Students Wrestle With War
by Lisa Featherstone
The Nation magazine, December 17, 2001
It's uncomfortable, wet and disgusting," laughs Yomaira
Tamayo cheerfully, "but I'm sleeping." Tamayo, a freshman,
is one of thirty-five University of Pennsylvania students sleeping
in tents on College Green, the main thoroughfare of the campus,
to call attention to the role of US bombing in Afghanistan's humanitarian
crisis. Asked how many fellow students agree with her group's
position on the war, Tamayo admits, "Not a lot. This is a
pretty conservative campus."
Her school is conservative, but hardly unique in its hawkishness.
A study conducted in mid-October by Harvard University's Institute
of Politics found that nearly four in five college students support
the US bombing in Afghanistan. A recent New York Times article
even featured war supporters at the University of Michigan's Eugene
Debs House, the radical co-operative that housed this Nation writer
for most of her own undergraduate years.
Given the unfriendly climate on campus, activists have had
to be very thoughtful about how best to frame criticism of the
US action in Afghanistan. "We have to accept that we are
the minority," says Kelly Howland, a student at Massachusetts
College of Art, who helped organize the recent antiwar conference
at Boston University, "and really figure out how to appeal
to the public." In a war that renders traditional left anti-interventionist
arguments nonsensical to most Americans, including many on the
left, it is difficult for activists even to agree with each other
on the conflict's causes or on the reasons for opposition. In
recent days, that problem has been compounded by the progress
of the war itself. The airwaves have been flooded with optimistic
images: women taking off their burqas, men shaving their beards,
a cinema opening in Kabul. It is becoming increasingly tricky
to know what people of conscience should advocate. "The first
step is realizing you have a problem," jokes Christopher
Cantor of the Berkeley Stop the War Coalition. "And I think
the peace movement is doing that. The situation on the ground
has completely changed, and we have just started to deal with
it." To make matters more confusing, says Dana Brown of Cornell
Students for a Peaceful Justice, "it is harder to get good
information lately."
Still, among students, this war has inspired a far-flung and
passionate opposition movement. The weekend of November 10, hundreds
of student activists gathered at regional peace conferences at
Boston University, Georgia State University, George Washington
University, Chicago's De Paul University and the University of
California, Berkeley, to plan campaigns and establish coalitions.
(A similar conference of students in the Northwest is planned
for early December.) Not all of these gatherings were successes;
students found themselves divided, especially on questions of
process, with anarchists and radical democrats favoring consensus
and other forms of direct democracy, while others, especially
members of the International Socialist Organization (ISO), preferred
majority rule. But on-campus organizing has been impressive. Students
at the Universities of Indiana and Wisconsin, and Maui Community
College, have established "peace camps" similar to the
one at Penn, evoking the famous Greenham Common Women's Peace
Camp, which lasted more than a decade after it was established
in 1981 by British women protesting a NATO cruise-missile station.
Others have held teach-ins, vigils and fasts.
This new peace activism, which has already touched at least
400 campuses, builds on networks and habits of dissent established
by the student anticorporate movement, which has focused largely
on economic justice, whether for the garment workers sewing college
sweatshirts overseas or the dining hall workers students see every
day. Many of the organizations-most notably Students Transforming
and Resisting Corporations (STARC: prominent in those campaigns
are equally visible in antiwar organizing.
But whereas recent high-profile student campaigns (those against
sweatshops, for example) have tended to attract students from
elite private schools and large state schools, the peace movement
has extended to less predictable quarters, including rural Southern
schools (North Carolina's Appalachian State University and the
University of Southern Mississippi); historically black colleges
like Morehouse; community colleges from Boston to Hawaii; urban
public universities like CUNY and the University of Illinois,
Chicago; and high schools and middle schools. A newly formed National
Youth and Student Peace Coalition will startle anyone who imagines
that all peace activists are white folk-music fans; it includes
the youth division of the Black Radical Congress and the Muslim
Student Association.
Many campus campaigns, like Tamayo's at Penn, had been emphasizing
the hunger crisis, finding that, as in anti-sweatshop organizing,
appeals to students' humanitarian sympathies are powerful. In
Afghanistan, according to Oxfam, there are 7.5 million hungry
people, 1.5 million of whom are children under 5. While it is
true that the Taliban have obstructed relief organizations for
years, many international aid agencies, including the United Nations,
the International Committee of the Red Cross and Doctors Without
Borders, agreed in October that the US bombings had made the situation
even worse. Oxfam called for a pause in the bombing, "at
least in some zones," so relief convoys could deliver food
and other supplies to those in need. Activists found that by joining
such calls, they could appeal to people who had never been to
a political meeting. "This is something everyone can get
behind," says Amy Warner of Clark University, "even
people who want to kill everyone involved in September 11."
I he trouble with the peace movement is that we're always
speaking to the choir," says U Mass activist Lisa DePiano,
who, with other Catholic students, is organizing a twenty-four-hour
fast beginning November 30 at the University of Massachusetts,
Amherst, intended to call attention to hunger in Afghanistan.
"We always see the same people at teach-ins. The fast is
a great way to get a wide range of people involved who are concerned
about hunger. We are attracting not only typical anarchist lefties
but conservative Catholics." The U Mass fast will be accompanied
by an all-day discussion on world hunger. In addition to raising
awareness on campus, DePiano hopes that visible action by Catholic
students like herself will encourage church leaders to take a
stand against the war.
Activists have also organized fasts at the Universities of
Texas, Hawaii and at least twenty other schools; many participated
in a national fast on November 7-9 initiated by students at Occidental
College. Cornell Students for Peaceful Justice has organized a
month-long rolling fast, in which more than fifty students will
take turns going without food.
Just weeks ago, this humanitarian focus seemed the best possible
direction for the peace movement. Now that's not so clear. At
this writing, there were reports that more food aid was entering
Afghanistan. News stories pointed to some ambiguities, asking
whether the US presence was still contributing to the hunger crisis
and even suggesting that in some places US troops, or at least
the fall of the Taliban, was alleviating the problem. "The
humanitarian angle has been our main focus," says UC Berkeley's
Chris Cantor. "But now the United States is helping, and
the situation is dramatically improving. That criticism is not
as valid anymore." Cantor's group will "wait and let
this play out," he says, admitting that "if the United
States pulled out right now, Afghanistan would be in real trouble."
Meanwhile, he says, peace organizations may increasingly turn
their attention to the "war" at home-racist scapegoating
and the frightening assaults on civil liberties.
But the peace groups best able to adapt to the changing global
situation are those that don't suffer from that unfortunate activist
malady of "having to have all the answers," as Lara
Jirmanus, a recent Harvard graduate working with the Boston Student
AntiWar Coalition, puts it. To Cornell's Dana Brown, who is also
a national organizer for STARC, which is running a national education
campaign emphasizing the connections between violence and economic
deprivation, the complexity of this war demands constant conversation.
"You obviously can't just stand in the middle of campus waving
a STOP THE WAR sign," she says. Cornell organizers have had
several extra meetings in the past few days, to talk about how
best to respond to the changing situation. They are not calling
off their fast, but they are asking new questions. Approaching
"triumph" in Afghanistan, will the United States now
attack Iraq? And more immediately, will the Bush Administration
face its responsibilities to devastated Afghanistan? "There
still is a humanitarian crisis. What is the United States going
to do about it?" Brown asks. More broadly, she and other
peace activists are asking, "What should the US role be in
Afghanistan? Why is the United States refusing to be part of a
UN peacekeeping force? None of us are pro-Taliban, but we know
how they came to power. We see the footage of the Northern Alliance
dragging people out of their homes and executing them. If we're
not extra careful, we could end up supporting another repressive
regime."
Given both the frightening consensus in mainstream public
discourse and the absence of satisfactory answers from the left,
real conversation is no small contribution. Tamayo says her fellow
Penn students, for all their bellicosity, have been eager to discuss
the war. "At 3:30 this morning," she says, 'people were
still walking by, just wanting to talk. We're being told that
we shouldn't question the government right now, but [the peace
camp] provides a space where people can debate. We've had a lot
of people coming up to us-people who don't agree with us-and thanking
us, saying, 'If nothing else, you guys have created a lot of dialogue
on campus."
Liza Featherstone, a journalist in New York City, has been
covering the peace movement for The Nation. Research support was
provided by the Haywood Burns Fund of the Nation Institute.
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