One time they
marched to war.
Now they’re walking for peace.
Members of the national group Veterans for Peace are
walking 700 miles from Maine to Washington, DC to highlight the need to end
wars and militarism.
They’re also pressing for action on the existential
threat of climate change.
The long walk is entitled “Peace Walk 2024 ---
Silencing the Drums of War.”
“What these veterans want is independence from the
dark prison of war and militarism so that our nation can focus its attention,
energy, resources, and creativity on addressing the real threats of nuclear
war, climate collapse and future pandemics,” said a release from Veterans for Peace.
“They believe that our focus on military and
economic primacy in the world is misguided because the only way to address
these global threats is collaboratively through global cooperation,” the
statement read.
The walkers started out from Ogunquit, Maine on May
7 and are now in Connecticut. They marched through eastern Connecticut towns
along the shoreline last week, were in Norwalk for the Memorial Day Parade on
Monday, will be in Milford Wednesday and in Bridgeport on Thursday.
The walk will
end on July 5 in the nation’s capital, where participants will take part in
demonstrations against NATO at that organizations 75th anniversary
celebration.
VFP leaders said anyone can take part in the event and walk any distance they can along the designated route. To register to walk, volunteer or donate, go to this website: http://peacewalk2024.org/get-involved/
Jim Brasile, a Vietnam War veteran from Newington who walked a number of miles in eastern Connecticut, said marchers carry a variety of anti-war signs, like “Stop War” and “Stop the Killing in Gaza” and “Nuclear Weapons are Illegal."
People are
walking on either the sidewalks or in the bike lanes.
Brasile said while most drivers ignore the walkers,
others honk or give them the thumbs up.
“With about
70%, there is no response. They’re busy. About 20%, we get thumbs up or the peace
sign. And then with 10 percent maybe, you get half the peace sign turned around
and a lot of them shaking their heads. They can’t mentally understand what
we’re trying to say.”
But Brasile
is happy with the people that are responding positively. “Every little bit
helps.” he said.
John Miksad,
a Veterans for Peace member from Wilton said a group of about 30-40 people
joined together to take part in the Norwalk Memorial Day Parade where they
carried peace banners and got a good reception from the crowd.
The peace group
had veterans (including a 92-year-old Korean War vet), members of St. Paul’s
Episcopal Church in Norwalk, Quakers and others.
“I’ve been
marching in the parade for about five years and this is the best turnout we’ve
had,” said Miksad.
“This is a good sign because it appears the
peace movement is growing again. My guess is what’s happening is, particularly
young people, are seeing this war in Gaza, the horror of civilians being
killed, 14,000 children killed, people buried in the rubble and I think they’re
seeing firsthand the violence and the barbarity of war.”
He added, “People
are repulsed by it. It’s being live streamed onto people’s phones and tablets
and computers and they’re saying, ‘Not in my name.’ Certainly that’s what these
veterans who are are walking are saying, ‘Not in our name.’ “
The peace walk is dedicated to Daniel Ellsberg, the long-time anti-war activist who died last year. In 1971, Ellsberg released the trove of classified documents known as "The Pentagon Papers" which revealed the lies the government had told about the Vietnam War. The revelations helped swing public opinion against the war and led to an end to the conflict.
Excellent article Reginald! As a veteran and member of Veterans for Peace here in Connecticut we are proud to support those young people standing up in colleges and supporting what VFP has been saying since 1985. Divest from the War machine and negotiate with countries.
ReplyDeleteThank you. The walk is sparking a lot of attention, and that's good.
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