What Is Going On In Oakland?
November 7th, 2011New Village sent out the following newsletter on November 4, and got so much response, we wanted to open up the subject for dialogue on our blog. Please feel free to share your opinions with us!
As you all know, something truly transformational is happening in cities across the country spurred by Occupy Wall Street. Oakland, our beloved hometown, is becoming an epicenter of this exciting new movement that is reclaiming our streets and cities and advancing ways to build a more equitable society. As a nonprofit organization dedicated to grassroots community building and participatory democracy, we celebrate this upwelling of civic engagement across the land. We embrace the questions the movement is asking and the challenges it is taking on. So we share with you a view of what is going on in our Oakland, knowing it is a vibrant part of the growing whole.
Occupy Oakland started on October 10, 2011 as protesters set up camp in Frank Ogawa Plaza, a park in front of Oakland’s City Hall. On October 25, a forced eviction of the campers occupying the plaza degenerated into a violent clash between protesters and police, which only fueled citizens’ will to reclaim public space for gathering and discussion. The encampment is now back, bigger than ever, and on Wednesday, November 2, Oakland was the theater of an historic general strike. This was the first general strike in the United States since 1946, which notably also happened in Oakland. New Village staff joined thousands of people joyfully occupying dow
ntown for a day of celebrations and direct actions. Individuals, families, and community organizations congregated en masse to share their messages, ideas, and desires. From bandstand speeches and amphitheater general assemblies to interfaith meditations and Buddhist drummers, from anti-police brutality groups to food justice workshops, the typically quiet plaza burst with activities and resonated all day with music and chants. A multitude of people of all colors and ages marched in the late afternoon to the Port of Oakland, and successfully shut down the third busiest port in the United States.
“This is what democracy looks like,” said a banner rolled out at the Oakland port; Occupy Oakland is proof that real democracy needs practice and creative experimentation. Diversity is voiced and heard in all of its expressions. The “99%” does not speak in a singular voice. The past few days saw an outpouring of initiatives and events—mostly in the form of positive propositions and constructive protests. However, dissent has not been entirely non-violent, and anger broke bank windows Wednesday despite efforts of activists themselves to keep the peace. Rather than being a reason to disqualify the movement as a whole, we believe this diversity should be seen as the consequence of the open, leaderless nature of the protest.This movement is not perfect and does not have all the answers, because part of democracy is the process of looking for answers. Community organizations, faith groups, unions, artists, students, educators, and individual citizens are coming together to share their ideas and suggest solutions to the social and economic crises this country and the whole world are facing. A spirit of respect and mutual listening is prevailing. Hundreds of people of all ages and social origins come together four times a week after a day of work to discuss issues of common interest, signaling a new, exciting level of social participation. Our New Village staff meeting yesterday turned into a mini-assembly discussing Wednesday’s events and our feelings about them in further proof of this movement’s power to spark debates and stimulate critical thinking. The movement is teaching us ways we can work with our neighbors and fellow citizens to find local, sustainable, enlightened solutions to problems that previously seemed overwhelming.
Everyone contributes to what happens next. On Wednesday night a group of protesters occupied a vacant building that once hosted an organization providing services to homeless people (government cuts to funding for social services had forced the organization to shut down). Protesters declared that the occupied building would be returned to its previous function or turned into a public library an
d community center. The occupation lasted little more than an hour before police intervention. Yet this symbolic action points to one of the many possible futures of this protest: the reclaiming of our cities through the creation of community centers that can serve neighborhoods and provide a stable space for discussions and initiatives that benefit our communities. Last night, November 3, a five-hour open City Council meeting featured a lively forum for Oakland citizens and council members to discuss the future of the Occupy Oakland encampment. After listening to more than two-hundred protesters, sympathizers, and business owners presenting their views who generally urged the city to endorse the movement, the Council presented their own diverse views about large systemic issues as well as practical local considerations that included providing a dry safe place for the movement to continue its public discourse through the coming rainy season. What will happen in Oakland will depend on the deliberations of the general assembly as much as, if not more than, those of the city’s elected representatives.
We don’t all have to agree on everything this diverse movement expresses, and we invite all of you to listen to the questions being asked. As we continue an open discussion we will find answers that work for the greater good and will build a more just society for all. Please feel free to repost or forward this message to invite other members of your communities to join the discussion.
In peace and community,
New Village Press staff














