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From Cairo to Madison: Hope and Solidarity are Alive
Here in Madison, Wisconsin, where protesters have occupied the State Capitol Building to stop the pending bill that would eliminate workers’ right to collective bargaining, echoes of Cairo are everywhere. Protesters here were elated by the photo of an Egyptian engineer named Muhammad Saladin Nusair holding a sign in Tahrir Square saying “Egypt Supports Wisconsin Workers—One World, One Pain.” The signs by protesters in Madison include “Welcome to Wiscairo”, “From Egypt to Wisconsin: We Rise Up”, and “Government Walker: Our Mubarak.” The banner I brought directly from Tahrir Square saying “Solidarity with Egyptian Workers” has been hanging from the balcony of the Capitol alongside solidarity messages from around the country.
My travels from Cairo to Madison seem like one seamless web. After camping out with the students and workers in the Capitol Building, I gave an early morning seminar on what it was like to be an eyewitness to the Egyptian revolution, and the struggles that are taking place right now in places like Libya, Bahrain and Yemen. Folks told me all day how inspiring it was to hear about the uprisings in the Arab world.
Some took the lessons from Cairo literally. Looking around at the capitol building that was starting to show the wear and tear from housing thousands of protesters, I had mentioned that in Cairo the activists were constantly scrubbing the square, determined to show how much they loved the space they had liberated. A few hours later, in Madison’s rotunda, people were on their hands and knees scrubbing the marble floor. “We’re quick learners,” one of the high school students told me, smiling as she picked at the remains of oreo cookies sticking to the floor.
I heard echoes of Cairo in the Capitol hearing room where a nonstop line of people had gathered all week to give testimonies. The Democratic Assemblymembers have been giving folks a chance to voice their concerns about the governor’s pending bill. In this endless stream of heartfelt testimonies, people talk about the impact this bill will have on their own families—their take-home pay, their healthcare, their pensions. They talk about the governor manufacturing the budget crisis to break the unions. They talk about the history of workers’ struggles to earn living wages and have decent benefits. And time and again, I heard people say “I saw how the Egyptian people were able to rise up and overthrow a 30-year dictatorship, and that inspired me to rise up and fight this bill.”
Solidarity is, indeed, a beautiful thing. It is a way we show our oneness with all of humanity; it is a way to reaffirm our own humanity. CODEPINK sent flowers to the people in Tahrir Square—a gesture that was received with kisses, hugs and tears from the Egyptians. The campers in Madison erupted in cheer when they heard that an Egyptian had called the local pizza place, Ians Pizza, and placed a huge order to feed the protesters. “Pizza never tasted so good,” a Wisconsin fireman commented when he was told that the garlic pizza he was eating had come from supporters in Cairo.
Egyptian engineer Muhammad Saladin Nusair, the one whose photo supporting Wisconsin workers went viral, now has thousands of new American Facebook friends. He wrote in his blog that many of his new friends were surprised by his gesture of solidarity, but he was taught that “we live in ONE world and under the same sky.”
“If a human being doesn’t feel the pain of his fellow human beings, then everything we’ve created and established since the very beginning of existence is in great danger,” Muhammad wrote. “We shouldn’t let borders and differences separate us. We were made different to complete each other, to integrate and live together. One world, one pain, one humanity, one hope.”
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18 Comments so far
Show AllAll it takes is a genuine insurgency of the real American working class to prove how insignificant and irrelevant the Tea Party is.
Wake up, American working class, let's have spread this uprising to every little town in the US of A.
Beautiful, hopeful, encouraging report and commentary, Medea; and may this reach the ends of our country, delia darrow! I'm going to try and reach Muhammad Nusair via Facebook. Solidarity forever!
Bill in Dubuque
"All it takes is a genuine insurgency of the real American working class to prove how insignificant and irrelevant the Tea Party is."
AMEN TO THAT!!!!!
one connected world = nice!
it's also coherent with nature!
less dissonance inside, potentially none!
into the fire, DAS KAPITAL!!!
KUMBIA
Thank you, Medea, for this inspiring article, AND your constant work to create a better world! One planet, one people, one future! That old chant, "the people united will never be defeated" never sounded so true. May it be so.
Well, Medea, it looks like you've come a long way. Hopefully, after watching the incredible resolve and principled steadfastness of the Egyptians, you now understand why one DOES NOT NEGOTIATE with the likes of Suzanne Mubarak!
I'm afraid I couldn't let your choice to negotiate behind our backs at the Gaza Freedom March go... However, I'm sure you've learned a thing or two! Now, no negotiations with Walker, Obama, or any of that lot! We don't beg, we demand!!
Well done! But she will never apologize for that. Not in my experience of her, anyway.
"Solidarity is, indeed, a beautiful thing. It is a way we show our oneness with all of humanity; it is a way to reaffirm our own humanity. CODEPINK sent flowers to the people in Tahrir Square—a gesture that was received with kisses, hugs and tears from the Egyptians. The campers in Madison erupted in cheer when they heard that an Egyptian had called the local pizza place, Ians Pizza, and placed a huge order to feed the protesters. “Pizza never tasted so good,” a Wisconsin fireman commented when he was told that the garlic pizza he was eating had come from supporters in Cairo."
How completely beautiful and KICK ASS these statements are!!! We *ARE* the World, not the richfilth.
Check this CATO Institute Union Bashing article, one British word for this guy.... Wanker
http://www.cato.org/pub_display.php?pub_id=12799
Let's just hope this is not the "change you can believe in" in yet another guise. No one learned that lesson yet, as far as i can tell. Hopefully, i will be surpriesed. I heard on Amy Goodman today in an interview that it is all the repubs fault ...Gotta vote dems according to the protestors! Obama in 2012 is the message as far as i am reading it.
Good point, but we cannot expect everyone to educate themselves at once. In WI, their Republicans are trying to disembowel collective bargaining; their Dems are dodging to keep the bill from passing.
As non-altruistic and uninspiring as the motives of most of the WI Democratic elect presumably are (after all, where were they last issue? what about the wars of occupation, the ------ well, you all know) that is a difference.
That difference does not largely apply to the Party as a national entity, obviously, and people will have different reactions to that, not all of them useful.
But bear in mind how small a place Wisconsin is in terms of population. 30,000 people? In a Wisconsin February that is no joke. If we had a corresponding reaction in New York, Los Angeles, or Chicago, there'd be some publicity wonks re-checking their calculators.
To the extent the details in this article are true---namely the threat that a revolt in little Wisconsin is acknowledged by people in Cairo---little wonder that our national media are not seriously covering it.
NPR's Monday coverage really sucked. And I mean REALLY SUCKED. Absolutely no substance, a report by an ignorant young reporter who probably has a Master's in Journalism but is ignorant of the history of unions to say nothing of strikes in Wisconsin. Pathetic. I think Schaeffer was the NPR reporter's name.
It makes me realize why so many at CD have said they don't care if NPR and PBS are defunded. NPR is a form of "repressive tolerance." Liberals.
Faced with the threatened defunding they are now in batten-down ass-kissing mode.
See you in Indianapolis, Medea! Or maybe Columbus...
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Wait! Stop the carry out man! Does accepting pizza paid for by Egyptian radicals give material support to the enemies of Mubarak and Suleimann, the two pharaohs allied with the USA in our battles to promote Zionism and defeat Islamic Jihadists?
14* comments on an article about solidarity and inspiration from people's revolutions/struggles.
261* comments on an article ('When a Country Goes Insane") blaming republicans for everything.
* Thus far
Don't worry. The number of comments doesn't correlate with approval.
I think the 261 is because people are just really pissed off about that article...
And 261 because Demoncrats and progressives are quite rightly terrified that they will no longer have any real political clout for the foreseeable future.
Horace has the last word...if he thinks so.
This goes back to 2004, and that NYTimes Saturday Magazine article quoting an anon. GOP operative saying that while you are studying us we are changing history.
Horace thinks that by disrupting consensus he is a positive influence.
Reaching a consensus is difficult enough without people who do not want one.
Who does Horace work for?
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