A day of orange
Friday, January 26, 2007Sadly, something happened a few days ago that made me feel like i really need to write on here.
It all started innocently, as any protest day would. I decided not to go to work for half of the day. Instead, I joined the brigades of hard-working human rights activists and volunteers from Montreal's four university Amnesty International groups which had put energies together and had come up with a manifestation together to call for the closing of the disaster that Guantanamo Bay turned out to be for the world history of human rights.
We were all together in the change room, getting ready to get into our orange jumpsuit outfits. The atmosphere was somber, to say the least and as we all changed into our clothes, what we had on was not us anymore. I looked at the things I was putting on, an orange jumpsuit from the army surplus store, a piece of clothing that I would otherwise wear it during Halloween to wear the true colours of the season. On my head, I put on a black hood similar to the ones used in Guantanamo.
A girl came in with a camera. The sudden instinct of wanting to test my camera's pixels and, at the same time, take some pics with my new friends sounded like a good idea. I gave her my camera to make the shot... A second later, flashes of Guantanamo and Abu Ghraib [among other prisons in Iraq] detainees pictures appeared in front of me. Suddenly, I felt like a soldier who wanted to make the event a sensation, a memento, something to remember the day by... And an orange jumpsuit with a black hood was nothing to be proud of...
The demo went super well, seeing as it was -25 degrees Celsius outside. There were about twelve detainees and about 70-90 protestors. We walked along St.Catherine St., the main street in downtown Montreal and ended up in front of the American Consulate... Chants varied from "Justice Gitmo Style, Five years no trial!" to "What do we want? Fair trials! When do we want them? Now!"
The day ended with demands from the US to close Guantanamo, the biggest illegal detention centre in the world. Protests similar to the one in Montreal were held around the world, including Toronto, Vancouver, Washington, London and Paris.
As I took off my jumpsuit, I remembered the picture that made me shiver throughout the day...
I went online and signed the virtual flotilla going to the US Naval base in Guantanamo. You can, too, you know. And so can your friends...and their friends...and then maybe, someday, when everyone's friends have signed and as many names have been collected as there are people in the world, I won't feel naive about asking this of you because Guantanamo will have been closed down.
Labels: amnesty international, guantanamo bay, human rights, Montreal, protest