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 NEWS & LETTERS, November 2004

View of 'FSM' at 40

Arrested many years ago in the Free Speech Movement in Berkeley, I returned to this University of California campus for the 40th anniversary of the event. The weeklong celebration of the "FSM" featured a rally that attracted 3,000 students; 10 workshops; '60s films; two poetry readings; a night of folk song; journalist Seymour Hersh talking about Abu Ghraib prison and Iraq, and a rock concert.

The Oct. 7 panel "Berkeley and the Black Freedom Struggle: Then and Now" explored the 50-year history of civil rights activism. Taman Moncour (Traci Seams), a leader of the Bay Area sit-ins in 1963; Mike Miller, the Bay Area organizer for Students for a Non-Violent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) during the 1960s; Hardy Frye, a SNCC organizer in Sacramento, Cal. and Mississippi from 1964–1967, and Cassie Lopez, an organizer for jobs, education and housing in Detroit--all shared histories of the '60s civil rights struggles.

Frye told how he learned to make coalitions between civil rights groups and farm workers; to change Mississippi and Alabama politics as well as to challenge the national Democratic Party, and to bring these ideas to the rest of the county.

STRUGGLE CONTINUES

The last speaker, Josie Heinman, is a senior at UC Berkeley and activist with the Coalition to Defend Affirmative Action, Integration and Immigrant Rights. In a powerful speech she told how the coalition helped organize 50,000 students to go to Washington, D.C. on April 1, 2004 to demonstrate for affirmative action at the Supreme Court. Concerned that too few students of color are enrolling in UC Berkeley, the coalition is trying to restore affirmative action there.

That evening’s panel, "Focus on the FSM: Its Genesis, Meanings and Consequences," had six political activists from the late 1950s and 1960s. Ken Cloke, former chairman of SLATE, a leading dissident student group of the early 1960s, said he was afraid he would never get a job if he signed a petition, but he, like all the others, overcame this fear. Jo Freeman, a leader of the Young Democrats in the 1960s at Berkeley, argued that although the FSM clearly came out of the civil rights movements, its main accomplishment was helping to end McCarthyism and red-baiting.

For author Greil Marcus, "the FSM was a great conversation," while Michael Rossman, a mainstay of the FSM for 40 years, said, "I learned the difference between a ‘mob’ and a ‘public.’ We were called a ‘mob’ but we really were the first democracy that we had ever experienced." Rossman added that UC Berkeley President Clark Kerr, who saw himself as a liberal fighting for civil rights, red-baited the FSM in the newspapers though he knew it wasn’t true. Kerr’s red-baiting gave ammunition to such right-wing politicians as Ronald Reagan who, when elected governor in 1966, fired Kerr for being too soft on the student radicals.

SQUAD CAR APPROPRIATED

At the noon rally on Oct. 8, 3,000, mostly students, sat around a police car on Sproul Plaza. They were reenacting the 1964 student capture of a Berkeley police car containing civil rights activist Jack Weinberg who had been arrested for sitting at an allegedly illegal political table near Sather Gate. Three months later the UC Berkeley faculty voted eight to one that all we had asked for around the police car should be given as our constitutional rights.

In 2004 speakers spoke from a wooden stage over the police car. The current student body president, Misha Leybovich, said, "Seeing the strength of the '60s gives me hope and confidence for my generation. It’s a fallacy that we’re no longer passionate. It’s a fallacy that we’re no longer active." He apologized that the DAILY CAL (the student newspaper), the administration, and the student goverment (the ASUC), were all against the FSM in 1964, but was happy that all three groups supported the FSM in 2004.

As if to underscore his point, Leybovich introduced UC Berkeley’s new Chancellor Birgeneau who said that while doing civil rights work in South Carolina in 1965, he received his political education from two FSM leaders.

Rosha Jones and Hiraa Khan, two students from campus Berkeley ACLU, were concerned about government attacks on civil liberties. They said that the students had gotten the student government to pass a resolution condemning the USA PATRIOT Act. This next year students will focus on ending racial profiling, defeating the USA PATRIOT Act, and restoring affirmative action.

--Julia Stein

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