope for change may outshine dark economic times:
"There will be, I think, a heightened sense of jubilation," he said. "I think that our movement has always believed that people are inspired by hope. . . . So now that we see that sense of hope all across the country, I think it's going to lift the vigil this year."



13 Comments so far
Show AllDon't pin your hopes on the Democrats, they are spineless scumbag sellouts.
Too chickenshit to ask for a recount in the 2000 election even when the Black Caucas requested one Democratic Senator was all it needed for that recount, and they, the Democrats, just sat on their hands -- and we got the alcholic,drug abusing wartime deserter and his band of nut cases for the last eight years.
Enter Democrat Nancy Pelosi and her eunchs, Harry Reid and John Conyers, and inpeachment is off the table, and all the little deserters war funding is passed. They sold out our Fourth Amendment, did nothing about torture.
Now, we're saddled with Obama "change we can believe in" and the first thing he does before becoming president is suck up to the murdering zionists at an AIPAC convention, then he was off to Florida to suck up to the Cuban terrorist mafia. And, when he is elected, his first appointment is Rahm Emanuel, a zionist citizen of Israel, whose father, Benjamin Emanuel, is a racist terrorist whose terrorist organization killed men, woman and children, blew up a hotel and murdered a diplomat.
So, do you really think there will be a change in Washington when that snake oil salesman, Obama, and the rest of the Democrats take control?
Good reminder about 2000 and the Black Congressional Caucus!
One Dem. Senator, just one- might have prevented Bush from taking the Presidency that year. I vividly remember watching the Black Caucus' hearings on the disenfranchisement of voters in that election and was completely horrified that no one was willing to step up. No one!
Most of our elected representatives- Senate & House- are 100% bought and paid for by big moneyed interests.
Closing the School of the Americas would send a positive signal to Latin America and go a small way to restore the US' reputation on human rights.
I share The Doctor's skepticism of the Democrats. Nancy Pelosi's big issue used to be human rights in China. But she's been blind to the human rights atrocities committed by the Bush Administration and ignored San Franciscans' vote demanding that their "representatives" move to impeach Bush and Cheney. Nevertheless, 70% of San Francisco voters voted to re-elect her, only 17% of us voting for a much more principled candidate, Cindy Sheehan.
Now that the Democrats form a majority in Congress, they no longer have the fig leaf of minority status. Failure to close the School of the Americas would represent yet another moral lapse. What Congress does about the School will be a good litmus test for what the Democrat's mean by "change".
I would have thought the article might mention Fr. Roy Bourgeois, the founder of SOA-Watch.
Fr. Bourgeois is being considered for excommunication by the Catholic Church for his controversial stand on women being permitted to joint the priesthood. LINK
One has to wonder if Roy's activism against militarism is rubbing Herr Ratzinger the wrong way...
This 'US Training School for Terrorists' is not the only one with such mission. Harvard, Yale, MIT and some others have trained and educated the ones (e.g., Friedman, G.W. Bush, and many many others) who are wrecking the planet; stealing from you the possibility of happiness and a simple, peaceful way of life; and perpetuating the unsustainable status quo; this immensely rich and well established training apparatus is just a status-quo keeper and more (Freidman’s actions and mindset will impact us for decades). It's all about short-sightedness, lack of genuine intelligence, love of money, stupidity, and perhaps to a degree British genes. When the U.S. falls, the monetary systems show their fallacies, and the Earth is regionalized into a 1,000 regions (erasing from the face of the Earth the poor concept of government) human beings will not attain peace and become an authentically happy species. I dare to say: Educate your children—away from the prevailing U.S./American way—practice true common sense, attempt to be smart and wise... Look beyond your presumptions, and acknowledge and be humble about the damage you have helped to create with your taxes, purchasing habits, isolationism, and lack of true education and culture. It’s just pitiful seeing the rich and a great portion of the middle class blinded by the desire for more; unhappy, thinking happiness and smart and extraordinary living is there… But they don’t know better.
Start with yourself and your children. Act extraordinarily in your own right.
[Thank you to all people who help see things clearer posting comments here and those who founded and support Common Dreams]
It's long past time that this training center for war criminals ended up shut down!
Barak Obama should make this a top priority along with closing down that concentration camp the US military maintains in Cuba and with that very military presence violating Cuba's national sovereignty to run its own affairs as is provided in the UN Charter.
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It's long past due this training center for war criminals be shut down. Barak Obama should make this a top priority.
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I regret the above duplication. Bear with me. It didn't seem like the first post went through.
I'm sure that a shutdown of this torture training school would have pleased Archbishop Oscar Romero.
come on folks, let's not think charter buses have to cost more in proportion to increased fuel prices. A greyhound-type bus gets, I think, about eight miles per gallon, making it one of the most fuel-efficient ways to transport people. To travel a thousand miles, that bus will burn 125 gallons of fuel. If the fuel price goes up by two dollars a gallon, that adds two hundred and fifty dollars to the cost of the trip. Double that to cover your trip home again, and you see that for fifty people to travel a thousand miles by bus to an event only costs $10 more per person when the fuel price goes up $2 a gallon. If charter companies prey on our lack of arithmetic skills and gouge us for thousands more, that's partly our own fault for being so stupid - but hey, I almost forgot, we're Americans, we're supposed to be stupid, we have national free public schooling to train us that way.
My Dream:
Thet President Obama shuts down the SOA.
Then awards the Presidential Medal of Freedom to the hundreds of peace activists who have been jailed for protesting at SOA.
Alas, I am afraid that it will remain only a fantasy.
But just think how these people are on such a different level than the receipients of the medal under GWB.
On second thought, it would tarnish the image of these brave patriots to be put in the same class of such War Criminals as Donald Rumsfield.
I just got back from Fort Benning. I drove from a small town in Alabama where I live. It was a two hour drive but it was worth every minute. The town where it is held is a small place called Columbus Georgia close to the border with Alabama.
There were thousands of people there, 20000 as per the organizers. We were chanting slogans, distributing fliers and we had a series of events occurring at a local convention center.
If you want to learn more about the School of the Americas and why it is labelled as the School of the Assassins, try this link - www.soaw.org
I hope we can shut down this disgraceful institution, but until then, let no-one have any doubts we will continue to protest there each year.
Good news coverage, Tim. And good commentary, suhail shafi.
Yesterday we returned from Fort Benning, and I too was filled with enthusiasm for this event. It's educational, it's a vigil and commemoration, it's also a celebration of human rights and activism in support of goodness and redemption.
It was also good to meet Marie Dennis, who authored, "Shut the Doors on a Disgraced Military School," Common Dreams, 11/20/08. I met her on Saturday as I was entering the rally and she was working a booth for Maryknoll in support of Father Roy and his activism for closing SOA/WHINSEC and supporting Catholic Women in priesthood ordination.
Bill in Dubuque