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1999, A Graduation to Remember (Evergreen State College - the ones blocking military shipments)
academic dot evergreen dot edu ^ | orig 1999 | Peter Bohmer

Posted on 11/14/2007 6:27:44 PM PST by doug from upland

A Graduation Day to Remember
by Peter Bohmer
June 20, 1999

"Out of the many here assembled, it is the heart of he or she that I seek who looks at a life of vapid materialism, of capitalist excess, and finds it simply intolerable. It may be 100 of you, or 50, or even ten, or even one of you who makes that choice. I am here to honor and applaud that choice and to warn you that, though the suffering may indeed be great, it is nothing to the joy of doing the right thing."

Mumia Abu-Jamal, at the Evergreen State College, Olympia, Washington, June 11, 1999

Mumia Abu-Jamal gave a memorable speech, recorded from Pennsylvania death row, to 8000 attendees, including more than 1200 graduating students, at the Evergreen State College graduation on June 11, 1999. During his 13 minute talk, you could have heard a pin drop, as almost everyone listened intently to Mumia's articulate voice. Drawing on the history of racist oppression in this country and the resistance to it, Mumia Abu-Jamal, in his taped address prepared for the graduating students, urged them to live their lives deliberately and join the revolutionary struggle. He pointed out that "race" is a social construct but also a social reality, and that whites had made and could and should make the choice to fight against white supremacy and the evils of capitalism, and for the liberation of all people. At the conclusion of his talk, a large majority of the audience gave him a loud standing ovation that could be heard all the way to his death row cell and hopefully to the U.S. Supreme Court, who will soon decide whether to consider the case. The attention paid by the graduating Evergreen students, their friends and relatives to Mumia's words, the interest in Mumia and the issues he raised, and the solidarity expressed by the applause, was very moving.

The idea of Mumia being the graduation speaker had been put forward in the fall of 1997. Although not initially successful, the idea did not die. In the last year, a group of students, primarily seniors, with support from a small group of faculty, staff and alumni organized to promote Mumia Abu-Jamal as the speaker for the 1999 graduation at the Evergreen State College, a 4000 student state college in Olympia, Washington.

Graduating students have usually had the primary say in selecting the speaker. Since it was announced in March, 1999 that Mumia was going to be a graduation speaker a furious, although ultimately unsuccessful campaign was launched to prevent this from happening.

Friday, June 11th , 1999 was a great day, especially for those who had worked so hard to have Mumia Abu-Jamal's voice be heard. One result of the organizing and outreach to gain support for Mumia speaking, is an increased awareness at Evergreen about the unjust nature of his conviction. By hearing him speak at graduation, there is also a more personal connection to Mumia which will lead to increased efforts to gain a new trial and prevent his execution. The national publicity will also help. At the college and in Olympia, it has led to real discussion about the racism and injustice in all aspects of the criminal justice system: police brutality; inadequate legal representation for most defendants; unjust arrests and imprisonment of political activists (especially people of color); juries that are often not of ones peers; the imprisonment with longer sentences of almost two million people, disproportionately Black, Native American and Latino; and the death penalty. The Philadelphia Fraternal Order of Police, many other police associations and the "law and order" crowd do not only want to execute Mumia, they also are committed to silencing him. On June 11th, they failed. (See my ZNET commentary of May 30, 1999 for background.) Their campaign escalated in early June of this year.

GRADUATION DAY APPROACHES
Less than a week before the scheduled graduation, on June 5th and June 6th, Maureen Faulkner, the widow of Daniel Faulkner, the cop whom Mumia was convicted of murdering in the deeply flawed 1982 trial, took out big ads in the local newspaper, the Gannett owned "The Olympian" with the headline, "A Convicted Cop Killer, Speaker at Evergreen State College Commencement?" In the ad, she announced she would be attending the commencement with a picture of her dead husband and asked people to walk out when Mumia's speech began. The pressure to prevent Abu-Jamal from speaking was intense. Editorials in "The Olympian" and other newspapers, repeatedly called him a cop killer; hundreds of letters and emails to the campus demanded he not be allowed to speak; a Washington State legislator demanded the same; and U.S. Congressman Tom DeLay, the Republican House whip from Texas, called for a moment of silence in the U.S. Congress on June 11th at 1 P.M. to protest Mumia's participation in the graduation. DeLay called the college socially irresponsible. Socially irresponsible is something DeLay truly is an expert in. As June 11th approached, anxiety continued to rise. There were rumors that 300 armed cops were coming to support Maureen Faulkner and protest the graduation, that Mumia's speech would be drowned out by bullhorns, and that hundreds would walk out. In response to her ad, an open and respectful letter to her, signed by 20 faculty and staff and distributed two days before graduation, contested Ms. Faulkner's claims of Mumia's guilt, and summarized some of the worldwide support for a new trial.

Maureen Faulkner demanded to address the graduation. The Evergreen college administration, to its credit, did not give her time to speak from the podium. The day before the graduation, the college president, Jane Jervis, in an interview with the New York Times said that Abu-Jamal deserved inclusion because he used his free-speech "to galvanize an international conversation about the death penalty, and the relationship between poverty and the criminal justice system." This was a step forward from earlier attempts to apologize for and minimize Mumia's verbal presence. Partly because of student organizing, the college did not cave in to the concerted and organized attempt to remove him from the college graduation. Students in support of Mumia became increasingly organized, strategic and effective in increasing the number of people involved in the campaign. There was systematic outreach to the mass media, the alternate media and the Internet. They sent out a message far and wide that Evergreen graduates were being honored by having Abu-Jamal speak; that he deserved a new trial, and that he was raising issues of fundamental importance for the future of this country.

For the graduation itself, the symbolism put forward was that Mumia was the canary sent into coal mine shafts to test for lethal gas. If the canary died, the miners knew not to descend into the mine, because it was poisonous. The pamphlet, which was handed out to 6000 people during the graduation stated, "Mumia is the canary in our coal mine. If he dies without a fair trial, we will know that we live in a society that is unsafe for all of us." This well-received pamphlet concluded, "If we don't defend justice for others, who will defend justice for us." Yellow armbands and/or flags with a picture of a canary in a cage were worn by hundreds of graduating seniors and many supporters. It was decided to set a nonconfrontational tone at graduation and not respond to provocation by the police or the right wing who were sure to be there.

GRADUATION DAY
The local newspaper, "The Olympian" on the morning of the graduation headlined, "Eyes of the nation are on Evergreen for Abu-Jamal speech." At 1:00 P.M., the graduating students marched to the main square on the campus and took their seats. It was a warm and sunny day, a good omen. After welcoming comments and a speech, by Evergreen faculty member Stephanie Coontz, that strongly encouraged people to listen to each other and bridge differences, President Jane Jervis introduced Mumia Abu-Jamal. She asked people to listen respectively and gave them the option to leave the square for the duration of his speech. Although some faculty and students had predicted mass walkouts, only about 15 graduating students walked out and another 20 to 25 remained but turned their backs in protest of Mumia's speech. Perhaps another 25 stayed away from the entire graduation to object. These three forms of protest together adds up to only 5% of the students receiving their bachelor's or masters degree, a very small percentage of those graduating. Given the pressure exerted on students to protest Mumia by the mass media, by police and by Maureen Faulkner who walked out with her supporters, that the overwhelming majority listened respectfully and attentively speaks well for the Evergreen community A significant number of those who walked out or turned their backs worked in law enforcement or had close relatives working as cops or a similar job.

During this day, the media swarmed around Maureen Faulkner but most students ignored her. There were no disruptions or confrontations at the graduation. Mumia's speech was the center piece of a meaningful day. By 4:30 P.M., each student who was graduating had their name called, received their diploma and left with friends and family.

THE MEDIA SPIN
Not surprising but still somewhat disappointing was the TV and newspaper coverage of the graduation. All of the stories began with the protest against Mumia. Maureen Faulkner and the few students and non-students who protested Mumia' speech were the center of almost all of the accounts. For example, the Associated Press (AP) story was titled "Abu-Jamal Protested at Commencement", and the first half of the story only mentioned those who walked out in protest with all the quotes from this group. There was not one word about support for Mumia. The second half of the AP story included one short quote from a graduating senior who supported Mumia speaking at the graduation, a little bit about his case and two sentences from Abu-Jamal's speech. The protest against him speaking became the main story, and the remarkable story that Mumia Abu-Jamal spoke at a college graduation with overwhelming support from thousands was not reported.

The press in the U.S. proudly calls itself free, and reporters no doubt believe they are objective. It was very revealing to see these reporters and the TV cameras continually seek out for interviews and comments from those who protested Mumia speaking, and ignore or minimize the far larger numbers who supported him. The supporters were far more organized with press packets, and prepared statements from a diverse group of students, alumni and faculty, but this didn't matter. The media did not actually lie in the sense that they changed what Mumia said, or exaggerated the numbers who walked out. Rather the main story ended up being the protest against Mumia, which fit best with the status quo view that there are no political prisoners in this country, that we live in a country where for the most part, racism is a problem of the past, that people who are convicted of crimes or in prison must be guilty, that poor people are to blame for their poverty, and the wealthy and powerful are rewarded for their ability.

It is a viewpoint which is unconsciously accepted by reporters and their editors. They consider it perfectly normal and appropriate for people like Henry Kissinger and Robert Rubin, whose policies have led to the deaths of hundreds of thousands, if not millions, to be honored college graduation speakers, while they condemn Mumia Abu-Jamal as violent and inappropriate. It led these reporters to look for and focus on the protest against Mumia. This illustrates why media with a different framework is so important. "Democracy Now", hosted by Amy Goodman and Juan Gonzales, played the entirety of Mumia Abu-Jamal's talk, in reporting on the Evergreen graduation on their June 14th radio show.

A SUCCESSFUL DAY FOR THE LEFT
There was a Mumia benefit, Friday night, June 11th, after the graduation that many local musicians played at. In spite of reports of the media spin, there was a solid feeling of positive accomplishment by those attending the show as people recounted the many discussions they had heard or participated in during the day of students with their parents and relatives about the criminal injustice system and the death penalty. Many parents said they would look into Mumia's case more carefully in the future as well as oppose the locking up of more and more of our population.

The silence about Mumia Abu-Jamal was pierced in Olympia on June 11th, 1999 and the ripples reached much farther. It was a day that those in attendance will always remember and for most, the memories will be about the social significance of what occurred. The struggle continues!



TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Government; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: academia; bohmer; evergreenstatecoll; highereducation; leftismoncampus; moonbat; mumia; sedition; traitors
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I kid you not. The quad on campus is called RED SQUARE.

Perhaps Evergreen's most famous graduate.


1 posted on 11/14/2007 6:27:48 PM PST by doug from upland
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To: NavyCanDo

PING


2 posted on 11/14/2007 6:28:46 PM PST by doug from upland (Stopping Hillary should be a FreeRepublic Manhattan Project)
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To: doug from upland

Ah, rachel, we hardly knew ye. And sure as hell didn’t want to know you better!


3 posted on 11/14/2007 6:34:30 PM PST by dynachrome (Immigration without assimilation means the death of this nation~Captainpaintball)
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To: doug from upland

According to my liberal sister, TESC is considered the white trash of liberal arts colleges.


4 posted on 11/14/2007 6:40:00 PM PST by Lancer_N3502A
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To: doug from upland
When I read Atlas Shrugged I often cringed a bit when Rand described the left the way she did. Describing them as loving death, hating the mind, wanting to negate existence. I thought she saw their motivations clearly but that she exaggerated. As time goes by Im beginning to think she underplayed it a bit.
5 posted on 11/14/2007 6:45:32 PM PST by mthom
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To: Lancer_N3502A

Why do ALL Liberal Arts teachers look like they idolize Richard Simmons?


6 posted on 11/14/2007 6:46:17 PM PST by MacDorcha (We have been at war with this mindset since before the Socratic method was borne.)
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To: MacDorcha
Lack of chlorine in their gene puddle.
7 posted on 11/14/2007 6:47:14 PM PST by Lancer_N3502A
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To: doug from upland

This guy is a professor? He writes like a star-crossed high school kid...

Regards,


8 posted on 11/14/2007 6:48:57 PM PST by Thunder 6
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To: doug from upland

What is the Dean’s house called?...the Kremlin?


9 posted on 11/14/2007 6:51:30 PM PST by Bishop_Malachi (Liberal Socialism - A philosophy which advocates spreading a low standard of living equally.)
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To: All

http://www.townhall.com/columnists/dennisprager/dp20030325.shtml
Dennis Prager (archive)
(printer-friendly version)

March 25, 2003

Who killed Rachel Corrie?

Rachel Corrie, the Olympia, Wash., college student killed trying to protect a Palestinian house — a house, remember, not even a human being — against an Israeli bulldozer, will probably not merit a footnote in history books. That’s too bad, because her life and death, the way she has been portrayed in some media, and the reactions of her college are powerful examples of an America with many morally confused individuals.

A Seattle Times columnist described her as a martyr. Her hometown paper, The Olympian, published numerous pictures of a sweet-looking woman from childhood on. It omitted the one photo of Rachel Corrie that USA Today, to its credit, published — Corrie screaming anti-American invective while burning an American flag in Gaza.

Anyone with a heart must extend the deepest condolences to Rachel Corrie’s parents. But anyone with a conscience must regard Rachel Corrie’s activities with contempt. One hopes that it is not asking too much of people to entertain simultaneously two conflicting emotions — grief for the parents and contempt for the daughter.

Rachel Corrie chose to side with a society that breeds some of the cruelest murderers of innocent people in the world. Rachel Corrie gave her life trying to protect people whose declared aim is to annihilate another country. In the name of saving children’s lives, Rachel Corrie chose to defend a society that teaches its young children to blow themselves up and which deliberately targets children for death. And Rachel Corrie went to America’s enemies to burn her country’s flag.

She was one of the many fools our colleges annually produce. Evergreen State College is reputed to excel in such production. Is anyone aware of a single student or faculty member who repudiated her activities?

We are told repeatedly that Rachel was idealistic — as if that matters. Virtually every person who commits great evil — the Nazi, the Communist, the Islamic terrorist — is idealistic. Idealism is morally neutral. It is good only when directed to good ends. But in young people, idealism is at least as likely to lead to bad as to good because few young people are wise — and idealism without wisdom is very dangerous.

We are told ad nauseam that Rachel Corrie was a “peace activist.” So let it be said once and for all that most of these people are moral frauds. Why? Because “peace activists” routinely protest only against peaceful countries. Has there been one Evergreen State or other “peace activist” in Sudan during its Islamic government’s slaughter and enslavement of millions of blacks? Are there any “peace activists” in Tibet to protect its unique culture from being eradicated by the Communist Chinese? Did you notice any “peace activists” trying to save the millions of North Koreans dying at the hands of their lunatic government? Of course not. Rachel Corrie and other “peace activists” only target peace-loving Israel and America.

Why do they do so?

Here is one answer.

The world is filled with evil, and young idealists like Rachel Corrie don’t like it. Which is lovely. But they don’t confront real evil because they know they will get hurt. That’s one reason there are no “peace activists” or “human shields” confronting Islamic terror, North Korean totalitarianism, or Chinese Communist despotism.

So, what’s an idealist to do if she refuses to confront real evil but wants to feel good about herself? Ironically, confront those who fight real evil. That’s why Rachel Corrie and the millions marching to protect Saddam Hussein’s Iraq have never uttered a peep against Palestinian terror, Iraqi totalitarianism, or North Korean gulags. Instead, they focus their animosity at the countries that confront these evils — the United States and Israel.

So, Olympia, grieve for Rachel Corrie’s parents, but spare us the hagiography. Rachel Corrie died fighting for the International Solidarity Movement, a Palestinian group dedicated, in its own words, to “armed struggle” against Israel. She ended up being a useful idiot for, and one more victim of, Palestinian terror.


10 posted on 11/14/2007 6:51:51 PM PST by doug from upland (Stopping Hillary should be a FreeRepublic Manhattan Project)
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To: Thunder 6

I would disagree...my high school students write BETTER than he does! He is a disgrace.


11 posted on 11/14/2007 6:56:13 PM PST by t2buckeye
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To: doug from upland

I live in Olympia and it’s worse than any of you can imagine...

Check this article about one of their finest.

http://www.frontpagemag.com/Articles/Read.aspx?GUID=74BD5102-BC84-4A7C-AC15-7F7750408F8F


12 posted on 11/14/2007 6:59:55 PM PST by Keith Brown (Among the other evils being unarmed brings you, it causes you to be despised Machiavelli.)
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To: mthom

She saw it firsthand in Soviet Russia. I never doubted her.


13 posted on 11/14/2007 7:00:42 PM PST by saganite
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To: Keith Brown

I am likely to be living in the area at the end of next year. Maybe together we can give them some grief.


14 posted on 11/14/2007 7:10:11 PM PST by doug from upland (Stopping Hillary should be a FreeRepublic Manhattan Project)
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To: MacDorcha

When I graduated from the Univ of Minnesota in May of ‘03, it was a huge event for me - considering I was about 15 years old than the average graduate.

Our commencement speaker was Judge Thomas Buergenthal of the International Court of Justice. Although not as controversial as Mumia, I still grimaced while listening to his speech. I remained seated while many of the mush-filled minds stood up and applauded at the end of his speech.

I told myself “I’ll say something to him if I have to shake his hand or accept my diploma from him”. Thankfully, it didn’t come to that.

But if someone as controversial as Mumia had given the commencement speech at my graduation, you can rest assured I’d have walked out.


15 posted on 11/14/2007 7:16:04 PM PST by MplsSteve
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To: doug from upland

I wonder HOW MUCH federal aid we the people give Evergreen College annually...and why are we still doing so?!!!


16 posted on 11/14/2007 7:16:55 PM PST by mo
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To: mthom

50th anniversary of Starnesville from “Atlas Shrugged”


17 posted on 11/14/2007 7:35:06 PM PST by dynachrome (Immigration without assimilation means the death of this nation~Captainpaintball)
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To: All
These foolish parents raised a naive foolish daughter. Oh, how sweet. They have a nice certificate from a murdering swine who is roasting in hell. They should be suing the school for filling her head with crap.

Just for fun, JOIN THE MOCKING SING-ALONG OF ARAFAT ON YOUTUBE


18 posted on 11/14/2007 7:47:12 PM PST by doug from upland (Stopping Hillary should be a FreeRepublic Manhattan Project)
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To: doug from upland
Fry Mumia!
19 posted on 11/14/2007 7:53:33 PM PST by Paleo Conservative
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To: Lancer_N3502A
I went there so I am not going to comment on that. However most of the kids that go there are children of very wealthy east coast parents. Some of those kids go out and live in the woods instead of dorms. In my experience the only college kids that find poverty and living in trees attractive is the very rich.

I being from a poor family received a merit based scholarship to attend Evergreen and was grateful for any college education, especially that offered more individual attention and freedom. I was an older student though and went into college with two successful businesses behind me and with a clarity that a college education is a benefit professionally.

The radical BS coming out of this school is what ultimately solidified my dedication to conservative ideals and living them. I am a happily married woman today that has taken my husband's name and a great success in all areas of my life. I live everything these people rail against and I have never been happier :-). Life is good.

20 posted on 11/14/2007 7:59:32 PM PST by GOP Poet
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