by Thomas Good - September 7, 2010 | News


Reverend James Seawood of the Brighton Heights Reform Church
(Photo: Thomas Good / NLN)

STATEN ISLAND, N.Y. — On Sunday, August 29, clergy of several traditions — Rabbis, Reverends, Priests and Imams — joined together on a march for tolerance and respect. The interfaith procession journeyed from a Protestant church to a Muslim mosque and ended at a Catholic church. At each stop speakers addressed the marchers — delivering an ecumenical message.


Activist Hesham El-Meligy outside the Masjid Al-Ihsan Mosque
(Photo: Thomas Good / NLN)

The “Respecting Differences Program” was an interfaith gathering “for reflection and hope” designed to promote tolerance and respect. Members of various religious traditions gathered at Staten Island’s Brighton Heights Reformed Church. Several speakers, representing a variety of faiths, addressed the audience. After the remarks concluded the congregation walked down St. Mark’s Place to the Al-Ihsan Mosque, a short distance away. At the mosque an Imam called the group to prayer and an Episcopalian minister asked if anyone could imagine a neighborhood complaining about a plan to build an Anglican church in their community.


Peace Action’s Eileen Bardel at the mosque
(Photo: Thomas Good / NLN)

After the visit to the mosque ended the group continued their journey to Saint Peters Catholic Church, also on St. Mark’s Place.


Imam Tahir Kukiai looks on as Rabbi Gerald Sussman speaks to NY1
(Photo: Thomas Good / NLN)

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Surrounded by press an Imam calls the congregation to prayer
(Photo: Thomas Good / NLN)

by Fran Korotzer - | News


(Photo: Bud Korotzer / NLN)

NEW YORK — During the early evening hours of August 19th the street in front of the new Trader Joe’s store on 6th Avenue and 20th Street in NYC was filled with about 200 chanting, placard carrying demonstrators and a brass band, the Rude Mechanical Orchestra. Organized by a group representing the tomato pickers in Immokalee, Florida, the Coalition of Immokalee Workers (CIW), and supported by their many allies, it was part of a campaign to get the Trader Joe’s market chain to agree to join with Whole Foods, McDonald’s, Subway, Taco Bell, and Burger King who are already working with the CIW to improve the working conditions and wages of the farm workers who pick the tomatoes that these stores sell. Essentially, that would mean that Trader Joe’s would have to pay an additional penny a pound for their tomatoes. The agreement between the Florida growers and these retailers requires that the retailers demand more humane standards from their Florida tomato suppliers, and for that they will agree to pay a higher price for the more fairly produced tomatoes, and they will only buy from growers who meet those higher standards. The Immokalee workers are trying to establish the principle of “Fair Food”.


(Photo: Bud Korotzer / NLN)

The CIW is responding to a human rights crisis in Florida’s tomato fields. Pickers earn 40-50 cents for every 32 pound bucket of tomatoes that they harvest. That pay rate has not risen since 1978. A worker has to pick 2.5 tons of tomatoes to earn a minimum wage for a 10 hour day.


(Photo: Bud Korotzer / NLN)

In 2008 2 farm labor employers in Immokalee each got 12 year prison sentences for enslaving tomato harvesters. The pickers were held against their will, beaten, chained, and locked up at night. During the past decade there have been 7 convictions of tomato growers, involving over 1,000 workers, for servitude/slavery.


(Photo: Bud Korotzer / NLN)

The CIW did not gain the power to represent the workers easily. They began organizing in 1993 in a room in a local church. Their goal was to better their lives and the lives of their community. It took 3 community wide work stoppages, a month long hunger strike by some of them, strong pressure on the growers from groups that supported the workers, and a historic 234 mile march in 2000 from Ft. Meyers to Orlando to enable them to gain recognition and win industry wide raises of 13% – 25% for the harvesters.


(Photo: Bud Korotzer / NLN)

As people passed Trader Joe’s they were handed leaflets explaining the action and very many stopped to talk. The demonstrators explained that they were not asking anyone to boycott the store yet. Postcards signed by people in the street that were addressed to Dan Bane, Trader Joe’s CEO, urging him to work with the CIW to ensure fair wages and working conditions for the farm workers, were delivered to the store manager.


(Photo: Bud Korotzer / NLN)

After about 90 minutes, as the colorful signs and musical instruments were packed up, there was one final militant chant, “We’ll be back and we’ll be stronger. We won’t take this any longer.”

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by Thomas Good - August 23, 2010 | Analysis, News


“I live here, Sarah Palin doesn’t”
(Photo: Thomas Good / NLN)

NEW YORK — August 22, 2010. Sunday was another rainy day in New York City, as two sides of the Ground Zero mosque issue squared off in dueling protests — two sides who are responding to a catastrophe with two mutually exclusive answers: hatred and healing.


“Islamophobia defiles Ground Zero”
(Photo: Thomas Good / NLN)

LOST

If volume validated an argument then the motorcycle contingent bound for Sunday’s anti-mosque protest would win, hands down. With loud pipes and shrill voices, the bikers from out of town who thundered down Broadway en route to the demonstration — apparently going the wrong direction — would have the final word in any debate whose outcome is measured only in decibels. But it isn’t that simple. And just as the issues surrounding the proposed building of a mosque-slash-community center in the general area of Ground Zero aren’t so simple — it’s too simplistic to write off all of the bikers as stereotypic toughs, incapable of compassion or human emotion. Some of them lost relatives in the September 11, 2001 attack on the Trade Center.

A short time after the loud cavalcade drove past this reporter, several of their number, now dismounted, emerged on a street corner looking confused, vulnerable and maybe even a little embarrassed. It was hard to deny their humanity. We’ve all been lost before — alone, wandering unfamiliar territory.

US V. THEM

To those who see the world from the vantage point of an “us versus them” perspective — there is no middle ground, no room for freedom of religion, no Constitution to defend, no reason to wince at racist epithets hurled at the Other side. To those who embrace an ideology based on interpreting 9/11 as a clash of two cultures, as an apocalyptic harbinger of a holy war — one protester’s angry outburst sums up the world view: “Islam is not a religion, it’s a cult.”

This was the statement one New Yorker hurled at another on Sunday.

And as if this statement was not sufficient to choke off discussion, to demonize and objectify an entire faith, the anti-mosque protester continued: “If you had a Qur’an here, I’d piss on it.”


“Support freedom of religion”
(Photo: Bud Korotzer / NLN)

THE OTHERS

The objectification of Other as evil incarnate, the demonization of billions of believers, is not a rational construct but it is one that has currency, perhaps because choosing hatred over healing, choosing to adopt bumper sticker slogans over calm dialog is less threatening, less intimidating than attempting to grasp elusive nuances. There is no doubt that it is easier to hate than to love, to assimilate rather than to accommodate, to shout rather than to listen. This is the sad trajectory of terrorism itself.


“Isn’t the Constitution hallowed?”
(Photo: Bud Korotzer / NLN)

The man who uttered that sad statement, who argued that Islam is not a religion, was eventually quieted by a white-shirted NYPD senior officer. The target of the protester’s venom — who had responded angrily — walked off to join the Other demonstration of the day: the group of civil rights activists, peace protesters and interfaith clerics who support the Muslims looking to build the Cordoba House mosque and community center on 51 Park Place.


(Photo: Bud Korotzer / NLN)

FROM NYC TO OKLAHOMA — AND BACK AGAIN

At the anti-Islamophobia rally, Alan Stolzer of the Military Project asked me a question.

“Has anyone built a church near the Oklahoma City bomb site?”

His rhetorical question was pointed: Timothy McVeigh was a blond and blue Christian. A home grown killer. The analogy was not ideal. McVeigh did not profess to kill in the name of his religion. But in our history other Americans have killed in the name of their faith, some acting in concert with other true believers. And yet in these cases, it was the killers who were judged, not the professed faith, not the religion in its entirety. It could not be otherwise. And yet it’s different for Muslims in America.


“Build and learn together”
(Photo: Bud Korotzer / NLN)

BEYOND BINARIES

Somewhere in between the 9/11 ideologues — the Islamophobes and racists who look to burning books as a solution — and the Muslim community left holding a fractured First Amendment are the families of 9/11. Their grief is not ideological in nature but their numbers, their “hearts and minds,” are the perceived prize for those who would market rabid xenophobia disguised as patriotism. The Sarah Palins and other rank opportunists, none of whom have ever lived in New York, some of whom can’t spell xenophobia — even if they can see it from their back yard — are eager to profit from appeals to hatred and racism. But for those who lost loved ones, healing will have to be accomplished without hate. However this is done, whatever path is chosen, healing involves overcoming hate, not embracing it.

As the rain fell on the protesters who challenge the binary world view, those who want to heal and move beyond Islamophobia and the scourge of racism, as the mainstream media swarmed to get their soundbites from the “pro-mosque protesters” — a man in a priest’s collar quietly held up a sign. It read: “Build and Learn Together.”

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by Adoptee Rights Coalition - August 18, 2010 | News


The 2010 Adoptee Rights march in Louisville meets the press
(Photo: Dory Martin / ARC)

[ Editor's Note: I was adopted in October of 1958. In May of this year I found my birth mother. I went to see her in July. It was one of the most remarkable experiences of my life. I not only reunited with my mother but was very excited to discover I have a birth sister. I feel very fortunate. If I had been born after 1964 -- I would have been denied access to my own records and the mother and son reunion that was so moving would never have happened. Many adoptees are not as lucky as I was. Each state has different laws and some states have convoluted, archaic laws -- my home state has three sets of laws for three time periods. It can be very confusing to attempt to navigate the legal system if you have no background or no progressive attorney (thanks Gideon!) to offer guidance. For this reason I contacted the Adoptee Rights Coalition and asked their organizers to write a piece for NLN. It is my contention that the adoptee's right to access their own history is no different from any other civil right -- unfortunately this is a civil right trampled by corrupt politicians and attorneys who profit from making children into commodities. I recently spoke to a friend in the NAACP and as we talked about our common search for ancestors it became clear that adoptees and the descendants of slaves have one thing in common: our past has been taken from us. One could argue that the Adoptee Rights Coalition could well adopt the slogan of the National Lawyers Guild: "Human rights should be more sacred that property rights." In the end, adoptees are not the property of the State and have a right to know who they are, where they came from -- and to pursue a reunion with their birth family if all concerned want it. I salute and thank the Adoptee Rights Coalition for the work they are doing and for agreeing to submit a piece to NLN. ]


“The people, united…” (Adoptee Rights protesters in Louisville, 2010)
(Photo: Dory Martin / ARC)

LOUISVILLE, Ky. — The Adoptee Rights Coalition was formed in 2007 in response to frustration at the myths, speculation, conjecture and shame that fuels the practice of denying American citizens — who happened to be adopted — the facts of their own lives.


“I’m Tired Of Being A Secret” (Louisville, 2010)
(Photo: Dory Martin / ARC)

In the 1930s and 1940s the United States — except for Kansas and Alaska — sealed the original birth certificates of people who were adopted. Not to protect the adoptee — to protect the sanctity of the adopted family.


“We Are opposedTo State Lies” (Adoptee Rights protest in Philadelphia, 2009)
(Photo: Kate Dahlquist and Claudia D’Arcy / ARC)

Adoption gained wide acceptance and popularity after World War II. As soon as the first bumper crop of adoptees grew-up, adoptees began asking for the right to have the documents relating to their own lives as available to them — a birth right taken for granted by most American citizens. In 1971, adoptee Florence Fisher founded the Adoptees Liberty Movement Association “to abolish the existing practice of sealed records” and advocate for “opening of records to any adopted person over eighteen who wants, for any reason, to see them.”


“Original Identity Is A Basic Human Right” (protest in Philadelphia, 2009)
(Photo: Kate Dahlquist and Claudia D’Arcy / ARC)

Unfortunately, the case for ending discrimination against adoptees has been stymied by adoption agencies and adoption attorneys who currently enjoy an unregulated $1.4 billion dollar a year industry. For more information, see “The National Council for Adoption: Mothers, Money, Marketing and Madness”

Adoptee Rights Coalition member Diane Crossfield offered a brief run down on the issue of adoptees being denied access to their won birth certificates on The Takeaway.


“Bastards Unite” (Philadelphia, 2009)
(Photo: Kate Dahlquist and Claudia D’Arcy / ARC)

Adoptees are routinely pathologized, their motives and loyalties questioned — for the simple act of wanting the same rights afforded to every other citizen.


“Birth Moms Support Adoptee Rights” (Philadelphia, 2009)
(Photo: Kate Dahlquist and Claudia D’Arcy / ARC)

Because adoption laws are decided on a state by state basis, Adoptee Rights activists have gathered at the National Convention of State Legislators for the last three years to lobby and educate law makers regarding pending legislation — and to urge legislators to take up the issue of adoptee rights legislation in their home state. To read more about these efforts visit AdopteeRights.net

Adoptee rights activists made the journey to Louisville this year — holding a protest outside the convention as part of the effort to educate the legislators and the public.

AdopteeRights.net has resources for anyone who is looking to donate time and money, or is interested in learning more about the adoptee rights movement in their state.

View Photos/Videos From The Protests In Louisville and Philly…


“McMahon Stop Pandering To Islamophobia”
(Photo: Thomas Good / NLN)

STATEN ISLAND, N.Y. — August 16, 2010. What do angry labor leaders, frustrated health care recipients, disgusted anti-war activists, stunned “Jewish money” donors and now — protesters decrying an “Islamophobic Witchhunt” — have in common? Mike McMahon.


Activist Elaine Brower strums a few chords for tolerance
(Photo: Thomas Good / NLN)

ISLAMOPHOBIC WITCHHUNT?

In a statement released last week a “diverse group of activists” said that, “As the elected representative of the 13th District, Congressman McMahon is encharged with upholding the principle of equal treatment for ALL, regardless of race, religion, gender, or sexual orientation. When he called for federal information on the Muslim religious organization MAS, he violated that core principle, and in so doing, pandered to the worst forces of bigotry. Would he have made the same request if it were a Christian or Jewish organization that wanted to build a house of worship? Is Representative McMahon prepared to investigate the anti-Muslim hate groups that breed a growing atmosphere of intolerance and racism from coast to coast?”


A protester plays John Lennon’s “Imagine”
(Photo: Thomas Good / NLN)

The statement was issued prior to a demonstration that the aggrieved activists held at McMahon’s Staten Island office on Friday the 13th. One version of the statement went out with the headline Protest Rep. McMahon Islamophobic Witchhunt

What made the protesters mad?


McMahon — and McCarthyism?
(Photo: Thomas Good / NLN)

ALLEGED AFFILIATIONS AND FBI INVESTIGATIONS

The Muslim American Society wanted to build a mosque on Staten Island. Some local community members claimed that the group had ties to a U.S. branch of the “Muslim Brotherhood.” The “U.S. Muslim Brotherhood” is apparently an organization so secret that one on can prove it exists, except in the extreme right wing of the blogosphere where it is mentioned constantly.

Rather than meet with the MAS, to determine their intentions and ask about their affiliations, McMahon told the Staten Island Advance he would do a check on the group. He then asked the FBI to investigate. The Bureau, according to McMahon, eventually told the Congressman that the MAS “appears harmless.” But the furor and the investigation caused the Catholic Archdiocese to cancel the sale of its closed convent to the MAS — and without a property to build on, the mosque plan was scrapped. Protesters accused McMahon of pandering, of using Islamophobia as an election year ploy.


A sergeant from the 122 PCT looks on as protesters decry racism
(Photo: Thomas Good / NLN)

An initial protest, against Islamophobia, was held at the site of the proposed mosque. But protesters, angry with their congressman, decided that they needed to put a finer point on his behavior, and they called a second protest. This time the protest was held outside the congressman’s office.

THE PROTEST

As the sun set on Friday, a dozen protesters holding signs were watched by two cops from the 122 Precinct as drivers passing by honked in support — while others hurled the occasional epithet. One driver called the protesters “a bunch of Muslims.” The protesters were a mix of faiths — with a couple of atheists thrown in.

The protesters argued that “McMahon should have stood up for the Muslim community. Instead he chose to disrespect them by appeasing those who use anti-Islamic hysteria as a political tool. By calling the Federal government, he a gave a nod to those who make it their life’s work to point an accusing finger at American Muslims, and engaged in an Islamophobic witchhunt. He played enabler to a movement of anti-Mosque fear and bigotry that now sweeps the country and demands national headlines.”


Activist Richie Marini is interviewed by NY1
(Photo: Thomas Good / NLN)

MCMAHON’S ALIENATED CONSTITUENTS — AND THE “JEWISH MONEY” BLUNDER

Mike McMahon, known for his non-committal, “centrist,” rhetoric and conservative voting record angered labor leaders when he voted against President Obama’s hhealth care reform package. Earlier today several news services reported that the AFL-CIO decided not to endorse McMahon “at this time.” SEIU1199 and the Working Families Party have made less equivocal decisions to yank their endorsements of the conservative Democrat.

Peace groups are also frustrated with McMahon’s support for the Iraq and Afghanistan wars.

In perhaps what is the most damaging blow to McMahon’s re-election effort, his former campaign spokesperson, Jennifer Nelson, released a list of “Jewish money” — i.e. campaign donors to McMahon’s rival Michael Grimm — to the New York Observer. McMahon fired the staffer but the news went viral and googling for “McMahon Jewish Donors” turns up over 1 million hits.

Can McMahon survive labor troubles, a pro-war voting record, and the “Jewish money” flap? Perhaps…perhaps his “Islamophobic Witchhunt” is an effort pander to those voters who haven’t yet jumped ship.

View Photos From The Event…

by Thomas Good - | News


(Photo: Bud Korotzer / NLN)

NEW YORK — August 10, 2010. MoveOn is worried. Apparently so were a hundred or so of their closest friends.


(Photo: Bud Korotzer / NLN)

The progressive Democrats held a rally a “Rally for Democracy” in which “New York City residents gathering to support fundamental changes to recapture our government from Corporate Lobbyists and CEOs” took to the streets.


(Photo: Bud Korotzer / NLN)

On Tuesday, August 10, at high noon, over 100 New Yorkers gathered outside Senator Charles E. Schumer’s office in Manhattan, at Third Ave. and 47th Street. The demonstraters were there to rally support for the “Fight Washington Corruption Pledge.” The Pledge addresses three issues that MoveOn members have identified as critical to the preservation of U.S. democracy: lobbying reform, election reform and reversing the Supreme Court’s “Citizens United” decision, which essentially allows corporations to campaign for political parties and candidates without spending limits.


(Photo: Bud Korotzer / NLN)

According to MoveOn this has the effect of “Putting our candidates up for sale. This is not democracy and must be answered. These three fundamental areas need to be changed before other political issues will be able to receive open debate and consideration.”


(Photo: Bud Korotzer / NLN)

According to organizers a goal of the rally was to unite “People who advocate for positive change, to educate fellow citizens on how their hard-earned liberties are jeopardized by bloated corporate wealth and to show Senator Schumer the voice and desires of his constituents, so that he can vote with our interests in mind.”

The rally featured speakers from Citizens Action, Common Cause, and the Public Campaign Action Fund, among others.

View Photos From The Event…


(Photo: Ed Hedemann / WRL)

NEW YORK — August 7, 2010 — Tompkins Square Park. It was an unusually pleasant summer day for an especially unpleasant subject — 65 years since the United States unapologetically — to this day — unleashed nuclear weapons on the citizens of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, unilaterally beginning the nuclear arms race. This exhibit, which the War Resisters League produced for the 50th anniversary of the bombings, immediate drew the attention of park denizens as well as many passersby. While some took fleeting notice, others spent a lot of time reading every single panel in the exhibit. Though there were a number of impromptu discussions and some debates, mostly people took leaflets and other literature and looked in silence.


(Photo: Bud Korotzer / NLN)

Frida Berrigan, a long time War Resister, worked the event. She told NLN that “It was a lovely, hot afternoon. Not unlike the day on which the bomb was dropped on Hiroshima. Passersby were asked to remember Hiroshima and Nagasaki, to spend a few minutes with the War Resisters League’s ’65 Years of Nuclearism’ exhibit, and take literature. A number of people read the whole exhibit, and were happy to take our materials.

I think that our presence there served as an important reminder to people out to enjoy their Saturday.”


(Photo: Bud Korotzer / NLN)


(Photo: Bud Korotzer / NLN)

NEW YORK — “Stop in the name of health! Don’t cut my Medicare. After I voted for you. After I voted for you.” 100 people from the Granny Peace Brigade and their many supporters sang like the Supremes (Stop in the Name of Love) and did a group dance in busy Bryant Park on Friday, July 30th, during lunch hour. They were accompanied by a very able band. Organized by Healthcare Now! NYC the event was timed to coincide with the 45th birthday of Medicare as well as meetings currently being held by the federal Deficit Commission which is considering cuts in Medicare, Medicaid, and Social Security despite Social Security having a $2.54 trillion surplus and solvency through 2037 (ssa.gov/OACT/STATS/table4a3.html).

Some of the dancers and singers were in their 80′s and 90′s while others were only 65, but all agreed that their lives depended on Medicare, and that this is a life or death struggle. They said Medicare should be expanded not cut. Some had personal stories about repeated bouts with cancer and explained how Medicare was allowing them to get the treatment that was keeping them alive.


(Photo: Bud Korotzer / NLN)

Although the performance left many observers laughing in appreciation, this is very much a fight for survival. According to the Harvard Medical School 45,000 people a year die in this country because they don’t have medical insurance. The number goes up to 101,000 people when the underinsured are included.

“People who voted for him [Obama] are not happy to see him preparing to cut Medicare. The irony is that a Medicare for All system would actually save $400 billion a year, because it cuts out the profits and the administrative waste of the private health insurance industry,” said participant Julia Willebrand, 77, who is the Green Party’s candidate for N.Y.S. Comptroller.


(Photo: Bud Korotzer / NLN)

After the performance in Bryant Park the troop walked around the block and repeated the song and dance on 5th Avenue between the stone lions, Patience and Fortitude, that guard the front entrance of the public library. Many interested observers stopped to comment and ask questions.

During the past year Medicare Now! NYC led the fight for a single payer, Medicare for All, “Everybody In – Nobody Out” health insurance. There were regular demonstrations in Grand Central Station as well as at insurance companies which were raking in billions while denying essential treatment to policy holders. Many people were arrested while sitting-in at these companies and charged with criminal trespass and/or obstructing governmental administration. During the year these cases worked their way through the court system with charges being conditionally dismissed.

Charges against 2 of those arrested at Aetna, Joan Pleune and Kate Barnhardt, were dismissed last month. However, news was brought to the library steps that the office of Cy Vance, Manhattan District Attorney, was filing new charges against Pleune and Barnhardt. That very morning ADA Eric Kratzville informed their attorney, Stephen Edwards, that he was planning to refile “amended charges” against Joan and Kate and that they should arrange a date to turn themselves in or be re-arrested against their will.

Everyone was incredulous, upset, angry. Why are the city’s resources being used to pursue charges in a non-violent protest case? This seems to make no sense.

As of this writing, August 6th, Pleune, a veteran of the civil rights movement, and Barnhardt have not been re-arrested. People have been urged to call the District Attorney’s Communications Director, Erin Duggin (212-335-9400) and ask why they are pursuing a case against these 2 women.

View Photos From The Event…

by Thomas Good - August 11, 2010 | News


A “Peace Procession” was part of the 2010 Hiroshima / Nagasaki observance
(Photo: Thomas Good / NLN)

STATEN ISLAND, N.Y. — August 8, 2010. Hiroshima still haunts: marking the 65th anniversary of the Hiroshima / Nagasaki bombings the Social Justice Committee of the Unitarian Church of Staten Island and Peace Action of Staten Island commemorated the events with music, dance, dramatic readings and a “peace procession.”


David Jones performed a piece he calls “Nagasaki”
(Photo: Thomas Good / NLN)

The bombings at HIroshima and Nagasaki took place on August 6 and 9, 1945.

According to Wikipedia: Within the first two to four months of the bombings, the acute effects killed 90,000-166,000 people in Hiroshima and 60,000-80,000 in Nagasaki,

Sunday’s commemoration took place at the Unitarian Church and featured readings and poetry. Music was provided by Staten Island pianist David Jones and members of the musical ensemble WaFoo, which blends the traditions of Japanese music with American jazz.


Flutist Yuuki Koike of WaFoo
(Photo: Thomas Good / NLN)

The American Conscience Theatre performed a short theatrical piece by Georgina Ohene commemorating the Hiroshima and Nagasaki bombings. The 25 minute presentation was a combination of live music by Robert Ross, dancing, and readings from John Hersey’s book, Hiroshima.


Georgina Ohene of the American Conscience Theatre
(Photo: Thomas Good / NLN)

The commemoration concluded with a procession from the Unitarian Church to the Snug Harbor Cultural Center.


Peace Action’s Sally Jones took part in the “Peace Procession”
(Photo: Thomas Good / NLN)

View Photos/Videos From The Event…


Bias attack victim Richard Vieira looks on as Matt Titone and Gerard Mawn address the crowd
(Photo: Thomas Good / NLN)

STATEN ISLAND, N.Y. — August 7, 2010. On Saturday evening a diverse group of Staten Islanders united against hate crimes, held a candlelight vigil outside Borough Hall — before marching to White Castle where Assembly Member Matt Titone treated everyone to a burger.

Earlier this year, on July 7, a man made homophobic comments before assaulting Richard Vieira and his partner at a White Castle in Staten Island’s Stapleton section. Police continue to search for the assailant.


Anti-hate vigilers outside Borough Hall
(Photo: Thomas Good / NLN)

In response to the attack — and to the recent wave of hate crimes targeting Mexicans — Staten Island Pride called a candlelight vigil and march. The event was held on Saturday night and was sponsored by a variety of groups, elected officials and individuals, including: Make The Road New York, the Guardian Angels, the Public Advocate’s office, State Senator Diane Savino (D – 23rd District), New York City Council Member Debi Rose (D – 49th District) and State Assembly Member Matt Titone (D – 61st District).


Protesters and press
(Photo: Thomas Good / NLN)

Standing in front of Borough Hall, the vigilers were besieged by the New York press corps which has been following the hate crimes story. Standing in formation, to the right of the crowd, a group of Guardian Angels held candles.


The Guardian Angels joined the vigil
(Photo: Thomas Good / NLN)

As the time neared to start the march event organizers addressed the crowd and the press.

“We want to call attention to hate crimes here on Staten Island,” said Gerard Mawn of Staten Island Pride.

“We want everyone here to commit to being a solution, to being part of the solution, to the hate crimes that started many months ago,” he said.

Mawn introduced Matt Titone who thanked the Guardian Angels for keeping the community safe and for participating in the vigil and march. Titone also thanked police and told the crowd that six arrests have been effected since the bias attacks began in April.


Assembly Member Matt Titone led the march
(Photo: Thomas Good / NLN)

Surrounded by the press, Titone led the vigilers in a march to the White Castle where Luis and Richard Vieira were assaulted. Richard Vieira, his arm in a sling, joined the march. He was surrounded by Guardian Angels as the procession made its way down Bay Street.


Richard Vieira flanked by Guardian Angels
(Photo: Thomas Good / NLN)

Cars passing the marchers honked in support as protesters held up signs saying “I Am Staten Island” and “Respect For Diversity.”

Standing in the parking lot of White Castle, Matt Titone addressed the marchers as TV crews looked on.

“I would like to treat everyone, including the press, to a burger on me. We passed a budget — I got paid. But seriously I really do want to thank everyone for participating and really showing our unity, our stand against hatred,” Titone said.

“We will not stand for intolerance. We are not afraid of those who are afraid of us. And we will continue to work, we will continue to march and we will continue to pray for those who feel differently,” he added.

View Photos/Videos From The Event…