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Please note that this very
successful event, Dec 15-20, 2002, has been completed.
FIVE DAY FAST TO LET IRAQ LIVE
San Jose Mercury News Article on
Peace Activist's Hunger Strike
http://www.bayarea.com/mld/bayarea/news/local/4749603.htm
(This article has expired and is no longer at this URL)
Posted on Mon, Dec. 16, 2002
The Mercury News
Peace Activists on Hunger Strike
13 Protesters in Downtown San Jose Oppose Possible War Against
Iraq
By Lisa M. Krieger
Mercury News
Thirteen activists began a five-day hunger strike Sunday night
on the windy, rain-drenched sidewalks of downtown San Jose, showing
their opposition to President Bush's call for a
pre-emptive strike on Iraq.
The protesters, most of them Santa Clara University students, held
candles and prayed in front of the Federal Building, just blocks
away from holiday shoppers and moviegoers.
``I'm a little nervous. I'm hungry right now, thinking about it,''
said Blair Thedinger, 21, an environmental science major at the
university. ``But I'm really opposed and frustrated by U.S. military
policy and our approach to world domination, rather than working
through diplomacy.''
Thedinger and fellow activists will sleep in two large tents on
Second Street, comforted by sleeping bags and nourished only by
bottled water. A visiting nurse will provide medical
support and surveillance.
The students, most of them adherents to the Catholic Church's Jesuit
tradition, are members of the Santa Clara University Peace Action
Committee.
``They're very brave, and it is important what they plan to do,''
said anthropology professor and Jesuit priest Luis Calero as he
visited the students during the evening's ceremony. He was joined
by sociology Professor Laura Nichols and Sister Elizabeth Avalos
of the Diocese of San Jose.
The students are following a longstanding Jesuit tradition of non-violent
protest, epitomized by Vietnam War protester and priest Daniel Berrigan,
Avalos said.
``We want greater efforts put toward diplomacy . . . and the $50
billion now going to the war effort to be spent instead on domestic
issues, like homelessness and education,'' she said.
Patricia Adams, 22, held a cell phone that had been lent to her
by her parents, who support her mission. Raised as a Catholic in
Kansas City, Mo., she said that her education and travels in El
Salvador influenced her to work for social justice.
``We want people to know that there is a growing anti-war movement
here in the South Bay, a movement that is gaining momentum,'' said
Adams, a recent graduate who studied
engineering and environmental science. ``You don't have to go to
San Francisco or Santa Cruz. There are people here in San Jose who
care.''
Adams, Thedinger and others joined together in a midday meal of
vegetarian Mexican food, then prepared for what they know will be
tough times.
``You can't concentrate. You feel lightheaded. You have to walk
slowly,'' said Adams, who has fasted in other anti-war demonstrations.
``On the second day you feel hungry, but
by the third and fourth day, your body goes into starvation mode,
and almost accepts it.''
She will be home for the holidays, she hopes, spiritually regenerated
by the mission.
``I want to work as an agent of change,'' she said. ``I want people
to hear -- loud and clear -- that there is a growing commitment
to opposing war.''
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Contact Lisa M. Krieger at lkrieger@sjmercury.com or (408) 920-5565.
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