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Wednesday, February 20, 2002
by Don Kazak
Noon, Wednesday, Lytton Plaza in downtown
Palo Alto. It's a peaceful scene on a sunny, pleasant
day.
Downtown workers and shoppers stream by
on their way to lunch.
Some glance at a couple of portable tables
set up in front of one of the benches, or at the banners
and large peace flag. Some stop to talk. A few take a
homemade cookie from a plateful.
It's a low-key deal.
The half-dozen or so peace activists wear
handmade badges that proclaim them a "Listener."
And that's the whole idea, really. Not to
get in people's faces, not to sell a viewpoint, but to
listen to what people have to say about three questions:
-- "What do you think of the events
of Sept. 11 and our government's response?"
-- "How do we defuse terrorism?"
-- "How can we make this a safer, better
world for our children and all children?"
"We've had such varied responses,"
said Carol Brouillet. "People have disagreed but
no one has been angry."
Brouillet, a Palo Altan and longtime member
of the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom,
is the force behind the Wednesday efforts to get people
to talk about terrorism and peace.
"Carol is very dynamic, the force behind
this," said another activist, George Johnson, a Vietnam
veteran and member of Veterans for Peace.
Brouillet started the Wednesday lunchtime
efforts at the plaza, at University Avenue and Emerson
Street, about a month after the cataclysmic events of
Sept. 11.
With President Bush's approval-rating in
the stratosphere, with the Taliban disbanded and al Qaeda
on the run or in the shadows, talking about peace may
seem to be a pointless exercise for some people.
But what people say gets written down in
a book, and Brouillet keeps track of the responses.
Not everyone is happy about the continued
bombings in Afghanistan, but it's one of those situations
where even some longtime peace activists have flown the
flag after Sept. 11.
Most of those who stop to talk are probably
sympathetic to some degree, so it's a self-limiting sample.
Brouillet said only one woman thought the military response
was appropriate.
But others don't stop. One woman, looking
at the flags and banners from a distance, said she was
turned off by the effort. She looked at one of the banners,
which read, "Another World is Possible," and
got angry.
The Veterans for Peace banner is the most
striking. A big, black cloth with white lettering, it
has the lyrics to the famous Edwin Starr song: "War,
what is it good for? Absolutely nothing."
George Johnson said a "street person"
came by one Wednesday and, being a Vietnam vet, was offended
by the banner. He was also feeling no pain, as they say.
He came by again on this day, sober and supportive, and
began singing the Edwin Starr song. Everyone smiled.
"Change happens one person at a time,"
Johnson said.
A Palo Alto parking monitor sat down for
a long heart-to-heart with Brouillet. Later, a man with
a pedigreed-looking boxer dog (with a choke chain) also
sat and talked a while.
A sandwich board by the tables proclaimed
the mission: "Listening for a Change."
In addition to the banners and peace flag
(the American flag with a large peace symbol where the
stars usually are), another pole held a two-sided poster:
On one side was a large photo of Martin Luther King, Jr.,
and on the other was a large photo of Mahatma Gandhi.
The presence on the plaza is so low key
that the only time Brouillet or Johnson or the others
talk to people is when people speak to them first, maybe
to ask a question.
It's the peaceful way to talk about peace,
as it were.
It's hard to argue about the need for peace.
But few people, even in Palo Alto, are all that upset
by America's military response to Sept. 11. Was there
another way to deal with al Qaeda and Osama bin Laden?
Now, curiously, an American from Marin county
is on trial for being a member of the Taliban, having
been trained in one of bin Laden's terrorist camps. Is
the young man guilty of treason?
There are many hard questions with no easy
answers, at least for some of us.
But talking, and listening, about peace
can't hurt.
Don Kazak is a Weekly senior staff writer.
E-mail him at dkazak@paweekly.com. |