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Reports

A Night of Hope in Berkeley

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Posted on Nov 16, 2011
Flickr / c_baek (CC-BY-ND)

Part of the crowd that gathered for Tuesday’s event at UC Berkeley’s Sproul Plaza.

By Cherilyn Parsons

It wasn’t quite Berkeley in 1964, but it wanted to be, and that might be the ultimate significance of the thousands-strong gathering Tuesday night in Sproul Plaza on the Cal campus.

The Occupy movement, which has kept apart from other social movements, reached back and grabbed onto the past.

It just so happened that the Mario Savio Memorial Lecture Fund’s Young Activist awards ceremony had been scheduled in a ballroom on campus that night, with Robert Reich as the headliner. Occupy Oakland asked the Savio Foundation if the event could be moved to Sproul Plaza.

What would Mario have done? For all the criticism of the Occupy movement’s “marketing,” this was an inspired move.

The helicopters were loud over Berkeley all afternoon. Occupy Oakland protesters marched up Telegraph Avenue, shouting “Education Should Be Free,” while another group—an amalgam of the UC Berkeley fee-hike protesters and the small Occupy Berkeley gang—marched from downtown Berkeley to the plaza. They were joined by thousands more students and community members.

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The night was clear and crisp, fragrant with the redwoods that line the center of campus, with barely a whiff of Northern California’s great export, marijuana. The crowd was distinctly multi-generational. Yes, students hung from the trees, climbed atop roofs, and plopped easily to the ground as everyone sat for the formal program, but there was a heck of a lot of creaky hips and cracking knees as the elders among us (now trusting other people over 30) eased themselves to the cold concrete. A couple of old guys in plaid shirts near me had brought folding camp chairs.

The program started with a rather long introduction by Lynn Savio, Mario’s widow, and excerpts of Savio’s speeches performed by his sons and foundation board members. Then came the presentation of the Savio awards to three young activists, all under 26—not even close to being born when Savio galvanized the campus free speech movement in 1964.

Reich finally took the stage. When Mario Savio spoke here in 1964, Reich said, the average CEO was earning 30 times what the average worker was earning. Today it’s over 300 times. “When so much income goes to the top, political power also goes to the top. … It’s not wealth that’s the problem, but irresponsible use of wealth.”

Equal opportunity, he said, is the moral foundation of America—and that’s what we’re losing. How can we let people fall down if we’re the richest nation on earth?

Boo, hiss, went the crowd, especially when Reich mentioned the Koch brothers.

“Moral outrage is the beginning. The days of apathy are over, folks.”

Reich himself brings such moral authority, intellectual firepower, eloquence and experience in the belly of the beast that both students and elders hung on his words. The only problem with the speech was that it was way too brief. He was being considerate of the cross-legged seating arrangement, but I think everyone wished he had talked much longer.

He often makes “short jokes” since he’s only 4-feet-10. He wound up by telling a story about how he used to get bullied as a kid. “The best way to stop getting beat up was to make alliances with bigger guys,” creating his “very own protection racket.” I thought at that point he was going to call for the Occupy movement to ally with others—labor, maybe. Instead, he connected the crowd and the movement with history.

He told how one of his protectors was a guy named Mickey Schwerner. Just like Savio, who had been in Mississippi registering voters before the Freedom Summer in Berkeley in 1964, Schwerner was concerned with civil rights. That summer, Reich learned that his protector (known to younger people as Michael Schwerner) had been brutally murdered by the Ku Klux Klan for his civil rights work. “I knew then,” Reich said, “something profound had to change in America.”


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By larrypsy, November 19, 2011 at 11:23 pm Link to this comment

It’s going to require more than hope, like 99% getting off their butts long enough to skip reality
TV and engage reality - select candidates and VOTE!

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By felicity, November 17, 2011 at 11:11 am Link to this comment

One of my granddaughters is a senior at Berkeley and
attended the rally at Sproul. She told me that it
inspired her to “get more involved.”  The fact that the
University, rather than just the students, was involved
in the events of Tuesday - a teach-in at noon along
with the rally and the speech - is a really positive
sign.  Would that universities across the nation follow
suit.

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By gerard, November 16, 2011 at 6:24 pm Link to this comment

P.S. The thing I’ll always remember from Berkeley this year was the two line-ups in opposition—young people with no weapons and no protection facing cops with all the outer equipment of violence and terror.  Police jabbed with batons toward young people; young people stepped back.  Young people stepped forward; police jabbed with batons. Each time young people stepped forward, they said, in unison and without threat a simple request-plea:
  “Don’t beat students!  Don’t beat students!” And guess what?  Police gave up the threatening and the jabbing, and the steam leaked out of their angry intent.  Few have remarked on this, but I clearly recognized the power of nonviolence in those moments of danger and trial.

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By Katya, November 16, 2011 at 2:06 pm Link to this comment
(Unregistered commenter)

Thanks for an excellent report from the frontline Ms. Parsons. I’m heartened to hear that the crowd was multi-generational. Young people could learn the techniques of peaceful protest from these elders. We all can’t leave our jobs and occupy full-time, but the movement has many allies in the working ranks. Their occupation represents widespread outrage at the TLC our government has been affording the mega-rich, while cutting off the poor and middle class at every turn.

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By do over, November 16, 2011 at 11:40 am Link to this comment

“Reich himself brings such moral authority, intellectual firepower, eloquence and experience in the belly of the beast that both students and elders hung on his words. The only problem with the speech was that it was way too brief. He was being considerate of the cross-legged seating arrangement, but I think everyone wished he had talked much longer.”

Reich has nothing to say to me.  He is a captive of the Democratic Party.  I respect his past but his time has passed.  Reich doesn’t get it.  Move on.

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By gerard, November 16, 2011 at 11:18 am Link to this comment

There is tremendous potential in the Occupy movement:
Not only the hope, but the faith that imbues every generation and the energy that brings it to life. Perhaps above all else, that is what the Occupiers know in their hearts and are trying to “organize” into practical nonviolent changes. 

We all need to join them, but first we have to put down our own hopelessness, our own disgust and cynicism.  We have to really join—not “advise” or
criticize, but join—organically, so that they and we become one civil body of determined resistance and year-long engagement—for it is going to take years of intelligent cooperative behavior to undo the crimes of the day.

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