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Occupy Protesters Eye Diversity As Movement Grows

Occupy Wall Street

ERRIN HAINES   10/17/11 11:38 AM ET   AP

ATLANTA — Jason Woody immediately recognized a shared struggle with many of the Occupy Wall Street demonstrators: The 2007 college graduate has been out of work for two years, and it's been longer since he's seen a doctor. He also noticed something else – the lack of brown faces on the front lines of the Occupy movement.

"When I started out here ... I realized there was not a lot of diversity out here," said Woody, who is black and graduated from Morehouse College and has camped in a downtown Atlanta park with other protesters for more than a week. "It's changed in the course of the past week. I'd like to see that grow."

The outcry against the nation's financial institutions that has swept the country in recent weeks has crossed many boundaries, including class, gender and age. But a stubborn hurdle in many cities has been a lack of racial inclusion, something noted by organizers and participants alike.

"We, the 99 percent, have to be reaching out to the cross section of the communities that we live in," said Tim Franzen, one of the organizers of the Occupy Atlanta movement. "If you come down to the park and spend a day I think you might have a hard time saying this is an all-white movement. We are reaching out, but we've got some bridges to build."

The absence of diversity is particularly notable given that some of the larger issues surrounding the Occupy movement – including the economy, foreclosures and unemployment – are disproportionately affecting people of color. And the legacy of activism present in some minority communities seems a natural segue for such a cause, which has been linked to the strategies of the civil rights movement of the 1950s and 1960s.

African-Americans are more inclined to rally around social justice than financial literacy causes, said John Hope Bryant, founder and chief executive officer of Operation HOPE, a non-profit organization that educates underserved and low-income Americans about personal financial responsibility.

"If this was about someone unjustly being brutalized, that's an easier thing for us to mobilize around," said Bryant, who is black, citing the recent Troy Davis death penalty case in Georgia, a diverse protest that attracted global attention last month.

The Occupy Wall Street protest in New York has been more diverse than other cities. Although the majority of protesters are white, many blacks and a smattering of Asians and Latinos have participated.

Among them is Omar Henriquez, a Long Island resident who emigrated from El Salvador. He passed out Spanish-language copies of the Occupied Wall Street Journal on Friday. He has been taking the newspaper to Latino and immigrant rights groups. He also is unemployed.

"That's why I'm here," said Henriquez, 55. "It's incumbent on us, Latinos here, to bring more Latinos here. We don't have to be invited to come, we just come."

On Saturday, the nation's capital provided a sharp contrast: A couple dozen mostly white protesters congregated in Washington's Freedom Plaza. They were separate from Occupy DC but hold similar ideals. Not far away, thousands marched to the Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial. Their rallying cry was similar, if not identical – yet the vast majority were black.

A few men played the bongo drums at Freedom Plaza, while a band at the nearby rally led by the Rev. Al Sharpton near the Washington Monument played a soulful, jazzy rendition of Michael Jackson's "Human Nature" – albeit with a white saxophonist – and the crowd sang along knowingly as a speaker recited the familiar opening theme to the "Tom Joyner Morning Show."

Phil Calhoun, 44, an engineer from Crofton, Md., who was checking out the various protests, marveled at the racial disparity between the two groups even though they were preaching similar ideologies.

"Maybe it's just the nature of our society, set this up this way," he said. "But it's one thing I think we need to bridge. We need to bridge that gap."

In Baltimore, there are people representing different racial, ethnic, age and income groups, but not in proportion to the city's population. Occupy Baltimore group organizer C.T. Lawrence Butler, who is white said there has been talk of going out to communities around the city to try to attract more people, but the group is just building steam and hasn't had a chance to put together official outreach. Instead, individuals have been reaching out to communities on their own, a strategy that may work better.

"Everybody would like more diversity," Butler said. "The group is focusing on creating a place where everybody can feel safe speaking up."

Most of the people at Occupy Boston on Friday appeared to be young and white, with just a handful of blacks, Latinos and Asians in an area not far from the city's Chinatown neighborhood. Anthony Messina, a 19-year-old biotech student at Middlesex Community College who is white, said he sees the beginnings of racial diversity at the protests, but that the numbers are nowhere near where they should be.

"It's not a representative group, and I don't think anyone would lie and tell you that it is," Messina said, adding that whites have to be careful when reaching out to minorities to join the movement. "You don't want to come off like you're preaching that you know what's good for them."

Bryant, of Operation HOPE, added that while the economic crisis has hit the middle class hard, blacks have reacted differently than whites, equating money with self-image and feeling ashamed and responsible for their financial situation, rather than angry.

"Money for us is a badge," Bryant said. "Money for them is a vehicle. We don't want to be seen. We just want to hide, and hope the storyline changes."

Blacks also don't want to be seen as just complaining. Former activists like Ambassador Andrew Young have pointed out that the Occupy movement is still in a nascent stage, with protesters more focused on what they're against rather than what they're for.

In Chicago, organizers have started canvassing neighborhoods on Chicago's largely minority South Side, a project they're calling Occupy the `Hood.

"We're sending people into different neighborhoods and we're looking into town halls in different communities," said Kelvin Ho, 21, an economics major at the University of Chicago and an Occupy Chicago press committee leader.

Ho, an American whose parents were born in Taiwan, said issues of race have come up during the group's twice-daily general assembly meetings. At first, most of the people moderating the meetings were white men. But participants noted that, and "now we're making an active effort to have people of color and women moderate the meetings."

In Atlanta, Woody said the word didn't get out clearly enough to African-Americans when the movement began. Now, he's trying to get more historically black colleges involved, such as his alma mater.

"I felt that my voice should be represented," Woody said. "A lot of people feel like it won't make a difference. I wish more people would realize that the more support we can show, the more powerful it makes our movement."

___

Associated Press writers Eric Tucker in Washington, Sarah Brumfield in Baltimore, Mark Pratt in Boston, Karen Matthews in New York and Carla K. Johnson in Chicago contributed to this report.

___

Follow Errin Haines at www.twitter.com/emarvelous

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ATLANTA — Jason Woody immediately recognized a shared struggle with many of the Occupy Wall Street demonstrators: The 2007 college graduate has been out of work for two years, and it's been long...
ATLANTA — Jason Woody immediately recognized a shared struggle with many of the Occupy Wall Street demonstrators: The 2007 college graduate has been out of work for two years, and it's been long...
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02:56 PM on 10/20/2011
I understand their fight with the "Occupy Wall St. Movement", but my God... That park is a mess!!!
12:10 PM on 10/19/2011
You "represent the 99%" but you have to recruite "people of color" to actually show up?

....awkwaaaaaaard.
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01:04 PM on 10/18/2011
We are each a walking breathing, 'beacon' for, Freedom, Justice, and Equality, people around the world look to us for fairness in the midst of trouble. We lived it worked it and earned it, we don't have to prove anything to anybody. What is this, diversity for, is that something the opposition, or Wall St. requires to respond?

Black student a police record could destroy you; stay-awaaay from trouble. How many black people can afford to spend the night in jail. When Rev. Sharpton shows-up he does so as our representative. If that's not enough for someone to bad. One of our leaders has spoken! I know some young AA's get educated, and then you think leaders are for the Negroes, you're the new black man/women or something else. I'm not against education I'm saying. We didn't win our 'equal rights' with what you learned in those books. It was courage, unity, doing and being "Right." No clever smart moth, tricks, lies, or pay-offs.

"Former activists like Ambassador Andrew Young have pointed out that the Occupy movement is still in a nascent stage, with protesters more focused on what they're against rather than what they're for."
"nascent" Adjective: 1.(esp. of a process or organization) Just coming into existence and beginning to display signs of future potential; not yet fully developed.
2(chiefly of hydrogen) Freshly generated in a reactive form.
03:48 PM on 10/17/2011
Gee, the liberals were all crying RACISM! when conservatives pointed out the lack of diversity in OccupyWallStreet. Now, they're doing the exact same thing.
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Puzzlr
Anything to get out of work.
01:18 PM on 10/18/2011
Except that one group would welcome diversity and the other would not. Care to guess which one? Occupy Wall Street, of course.
02:36 PM on 10/17/2011
No longer do the occupy protests scream Democrat as they once did on television. The speakers at the Occupy Jacksonville protest spoke about change at the ballot box but they didn’t say who or what party they wanted to see change. It seems to me that Occupy Wall Street is frustrated with both parties as the Tea Party claimed it was in its infancy. Occupy Wall Street seems to want the restoration of a glorious America the same as the Tea Party cries in everyone of its rallies.

Which America do occupy protesters and Tea Party Americans want back. Is it the America of smaller government, more jobs, a balanced budget, reduced (not eliminated) deficit, low unemployment, and marginally higher taxes? Is it the America where the rich pay their fair share, the poor, impoverished, and disenfranchised can close wealth gaps, education gaps are not wider than the Grand Canyon, wages aren’t stunted, and manufacturing bountiful? Is that the America both groups want back? If that’s all that is wanted, why does the message seem to sound so different? Why is it one group is branded racist and the other revolutionary? Why is one group labeled as being stuck in the ante-bellum war between the states south rednecks and the other as young rabble rousers agitating change?

http://changecomesslow.com/2011/10/17/occupy-wall-street-vs-the-tea-party-whats-the-difference/
01:43 PM on 10/17/2011
offer something for free and watch
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
jessicadevyn
Do you like Huey Lewis and the News?
03:52 PM on 10/17/2011
Just like mentioning race brings the r@.c|St trolls like you out. Plz don't b|t€h about the r@.ce card when you are obviously r@€|$t
11:36 AM on 10/18/2011
truth hurts huh

nice play of the rac card
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Puzzlr
Anything to get out of work.
01:21 PM on 10/18/2011
Huh? Are you saying that only black people would show up if they offered something for free? So what was the excuse used during the tea rallies? The Koch brothers offered free bus rides and free lunches. However, I don't recall many blacks at those rallies. You fail dude.
02:12 PM on 10/18/2011
Did I say only black people??? Did I say All black people?? you fail
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LenR
author: sci fi/ fantasy.
01:26 PM on 10/17/2011
The way it's going, those who are legitimately part of the 1% and have half a brain will join the protests, wave placards, and yell as loud as the 99%ers around them. Not a good time for them to brag about their palatial estates, their Bentleys' and their seven and eight figure portfolios,
12:14 PM on 10/17/2011
"OCCUPY" Protests For IMMIGRATION REFORM

I also see a lack of "diversity" in the issues. Yes we need to protest Wall Street, but as the movement grows, I'd like to see it broaden and embrace OTHER issues like Education Reform, Ending the war in Afghanistan...and Immigration Reform.

I'm wondering WHY Immigration Reform Groups are not taking this great opportunity to protest and demand IMMIGRATION REFORM. See my blog: http://conlibe.wordpress.com/

Why have we bought into the conventional wisdom that Immigration Reform can't happen until certain things fall into place? Namely a secure border (an obvious/effective obstacle that's allowed certain elements to set and manipulate the agenda and stall reform, which they will NEVER support, even if there's an impenetrable border) OR the lack of backbone and will by a White House that either CANNOT or WILL NOT act unless it's secretly taken a poll to decide if it has the votes.

Immigration Reform groups need to demand Reform NOW. Force a vote in Congress. Let's see who's for and who's against. Then let the electorate decide. Until then, NOTHING WILL HAPPEN. If we wait for a secure border, NOTHING WILL HAPPEN.

Mobilize Immigration activists! Seize the opportunity that's opened up! Grab your placards and join the "Occupy" protests to push the case for Immigration Reform.

DEMAND REFORM NOW!!!

Not in the next 3 years. NOW!!! If the 2008 election taught us anything, it's that the time will NEVER be right. NOW!!

Thanks.