[act-ma] An Injury to One is an Injury to all with Glenn Greenwald - final schedule - Dec 8 civil liberties conference
Marilyn Levin
marilynl at alumni.neu.edu
Mon Dec 3 14:07:39 PST 2012
Hi, this is an important regional conference that is being held in New Britain, CT featuring Glenn Greenwald and Sahar Aziz and an impressive list of panels and workshops outlining the scope of the attacks on all of our rights and what we can do to fight back. It’s only 2 to 2-1/2 hrs drive from Boston. I’m organizing car pooling. The BPD spying case is included in the workshops and discussion. Boston is represented by Nancy Murray from ACLUM and me.
Marilyn
UNAC
(please forward widely)
An Injury to One is An Injury to All:
A Conference in Defense of Civil Liberties and to
End Indefinite Detention featuring Glenn Greenwald
When: Saturday, December 8, 2012
9am Registration & Tabling; 10am Welcome; 6:30pm Closing
Where: Semesters Hall, inside the Student Center
Central Connecticut State University
New Britain, CT
Enter via the Student Center parking lot from Ella Grasso Blvd.
( <http://webmail.nycap.rr.com/do/redirect?url=http%253A%252F%252Fwww.ccsu.edu%252Fpage.cfm%253Fp%253D1378> http://www.ccsu.edu/page.cfm?p=1378.)
How: $10 at the door; Solidarity Price of $25, No one turned away for lack of funds.
To Register in advance or contribute, use the paypal button at <http://webmail.nycap.rr.com/do/redirect?url=http%253A%252F%252Fctstopindefinitedetention.com%252Fregister-online%252F> http://ctstopindefinitedetention.com/register-online/.
Or make out checks to and send to “CT Coalition to Stop Indefinite Detention”
c/o Dan Piper, 103 Elizabeth Street, Hartford, CT 06105.
For more info contact Dan at 860-985-4576 or <http://webmail.nycap.rr.com/do/mail/message/mailto?to=daniel.adam.piper%40gmail.com> daniel.adam.piper at gmail.com
Conference Schedule and Program
9:00 am Registration and Tabling
10:00 am—Welcome and Outline of the Day
10:15 am. Panel 1: The Scope of the Attacks on Civil Liberties: Immigrants, African Americans, Muslim Americans, South Asian Americans, and the Social Movements Under Attack
Nancy Murray – Education Director of the Massachusetts American Civil Liberties Union
Dr. Ruth Wilson Gilmore – Co-Founder with Angela Davis of the prison abolitionist organization, Critical Resistance
Muneer Awad – NYC Council on American Islamic Relations
Lorella Praeli – United We Dream National Coordinating Committee
Dr. Shamshad Ahmad – Author, Rounded Up: Artificial Terrorists and Muslim Entrapment After 9/11.
John Woodruff – International Representative, United Electrical Workers
11: 30 am--Workshops Session 1
1. Preemptive Prosecution (Project SALAM/NCPCF): Following 9/11, the FBI and the Justice Department began to “preemptively prosecute” and incarcerate hundreds of Muslim Americans and others who they claimed might have an ideology to commit terrorist acts in the future. The use of secret evidence, provocateurs, new “material support” laws, and threats of deportation has created a gulag of political prisoners. Learn how it works and how to fight it. Lawyers,Kathy Manley and Marwa Elbially will lead a discussion of these topics including identifying FBI informants, and Knowing Your Rights. Families members of prisoners will also speak including, Shahina Parveen of Desis Rising up and Moving (DRUM) and Marlene Jenkins of Project SALAM.
2. Beyond the Prison Industrial Complex: How the thinking of prison abolitionists can sharpen our critique and strengthen our anti-racist and anti-mass incarcerations campaigns.
Presenter
Dr. Ruth Wilson Gilmore – Co-founder with Angela Davis of Critical Resistance.
3. War, International Solidarity and Repression Against the Peace Movement: Civil liberties have always been a “casualty” of war. Currently, the U.S. government is using police spying, Cointelpro-type provocateurs, McCarthyite grand juries, and other methods to silence the antiwar and international solidarity movements. Learn how to fight back.
Presenters
Tom Burke – Committee to Stop FBI Repression
Representative (TBA) – Project SALAM
Marilyn Levin – campaign against Boston police spying
Joe Lombardo – United National Antiwar Coalition.
4. S-Comm and the Struggle for Immigrant Rights: How have deportations roughly doubled over the last four years? What does the new nationwide arrangement between federal immigration authorities and local police known as "Secure Communities" or "S-Comm" mean for immigrants and everyone else living in the US? What is the significance of the new deferred action program? Join a discussion on these and other questions facing the movement for immigrant rights.
Presenters
Jeff Napolitano – American Friends Service Committee, Western MA
Herman Zuniga – President, Communities of Immigrants of East Haven
Representative (TBA) – SEIU 32BJ
Kazi Fouza – South Asian Workers Center
5. The New Surveillance State: With new legislation, legal rulings, technology and funding the surveillance powers of the state and federal government have grown beyond all expectation since 9/11. What is the extent of this new apparatus? What does it mean for our lives and political activity? Join a discussion of these questions and how we can mount a response.
Presenters
Nancy Murray – Education Director of the MA ACLU
Cyrus McCormick – CAIR NYC.
6. Students—Defending Ourselves and the Social Movements: From the University of California to Yale University to the University of Massachusetts in Boston, student activists are under attack. Palestine solidarity groups are characterized by university adminstrations as “hate” groups and Muslim Student Associations are spied on by the NYPD and CIA. At the same time, as students, we have unique resources that can be used to deepen the education and organization of all those victimized by the new attacks on civil liberties.
Presenters
Christopher Hutchinson – CCSU Youth for Socialist Action
Roksana Mun – Desis Rising Up and Moving & Youthnac
Representative (TBA) – CCSU Latino Students Organization, and
Abdallah Alsaqri – CCSU Students for Justice for Palestine and the Muslim Students Association.
1-2 pm Lunch
2 pm: Keynote addresses:
Glenn Greenwald: a columnist on civil liberties and US national security issues for the Guardian. A former constitutional lawyer, he was until 2012 a contributing writer at Salon. He is the author of With Liberty and Justice For Some: How the Law Is Used to Destroy Equality and Protect the Powerful and one of the most important public intellectuals opposing indefinite detention.
Sahar Aziz: Professor of Constitutional Law whose scholarship focuses on the disparate impact of post-9/11 laws and public policy on ethnic, racial, and religious minority groups in the United States.
3 pm. Panel 2—Creating New Ties of Solidarity: Building a Movement that Can Push Back the Assault on Civil Liberties
Shahid Buttar – Executive Director, Bill of Rights Defense Committee
Sandra Staub – Legal Director of the American Civil Liberties Union Foundation of CT
Tracy Molm – Committee to Stop FBI Repression
Fahd Ahmed – Legal Director at Desis Rising Up and Moving (DRUM)
Chris Gauvreau – CT Coalition to Stop Indefinite Detention
Steve Downs – Executive Director, National Coalition to Protect Civil Freedoms
4 pm--Workshop Session 2
1. Speech as a Crime: In April 2012 Tarek Mehanna was sentenced to 17 years in prison for writings he placed online and a trip to Yemen. Hear the story of his case and his defense campaign. The workshop will also discuss how material support for terrorism laws have undermined freedom of speech and criminalized activities like charitable donations, peacemaking, and social hospitality.
Presenters
Kate Bonner-Jackson – Boston organizer leading community and political support for Dr. Tarek Mehanna.
Andrew March – Expert witness for the defense of Tarek Mehanna, Associate Professor, Department of Political Science, Yale University
Kathy Manley – Lawyer, member of Project SALAM/NCPCF
2. Repression and Political Prisoners in the U.S. and Puerto Rico Today: Liberation movements everywhere are met with state repression - and the U.S. is no exception. Hear about several ongoing international defense campaigns to free renowned political leaders from U.S. prisons and defend their movements. Cases to include: Mumia Abu-Jamal, and the Cuban Five and Leaders in the Struggle for Puerto Rican Independence.
Presenters
Nancy Kohn – International Committee for the Freedom of the Cuban 5
Jason Wright – International Bolshevik Tendency
Jorge Limeres – Comite Pro Independencia de Puerto Rico en Connecticut.
3.The New Jim Crow in Connecticut: When Hurricane Sandy hit, the National Guard was sent to Fairfield to clean up wreckage - and to Bridgeport to patrol the streets. How and why is racial discrimination enforced in the criminal justice system and other institutions? How are people pushing back in Connecticut? Hear about struggles against police brutality in New Haven, the curfew in Bridgeport, discrimination in the Department of Children and Families, and analysis of the broader implications of racial profiling and solutions for how to achieve equal representation under the law.
Presenters
Isa Mujahid – ACLU, CT
Don Wilson – New London NAACP
Cornell Lewis – Anti-racism activist
Linda Lancz – New London Coalition Against Racial Profiling.
4. Indefinite detention: building grassroots opposition. Almost twenty cities and towns have passed anti-indefinite detention resolutions in the past year, and many more are in play. While the Obama administration has made it clear that is going to the Supreme Court if necessary to ensure that the right to indefinitely detain US citizens without charges or trial is the law of land, and congress is increasingly gridlocked, local legislative campaigns remain an important way to mobilize grassroots resistance and shift the national conversation about the NDAA and indefinite detention. Only the expression of mass grassroots opposition can make it impossible for the government to use this new tool of repression. Learn how to use local resolutions to build the movement in your area.
Presenters
Emma Roderick – Bill of Rights Defense Committee
Henry Lowendorf – Greater New Haven Peace Council
Amy Martin – CT Coalition to Stop Indefinite Detention.
5. Fighting Police Harassment and Spying. In February of this year, the Associated Press broke the story that the NY Police Department, in conjunction with the CIA, was operating a vast surveillance operation aimed at Muslim students at at Yale, Columbia, Syracuse, Rutgers, New York University, and Brooklyn College, while also setting up 24/7 spying of Muslim communities in the tri-state region. Surveillance is usually a euphemism for police disruption. Antiwar activists in Boston are now responding to revelations that they too had been targeted. Learn how to support victims of police harassment and to respond when you are the target.
Presenters
Fahd Ahmad – Desis Rising Up and Moving
Michael Figure – Bill of Rights Defense Committee
Muneer Ahwad – NYC CAIR
Marilyn Levin – United National Antiwar Coalition.
6. Solitary Confinement and Torture. The US is building a gulag prison system that holds political prisoners and others in isolation under conditions amounting to torture. Sharmin Sadequee of NCPCF, and Marlene Jenkins of Project SALAM will lead a discussion of this topic including families of prisoners who are held in this gulag. What can be done to relieve the prisoners, and their families, and how can we end solitary confinement, and the ethnic /ideological prisons called communication management units.
5:30 pm - 6:30 pm--Concluding Session--A Group Discussion. What Concrete Steps We Can Take Now?
Speakers and Workshop Presenters—Brief Biographies
Glenn Greenwald: a columnist on civil liberties and US national security issues for the Guardian. A former constitutional lawyer, he was until 2012 a contributing writer at Salon. He is the author of With Liberty and Justice For Some: How the Law Is Used to Destroy Equality and Protect the Powerful and one of the most important public intellectuals opposing indefinite detention.
Sahar F. Aziz: Associate Professor at Texas Wesleyan School of Law. Professor Aziz’s scholarship focuses on the intersection of national security and civil rights law with a focus on the post-9/11 era. Professor Aziz incorporates critical race theory, feminist theory, and constitutional law into her examination of the disparate impact of post-9/11 laws and public policy on ethnic, racial, and religious minority groups in the United States.
Shahid Buttar is Executive Director of the Bill of Rights Defense Committee. He is a constitutional lawyer, grassroots organizer, independent columnist, musician, and poet. Since graduating from Stanford Law School in 2003, Shahid's litigation career included a 2004 lawsuit seeking marriage equality for same sex couples in the State of New York, and a 2009 FOIA case that revealed previously secret FBI investigative policies. Beyond litigation, Shahid has also organized several mass mobilizations, and political arts collectives, active across the country.
Steve Downs: Executive Director, National Coalition to Protect Civil Freedoms and attorney and a member of Project SALAM, a group dedicated to defending victims of pre-emptive prosecution. Downs was also a lawyer for FBI victim Yassin Aref, and former Chief Attorney for the New York Commission on Judicial Conduct.
Nancy Murray: has been Director of Education at the ACLU of Massachusetts since 1987. She also taught at the University of Nairobi (Kenya) for 7 years and directed a nationwide program to combat racism in the media at London’s Institute of Race Relations. After 9/11, she helped get 53 Massachusetts cities and towns to pass resolutions against the PATRIOT Act and most recently distinguished herself by protesting the conviction of Tarek Mehanna for “thought crime.”
Ruth Wilson Gilmore: Professor of geography in the doctoral program in earth and environmental sciences, is known as an activist as well as an intellectual and is currently president of the American Studies Association (ASA). She examined how political and economic forces produced California’s prison boom in Golden Gulag: Prisons, Surplus, Crisis, and Opposition in Globalizing California (University of California Press, 2007). Gilmore’s wide-ranging research interests also include race and gender, labor and social movements, uneven development, and the African diaspora. She also co-founded, with Angela Davis, the prison abolition organization Critical Resistance.
Lorella Praeli: an undocumented American from New Haven, CT, where she directs Connecticut Students for a DREAM, a statewide organization of DREAMers and allies that seeks to empower undocumented students and their families. Originally from Ica, Peru, Praeli immigrated to the United States when she was 10 years old to receive medical treatment. After advocating for anti-bullying measures to be adopted at the legislative and community levels, she joined the student immigrant rights movement and came out as “undocumented and unafraid.” This year, she graduated from Quinnipiac University with a Bachelor of Arts in Political Science and Sociology, summa cum laude. Her passions in these disciplines are education, the law, public policy, and politics. She was recently elected onto the United We Dream National Coordinating Committee as New England representative, and helps lead the Dream Educational Empowerment Program.
Shamshad Ahmad: Borne and raised in India. Obtained PhD in Physics from the Australian National University, Canberra, Australia, in 1979. Joined Department of Physics at SUNY, Albany in July 1979 and is still teaching physics there. Founder and President of Masjid As-Salam mosque in Albany. Recipient of Jim Perry Progressive Leadership Award, 2007. Member of Project SALAM and the National Coalition to Protect Civil Freedoms. Author of book Rounded Up: Artificial terrorists and Muslim Entrapment After 9/11.
John Woodruff: an International Representative for the United Electrical, Radio and Machine Workers of America (UE). He has over 20 years of experience working in organized labor, as a Shop Steward and Trustee, Vice-President of his local shop, President of UE Local 222 and as a UE Field Organizer.
Fahd Ahmed is the Legal and Policy Director at DRUM. Fahd Ahmed came to the United States as an undocumented immigrant from Pakistan in 1991, and joined DRUM in 2000 when he had a brother facing deportation, and a cousin facing an entrapment case. Within DRUM, Fahd led the work with Muslim, Arab, and South Asian immigrant detainees before, and immediately after 9/11, by coordinating the detainee visitation program. Fahd runs the End Racial Profiling Campaign, working to hold law enforcement, including the NYPD and FBI, accountable and transparent. He is also developing a community law practice focusing on the same issues.
Kazi Fouzia is a designer and seamstress at a retail sari shop in Jamaica, Queens. She has been a member of DRUM since 2009 fighting for better rights as an undocumented Muslim immigrant worker. In Bangladesh, Kazi was a member of a street vendors union, a community theater group, an organizer for free community health clinics, taught young children from the slums, and comes from a long history of struggles for justice. In addition she has worked as a member for the Women Watch Bangladesh, a national small and cottage industry in Bangladesh. Currently she is the Adult Organizer for the Workers Center.
Muneer Awad is the executive director of the New York Chapter of the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR-NY). He started working with CAIR in 2010 as the Executive Director of the Oklahoma Chapter where Muneer was the lawyer and plaintiff that filed the landmark lawsuit to stop that state from implementing an anti-Sharia bill promoted to defame and demonize Muslims. The court case gained international media attention and allowed various national organizations including the American Jewish Committee, the Interfaith Alliance, the New York City Bar Association, and the American Constitutional Society to weigh in with reports and opinions in support of his stance.
Mongi Dhaouadi is possibly the most visible advocate for Muslim civil liberties in CT. He studied electrical engineering at the University of Nebraska in Lincoln. He has criss-crossed the state presenting Know Your Rights sessions to the Muslim American community, dealing especially with FBI and law enforcement encounters. He served as Executive Director of the CT Chapter of the Council on American Islamic Relations for 3 years and recently helped drive forward state legislation to rein in police racial profiling in CT. Served as an observer to the Tunisian elections in October 2011. This summer he spent about 2 months in Tunisia observing the political transition underway and engaging in dialogue with various civic and political leaders.
Marwa Elbially: is a 2010 graduate of Albany Law School, where she was student editor of the Government Law and Policy Journal. As President of the Muslim Law Students Association, she organized to help raise awareness on issues related to Muslims and civil liberties. As a volunteer researcher with the National Coalition to Protect Civil Freedoms (NCPCF) she worked on compiling the extensive NCPCF database of pre-emptively prosecuted defendants. She is currently the NCPCF Secretary.
Michael Figura: 2012-2013 legal fellow at the Bill of Rights Defense Committee, is a recent graduate of City University of New York School of Law (CUNY), where he served as Executive Articles Editor of the New York City Law Review and was awarded several fellowships, including the Haywood Burns Fellowship for Civil and Human Rights and Charles H. Revson Law Student Public Interest Summer Fellowship. Since graduating from Wesleyan University in 2006, Michael’s student internship and prior experiences including serving with the Center For Constitutional Rights, CLEAR (Creating Law Enforcement Accountability and Responsibility) Law Clinic, Office of the Appellate Defender of New York, and the New York Civilian Complaint Review Board.
Emma Roderick is the grassroots campaigns coordinator at the Bill of Rights Defense Committee. A 2007 graduate of Smith College. Emma has been active in social justice organizing since she was fourteen years old, and in college was a national leader in United Students Against Sweatshops. She spearheaded several labor rights campaigns at Smith, including a successful effort to end Coca-Cola’s exclusive contract with the college because of the company’s involvement in labor and human rights abuses. Emma joined BORDC in 2008 and has worked to coordinate and support campaigns to restore civil rights and liberties in local communities. She also coordinates BORDC’s work with educators and youth. Currently, Emma is enrolled part time at the University of Connecticut School of Social Work, where she is concentrating in the community organization method of social work and expects to get her MSW in 2014.
Andrew F. March is Associate Professor, Department of Political Science, Yale University. He works on political theory, Islamic law and religion and politics. He is the author of Islam and Liberal Citizenship (Oxford, 2009) and multiple academic articles in political theory and Islamic studies. His article for the New York Times Sunday Review, "A Dangerous Mind?" (April 21, 2012) discussed his experiences as an expert witness for the defense in the Tarek Mehanna case and the threat to free speech raised by the Mehanna prosecution.
Jeff Napolitano runs the Western Massachusetts Program of the American Friends Service Committee, with offices in Northampton and Springfield. His AFSC program covers an array of issues, from anti-war organizing to immigration policy. Last year, AFSC and its coalition partners won opt-outs from SComm in Springfield, Northampton, and Amherst. Our program is in the process of compiling a comprehensive report of local police and jail policies in the four Western Massachusetts counties since the implementation of Secure Communities in the state.
Marlene Jenkins is the mother of Tarik Shah, a famous jazz bass player and also a victim of preemptive prosecution who was held for many months in solitary confinement. Marlene has been a community activist all her life in many different capacities, and presently resides in Albany NY, where she is a member of the Muslim Solidarity Committee, Project SALAM, and Treasurer of the Albany Chapter of NCPCF.
Kathy Manley: an Albany, NY criminal defense attorney specializing in appeals, and is one of the attorneys for Yassin Aref, who was entrapped in an unfair FBI sting operation. Long an advocate for peace and social justice, Kathy is involved in a number of groups, including the Muslim Solidarity Committee, Project SALAM, the National Coalition to Protect Civil Freedoms, and the NYCLU.
Lynne Jackson of Albany, NY is a co-founder of Project SALAM (Support and Legal Advocacy for Muslims). Her involvement with the issue of preemptive prosecution began when two Muslim men in Albany, Yassin Aref and Mohammed Hossain, were sentenced to fifteen years in prison after being entrapped by the FBI. In 2010, Lynne organized the campaign for the Albany Common Council to pass the Albany Resolution, which urges the U.S. Justice Department to implement the recommendation of its own Inspector General and establish an independent panel to review the convictions of Muslims who have been preemptively prosecuted to ensure their fair treatment under the Constitution and Bill of Rights.
Sharmin Sadequee: an Anthropology PhD student currently conducting my ethnographic dissertation research that examines the impact of national security laws, subjectivity, subject formation, and state repression, centering on political prisoners, their families and court cases and the way communities are addressing and challenging these laws and policies through social justice and advocacy work. In 2006 when I was preparing for my PhD Candidacy Exam, my 19 year old brother Shifa Sadequee was kidnapped at the behest of the US government and charged with providing ‘material support’ for translating and publishing Islamic and Arabic literature in an online publication website, Tibyan Publication, and making trips to Canada and Washington, DC. He is currently serving his 17 years sentence in the Communication Management Unit (CMU) at the Federal Prison in Terre Haute, IN. My family's experiences with my brother's case have given me an additional lens through which to understand the War of Terror. I am also the Director of Prisoners and Families Committee of the National Coalition to Protect Civil Freedoms (NCPCF).
Linda Lancz has functioned as a facilitator of New London County Against Racial Profiling. She was an activist in the civil rights movement in the 60's desegregating Baltimore and went to jail on the Eastern Shore of Maryland for demonstrating against racist attacks on the black community. She was coordinator of the Boston Mobilization Committee Against the War in Vietnam. She has been a lifelong community activist, a tenant organizer, a trade unionist, a feminist and an artist and writer. She is a member of the NAACP and the Green Party of CT and a founder and past President of The Ecological Health Organization in CT (ECHO).
Isa Mujahid first became interested in civil liberties while active duty with U.S. Army. The fact that soldiers take an oath and sometimes give their life to defend the Constitution but do not enjoy some of the most basic civil liberties such as freedom of speech and expression did not sit well with him. Upon discharge and returning to Connecticut, he began working in a small law firm and learning how to advocate. Soon after, he was doing community organizing in Bridgeport with the grassroots organization ACORN. He’s since been involved in many social and political movements in Connecticut. He’s a board member of the CT Working Families Party and had has been organizing with the ACLU of CT for the last year.
Sandy Staub is the Legal Director of the American Civil Liberties Union Foundation of Connecticut, where she directs a complex legal docket and advocates for the protection of civil rights and civil liberties. She served as Chief of the first Domestic Violence Prosecution Unit for the Northwestern District Attorney’s office and was Coordinator in Provincetown for improving the community’s response to domestic violence, under a community policing grant. For many years Sandy volunteered as a board member, including as President, of New England Learning Center for Women in Transition, an agency providing shelter and services to women and children transitioning from violent homes. Most recently, she has helped to organize a CT effort to end racial profiling.
Christopher Hutchinson is the head of the Youth for Socialist Action group at CCSU and headed up the campus organizing for this civil liberties conference. Hutchinson is a long time activist in the antiwar, anti-racism, and Palestine Solidarity Movements. He participated in the Gaza Freedom March in Cairo, Egypt in 2010 and recently helped organized a demonstration at CCSU to Break the Siege of Gaza. He is also a visual artist whose illustrations can be found in the new book from PM Press called Robin Hood: People’s Outlaw and Forest Hero.
Joe Lombardo is the co-coordinator of the United National Antiwar Coalition (UNAC). He is a founding member of Project Salam and Bethlehem Neighbors for Peace. He recently retired after 25 years as a New York State worker, but continues to be active as a member of CSEA and the Troy Area Labor Council. Lombardo recently returned from Pakistan where he met with the families of the innocent victims of the U.S. drone war.
Dan Piper is a leader in the CT Coalition to Stop Indefinite Detention. Piper's political activity began with organizing against the invasion of Afghanistan in 2001. After about a year of organizing for ACORN he was pulled into the fight for immigrant rights - just in time for historic mobilizations and strikes of March-May of 2006. More recently he has participated in Occupy Hartford and helped to organize support for Latino janitors unjustly fired from the prestigious Kingswood-Oxford school in West Hartford.
Henry Lowendorf: A peace activist since the 1960¹s U.S. war on Vietnam, Henry Lowendorf chairs the Greater New Haven Peace Council, which works for peace on global, national and local levels. He a member of the executive committee of the US Peace Council and a representative to the World Peace Council, an NGO of the United Nations. The US Peace Council is a multi-racial, anti-imperialist organization committed to peace, economic and social justice and to international solidarity with the peoples of the world. Henry co-organized two international conferences - in New York in 2010, calling for abolition of nuclear weapons and this year in Chicago calling for the dissolution of NATO. In the recent election, the Peace Council helped place a referendum on the New Haven ballot calling for a reduction in the military budget, converting from military to civilian production and funding human needs. Citizens mobilized to support the referendum voted 85% “yes.”
Tim Craine is a founding member of the Greater Hartford Coalition on Cuba, which has been working since 1993 to end the embargo against Cuba. He will be helping to organize a New England tour of "Humor from My Pen," an exhibit of cartoons drawn by Cuban Five prisoner Gerardo Hernández taking place in early 2013.
Nancy Kohn is a representative of the International Committee for the Freedom of the Cuban Five.
Don Wilson is President of the New London chapter of the NAACP. He was instrumental in having the state and local chapters of the NAACP call for federal intervention into two different cases of alleged discrimination in the New London fire and police departments in New London.
Cornell Lewis was born in Detroit, Michigan and earned a BA in theology and an M.Ed in Rehabilitation Therapy. He taught Social Work / Community Organizing at Capital Community College in Hartford and organized The Men & Women of Color Initiative to help North End children get to school safely. Lewis started community patrols in apartment complex on Vine & Albany Street to rid it of drug dealers and organized weekly Freedom Rides to suburbia to homes of persons convicted of buying drugs in Hartford, making the connection about how suburbs contribute to a criminal urban economy.
Jason Wright has been an active leftist since 1988, initially with the Democratic Socialists of America, but subsequently with the International Bolshevik Tendency. Jason has been active in the campaign to free Mumia Abu-Jamal for over two decades and was a co-author of "The Case of Mumia Abu-Jamal" a detailed study of the judicial frame-up of America's leading political prisoner.
Shahina Parveen is a leader of DRUM-Desis Rising Up & Moving, and the mother of Shahawar Matin Siraj, who was targeted and entrapped by the NYPD and is now serving a 30 year sentence. As an undocumented Muslim immigrant, Shahina has active in speaking out about the surveillance of Muslim communities in the broader context of policing of communities of color. She has also been a vocal leader in the immigrant rights struggle, and the anti-war movement, making the links between the wars abroad and the war at home.
Roksana Mun is a Youth Organizer at DRUM. Roksana Mun is an immigrant New Yorker who was born in Bangladesh. She has been a member of DRUM YouthPower! since 2003 when she graduated the Youth Power! Summer Community Organizing Institute. She has served as a Youth Organizer from 2007-9 and rejoined staff in 2011, and is currently the Dignity in Schools Campaign Organizer building youth leadership to win educational justice.
Christine Gauvreau is an organizer with the CT Coalition to Stop Indefinite Detention and with CT United for Peace. She also serves on the administrative committee of the United National Antiwar Coalition. She came to focus on civil liberties work after seeing the way in which the pre-emptive prosecution, FBI entrapment, and the treatment of speech as material support to terrorism, i.e. the elements of the “war at home,” were being used to cripple the antiwar movement in the US and justify ever more murderous wars abroad. Gauvreau has been active for forty years in the movements for social change.
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