About six months ago, Dan Pearson, co-coordinator of Voices for Creative Nonviolence, swiveled around
in his office chair in our tiny �headquarters� to ask what we thought about
organizing a walk from Chicago to St. Paul, arriving just before the Republican
National Convention.
A dedicated group of volunteers joined Dan to plan a
project, which, to me, is one of the best organized efforts I�ve ever
encountered, all aimed at voicing a witness against war, particularly in
Wisconsin, where 3,500 National Guard troops are on alert for a call-up to
combat duty, in Iraq, in 2009. Generally, three to five �day walkers� will join
our core group of nine walkers. We walk about 15 miles each day carrying signs
that call for an end to the war and for keeping Wisconsin National Guard troops
home.
The sign I carry on this walk reads �Rebuild Iraq, rebuild
the U.S.� Another of our signs, decorated with the obligatory elephant and
donkey, reads, �We hold both parties responsible.� We began walking on July 12
and will arrive in St. Paul, Minnesota, on August 30.
Our �Witness Against War� walk is in Wisconsin, traversing
traditional land of the Ho-Chunk Nation, also known in the English translation
as �People of the Big Voice.�
In 1836, U.S. settlers, including farmers and miners,
coveted this lush farmland and its rich mining resources and forced the
Ho-Chunk to sell it all for a pittance. The US government imposed repeated
roundups and �removals� on them, resettling them from Wisconsin to Iowa, from
Iowa to Minnesota, then to South Dakota and onward, in dangerous, and for some
deadly forced transports. �In the winter of 1873, many Ho-Chunk people were removed
to the Nebraska reservation from Wisconsin, traveling in cattle cars on trains,�
according to the Nation�s website. �This
was a horrific experience for the people, as many elders, women and children
suffered and died.� Some of the transports were imposed to remove the Ho-Chunk
people from conflicts with other nations -- conflicts created by previous
forced transports.
But after the removals by train, they walked back on foot to
Wisconsin, to reclaim their former homes, It�s a tale of immeasurable
suffering, but because of these walks back they are still here, as the �Ho-Chunk Nation� in
this beautiful Wisconsin land where their ancestors were buried.
And we�re here too, walking on behalf of people in Iraq who�ve
been made refugees to escape U.S. violence, and also the sectarian violence
made inevitable by the U.S. government�s wholesale dismantling of their
country, whether achieved deliberately or through incompetence, we can�t know. We�re
walking for people who, like the Ho-Chunk people, were told that if they didn�t
cooperate with a U.S. project to seize their precious and irreplaceable
resources, we would kill them.
The name of the �Ho-Chunk� nation means �People of the
Sacred Language,� or �People of the Big Voice.� And when no one was listening
to them, they spoke to each other and chose to return, and strengthened each
other for the return here where their actions spoke louder than words and they
eventually, after 11 removals and five weary returns, were ceded parts of their
original land.
My companions and I think of deliberate nonviolent action as
a sacred language. Sunday, we crossed the line into Fort McCoy to protest the
cynical use of our young men and women, many of them seeking opportunities
denied them in their communities, to kill and dispossess members of the Iraqi
nation, to drive them into refuge in Jordan and Syria, to drive them into
conflict one against the other, arming first this faction and then that with
more and more weapons in the name of establishing �security forces,� so that we
will have an excuse to occupy this oil-rich region for ages to come, whatever
platitudes our leaders may offer now about eagerness some day to withdraw. Several
of us may face several months in jail. Our leaders will continue to use these
lands for wrongful purposes and we will keep walking back, until enough of our
fellows join us that we are allowed to reclaim these lands, and our resources,
to be the refuge and the comfort of all.
The United States is called a democracy. That means �People
of the Big Voice.� A sacred language. But we as a nation are not yet ready to
use our voices loud enough to be heard, or to use our feet, when our voices are
ignored, in the sacred language of nonviolent direct action, in resistance to
the greedy powerful few who would limit our choices to choices of war and claim
all lands, heedless of the voices of the people living in them, for the
purposes of greed. The world looks to us, much of it in genuine pain and anguish,
asking when are we going to rescue them from our government, by expressing our
wish for peace at long last in the Big Voice we have always claimed as our
heritage?
Kathy Kelly (kathy@vcnv.org) is a co-coordinator of Voices for Creative Nonviolence.