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When The World Said No To War: The Exhibition
an article by Chip Henriss-Anderssen
"What did your protests achieve?" asked the taxi driver,
his frustration showing through his Tanzanian accent. "Nothing! No one
listened, they voted for Howard here in Australia and Bush in the
States, it was all for nothing," he said.
His response came
after I began to tell him about the photographic exhibition, When the
World Said No to War, a collection of photos from around the world
taken at anti-war protests in February 2003. For a moment I began to
believe him. I had no answer. It really did seem hopeless after the
crushing defeats in the Australian and US elections. Perhaps he was
right and the "bewildered herd" had completely capitulated to the power
elites of our society. Perhaps there is no way people will put other
human beings before their interest rates.
Unfortunately it was
only after the taxi driver dropped me off that it came to me. What if
Nelson Mandela had given up when he was imprisoned? What if those who
struggled for women’s rights had given up? What if the abolitionists in
the US had quit after John Brown was hanged following his unsuccessful
attempt to lead a slave rebellion at Harpers Ferry Virginia?
It’s
not true that no one listened. Only those who didn’t want to hear
didn’t listen. And many of those who didn’t want to hear actually did
listen -- a lot of people, especially conservatives who didn't want to
hear how they were wrong, switched from Bush to Kerry.
When the
World Said No to War is more than a display of interesting pictures.
This exhibition continues the struggle and is part of a worldwide voice
shouting for compassion, reason and an end to the violent abuse of
power called War. The exhibition needs your support to make that voice
louder and to maintain the momentum for the majority of the earth’s
population that have no power to speak on their own. In the words of
Dr. Denise Leith in her book, Bearing Witness : The Lives of War
Correspondents and Photojournalists, "Although it may be difficult to
envisage an end to war as a form of political behaviour, there was a
time when people could not foresee an end to slavery, the emancipation
of women, the vote for blacks or the end of apartheid, but these things
came to pass. Not because some magnanimous government or world body
decreed them to be so, but because ordinary citizens said it should be
so. We need not be Nelson Mandela, Aung San Suu Kyi, Martin Luther King
Jr, or Gandhi, for none of those people effected change alone; behind
each stood millions of like-minded individuals with their own acts of
moral courage. Our strength lies in the recognition of this – our
shared humanity – rather than in the separation imposed by the
constructs of state, religion and ethnicity."
When The World
Said No To War is a photography exhibition, education forum and Peace
Film Festival. It opens on Wednesday, 2nd February, at Pine Street
Gallery, Chippendale, Sydney, Australia.
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DISCUSSION
Question(s) related to this article:
Where were you on February 14-16, 2003
As a reader, you are invited to join in the discussion of
this article based on any of the above question(s): just click on the
question, read the previous comments and add a new reply. You may also
enter a new discussion topic on this article - see bottom of this page.
Thematic forum(s) in which this article is being discussed:
MARCHES AND PROTESTS
LATEST READER COMMENT:
a
brilliant article! it's so easy to dispair and loose sight of the fact
that democratic forces have reached unprecedentd heights in recent
years.
I was in the streets of New York on February 15th,
2003, along with over 400 other students from my university (a large
chuck of the undergrad population). Sometimes, when you're in the thick
of things, you don't realize how sweeping and epochal a single event
can be. It wasn't until I purchased a book called "2/15 - The Day
the World Said NO to War," that I realized the scope and impact of the
peace movement today. The book is a collection of inspiring and diverse
photos from peace protests around the world.
If the exhibition you refer to is anything like the book, I would say it's well worth seeing.
More info on the book can be found here: http://www.amazon.com/exec....s=books.. . ...more.
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This report was posted on January 28, 2005. The moderator is Daniel.
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