[Air-l] saturday, september 11, 2004
Steve Fox (NISD)
stevef at microsoft.com
Wed Sep 15 16:17:16 PDT 2004
David,
I have to say that this project was/is both impressive and important.
Mobilizing people to rally around such a significant event is not an
easy proposition. Kudos to your passion and hard work on this project.
The video kiosk reminds me of 'Speaker's Corner' in downtown Toronto,
where you can pay a couple of dollars to record your thoughts on the
local City-TV - which they edit/air on the weekends. I guess my feeling
is that it's events like this that help breathe 'our' voice back into
our communities.
I look forward to engaging discussions about this event on AOIR.
Steve
-----Original Message-----
From: air-l-aoir.org-bounces at listserv.aoir.org
[mailto:air-l-aoir.org-bounces at listserv.aoir.org] On Behalf Of david
silver
Sent: Wednesday, September 15, 2004 3:30 PM
To: cultstud-l at mailman.acomp.usf.edu
Cc: air-l at listserv.aoir.org
Subject: [Air-l] saturday, september 11, 2004
The September Project (09.11.2004)
http://www.theseptemberproject.org
On Saturday, September 11, free and public events about democracy,
citizenship,
and patriotism took place. To the best of our knowledge, 469 events
took place
in all 50 states. Outside the US, events took place in 8 countries:
Australia,
Cuba, Japan, the Netherlands, Singapore, Spain, Switzerland, and
Venezuela.
Living in Seattle, I had the opportunity to attend 55 events spread
throughout
the Puget Sound area. All of the events were free. All but two events
-- at
the King County Jail Library and at the King County Regional Justice
Center
Detention Library -- were open to the public. I wanted to attend all of
the
events but a day is short so I selected two: the Ballard Public Library
(my
neighborhood) and the Central Library downtown. Both events were
inspired and
beautiful.
At the Ballard Public Library, librarian Ellen Fitzgerald organized an
excellent event. About 75 people attended a talk by Ian Spiers, a
college
student whose photographs of a popular Seattle landmark led to visits
from
police officers and officials from the Department of Homeland Security
(http://brownequalsterrorist.com/), followed by comments by Doug Honig,
Communications Director of ACLU-Washington. Few were silent during the
Q & A
period and the discussion covered issues of security, racism, civil
liberties,
and justice. 75 community members discussing issues that matter in a
public
space: it was as if we were all part of an unironic and uncynical Norman
Rockwell painting. The event finished with folks talking about how we
can
continue to have events like these.
At the Central Library, Andra Addison, Chris Higashi, Amy Twito, and
Kristin
Zavorska organized a diverse set of events, including two film
screenings of
the film "Poetry in Wartime," a facilitated discussion about the film,
poetry
and creative writing workshops, and information booths featuring local
organizations and non-profits. The event also included a video kiosk
(designed
by The September Project's John Klockner) which allowed participants to
record
their personal thoughts and reactions to the day. It was great to see
kids,
young adults, and adults record their thoughts throughout the day.
Outside the library were four blank murals. This was a very large
project,
involving many, and organized primarily by Irina Gendelman, Giorgia
Aiello, and
Tema Milstein, three graduate students at the University of Washington.
Each
mural had a different theme and color -- America (red), patriotism
(white), war
and peace (blue), and 9/11 (black). As the day went on, people (some
library
patrons, some who were there for September Project events, and some
directly
from the streets) observed the murals, talked about them, and added an
image, a
word, a sentence. It was quite beautiful. Every community should have
community murals! For images of the process and product, see:
http://students.washington.edu/giorgia/photo_mural/
http://students.washington.edu/irinag/murals/91104/
I find a ton of hope in individuals and collectives that are working
hard to
make our communities, our countries, and our globe a better place.
Here's to
LIBRARIANS, who, despite budget cuts, despite pay cuts, and despite the
Patriot
Act which compromises their very job description, work hard and
creatively to
heal our communities. Here's to ARTISTS and ACTIVISTS who have always
and will
always tackle the kinds of issues we are encouraged to be silent about.
And
here's to YOUTH -- the hopeful, the unjaded, the uncynical, the not-yet
burned
out.
It is difficult to find someone, anyone, who is happy with the
directions our
communities, our countries, and our globe are taking. I'd like to end
by
thanking all of you, from all of us, for succeeding -- with grace, with
inspiration, and with belief that it can and must be done -- in working
to
change those directions.
Here's to libraries. Here's to public culture. Here's to free culture.
Here's to dialogue, discussion, and dissent on topics that demand
attention.
Here's to the people.
david silver
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