Activists Occupy National
Museum of American
History — Install Torture Exhibit to Mark Guantánamo Anniversary
Saturday, January 11, 2014
Vowing to “Make Guantanamo History,” human rights advocates
from around the country marked the beginning of the thirteenth year of
torture and indefinite detention at the prison camp with a dramatic protest at
the National Museum of American History. 150 activists occupied the atrium of
the crowded museum for more than two hours, speaking out against torture and
calling for Guantanamo
to close.
The activists hung banners, stood in stress positions in
hoods and jumpsuits, spoke to the tourists, and with their bodies and voices
revised the museum’s “Price of Freedom” exhibit to include twelve years of
torture and indefinite detention as the bitter cost of the United States’
misguided pursuit of “national security.”
In a booming chorus, members of Witness Against Torture and
other groups read from a statement that closed with the lines: “to
honor freedom and justice and the struggles of Americans for these things, we
must end torture, close the prison and make Guantanamo history.”
Chantal deAlcuaz, a Witness Against Torture activist from Anchorage, Alaska
spent the two hours in an orange jumpsuit and black hood. She reflected that:
“We came here today because we want to see Guantanamo relegated to a museum — to be
shuttered and condemned, but also understood as an example of where fear,
hatred and violence can take us.”
The museum protest followed a robust and spirited rally at
the White House that featured speeches from grassroots activists, Guantanamo attorneys and
representatives of national human rights organizations.
“It was so great to see the spirit of hope at the White
House, in the streets of DC and at the museum,” said Chris Knestrick, a
divinity student form Chicago.
“We definitely moved closer to our goal of closing Guantanamo today. And the work will
continue!!”
Since Monday, January 6, Witness Against Torture activists
from throughout the country have gathered in Washington, D.C. to engage in
street theater, demonstrations, fasting and direct action to demand that
Guantanamo be closed immediately. There were also anti-Guantanamo
protests and vigils throughout the country, including in Los
Angeles, CA, Boston
MA, Chicago IL, Santa Monica, CA Erie, PA, and Cleveland, OH.
Witness Against Torture is a grassroots movement that
came into being in December 2005 when 24 activists walked to Guantanamo to visit the prisoners and condemn
torture policies. Since then, it has engaged in public education, community
outreach, and non-violent direct action. January 2014 is the eighth year the
group has gathered annually in Washington,
DC to call for justice and
accountability. To learn more, visit www.witnesstorture.org.
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