Monday, January 17, 2005

Ethnic Diversity March in Bozeman: MLK Day and Neo-Nazi's.

Minna celebrated her 20 month birthday by attending her first protest rally yesterday. We all walked down Main Street in Bozeman for the Martin Luther King "Diversity Day" event. We marched for 8 blocks alongside the "Livingston Womens Group" and behind the "Gallatin Valley Interfaith Organization" banner. Children and parents carried hand-drawn posters declaring "Bozeman Supports Diversity" and "No Matter What the Color of Our Skin We Are The Same Inside." All this would have been very cute and innocent, perhaps ironic too, given that Bozeman's ethnic population amounts to only a few dozen African American, Hispanic and Asians plus maybe 50 Jews. Except that this event will be viewed in the future as an important milestone for Bozeman. Word of it's coming together had fascinated this growth-stressed community for weeks. Officially, the march and rally, organized by the hastily established "Gallatin Valley Human Rights Task" was an MLK Day commemoration. But it's more urgent purpose was to show community outrage at the recent local emergence of a white supremacist hate group, the National Alliance, that has been targeting Bozeman and Livingston for new recruits and testing the community for a possible headquarters. Over a thousand people showed up on this cold snowy Sunday, singing and banging drums and excitedly greeting one another as neighbors tend to do under such circumstances. Until we came upon 11 men and 2 women standing on the steps of the Gallatin County Court... like grotesque wax museum figures from a ghastly era... each with a sickly grin on their face, holding slogans, banners and swastikas. The procession of marchers bottlenecked in front of them, all of us silently staring with a horrified fascination. A swoon of shock and nausea came up and I had to choke back tears... much like the feeling I had when, from the dust coated window of my father's evacuated, apartment, I first saw the twisted, still smoldering ruins of the World Trade Center just across the street. It's really something to be part of a growing community like Bozeman, where everything is still in flux and it's future is wide open. In only the 6 months that we've lived in the area full time, I've developed a strong sense of local responsibility, a sense of my uniqueness and a keen awareness that I am needed here. Michelle, Minna and I really did make a difference by participating yesterday. Very unlike my liberal big-city mindset where I had a sense of complacency, no... apathy, knowing that attending events like "Diversity Day" would be embarrassingly PC, trite and redundant. It just didn't every seem necessary to show up...it being so obvious, that everyone here takes ethnic diversity as a given... no big deal... and besides, all the usual "psuedo professional and hobby protestor" suspects will be there, and then again on tonight's local news. But here in Montana, I no longer take any of that for granted.

6 Comments:

GrumbleGrouch said...

All's fine until you "came upon 11 men and 2 women standing on the steps of the Gallatin County Court... holding slogans, banners and swastikas.... A swell of hatred and nausea came up and I had to choke back tears...." Please, don't hate, don't weep. Hating is their thing, not ours. They are more to be pitied than censured. Forgive them, for they know not what they do. Instead of hating them, rejoice that they have been outnumbered on this day, and that they are looking at you not knowing what to do next.

3:09 PM  
R said...

I attended a writing seminar at Bard one summer and as a part of our work in dialectics we were given the task of defending the right to assemble that a white supremacist group raised by staging a rally in Skokie, II. Our instructor was amazed when we were successful in convincing the rest of the group and her that the freedom of speech issue was indeed more important than the prohibition of it that the protestors wanted. And even more amazed when then we confessed that we would have joined with the protestors. But that's what freedom of speech is.

10:25 PM  
Wulfgar said...

Hi, Ron. I just want to let you know that I'm right over the hill from you, and discovered your site last night. I'll be checking in often. Welcome to the Montana webosphere, and I'm glad that I've found you.

3:13 PM  
Anonymous said...

Yeah, It was a little eerie seeing them. I posted some pictures of the march on the Gallatin Democrats website.
www.gallatindemocrats.com The last picture is scary, the people look mentally ill. (the comicle didn't do justice to the march. hundreds of people? The Police stopped counting at 1700.) The GVHRT had an emergency meeting about the puff piece the Chronicle did Sunday about Mark Mcguire. They were steamed. Nice to see more voices around Bozeman. Billy

4:49 PM  
The Arcane Radical said...

Its been a while since I looked at the exact numbers, but Bozeman is more diverse than the picture you paint. I think the total for Hispanics, Asians, and American Indians is closer to 1500 than "a few dozen". Diversity capital of the Pacific Northwest, no way, but not as bad as you paint us either.
Personally, I was appalled the Nazi got front page status in the Comicle this weekend, a friend tries to tell me not to worry, there are only 700 of them. I don't recall the exact number, but I think the German Nazi pary had less than 100 members when Hitler joined.

11:14 PM  
R said...

The strange thing is is that there seems to be more and more instances of hate and hate group activity where the result is an acceptance rather than a rejection. It feels like all those years of mostly white people complaining about the unfairness of laws that gave minorities a chance to catch up have finally born fruit in a frame of mind that sees every hateful act, every Iraqi civilian collateral casualty, and every African death whether by aids or ethnic cleansing as some sort of karmic justice.

11:00 PM  

Post a Comment

Links to this post:

Create a Link

<< Home