Something Significant is Happening: An Occupy Oakland Strike Reflection
[http://faithinthebay.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/11/ookids_2011.jpg] Something is happening. Something significant is happening all around us. Wednesday I spent the day among millions. Wednesday, I found myself floating in a sea of humanity whose river flowed guided by an invisible hand through th
Wednesday I spent the day among millions. Wednesday, I found myself floating in a sea of humanity whose river flowed guided by an invisible hand through the streets of Oakland. I believe I felt the presence of God moving or the voice of God speaking but not in any way that I have before experienced the Divine.
Wednesday, marked a week and one day after the tragic attempt to disband the Oakland encampment of the Occupy Movement. The attempt turned almost deadly violent. Early that Tuesday morning a police force containing seventeen different police departments and led by the Oakland Police Department (OPD) came to order the campers to leave the plaza in front of city hall where they had occupied for more than a month. The police met with resistance. That is to say that there were those who stood to deliberately and determinately defy the orders of the police. The Police Chief said his officers were violently attacked and responded. Others report that the police were aggressive and unprovoked.
Wednesday, the day after the plaza had been cleared, cleaned and sanitized there was a mass meeting in front of city hall. It lasted late into the night. I was there. I was there as a nonviolent clergy person with other nonviolent clergy persons to do whatever we could to prevent any further violence. There were a lot of people out that night. We were shoulder to shoulder and filled the square. During the general assembly it was decided that there would be a general strike on Wednesday the next week. That is the day of which I am writing here.
For a week there was this buzz about the general strike. I was invited to a clergy meeting which ended up at our church because it outgrew the scheduled meeting place. The meeting went on for three hours as a diverse group of thirty clergy persons met to lend their presence and plan for a peaceful outcome to the planned marches. There were to be prayers and peace rituals a half an hour before; the morning events which began at 9am, the noon rally and the 5 pm march to shut down the Port of Oakland. Valerie and I arrived before 11am.
We arrived into something big, something huge. As we drove into town there was an unusual calm. Even the unusually quiet traffic seemed serene. There seemed to be something different about our city. We parked the car at the church four blocks from the city center and began walking to city hall, as we turned the corner on 14th street we saw a huge crowd filling the intersection of 14th and Broadway. As we walked closer we saw a black sign stretching across the street with large silver painted words announcing: “Death to Capitalism”. The crowd was massive. There were people everywhere. If there were thousands at the rally the week before there were tens of thousands there Wednesday.
The time came for the noon marches. There was a children’s march leaving from the Oakland Library at noon that I was aware of, some of my friends and co-workers were headed that way. There were other marches simultaneously on the move. Valerie and I joined a mass of people moving down 14th street toward the library. We were among a multitude filling all four lanes of the street for as far as one could see. The crowd was dense and turned left on Franklin and headed north toward the place where several bank branches were clustered.
Valerie and I were joined by one of our members as we walked along Franklin Street. The three of us finished that noon march together. Throughout the day I saw several members of our congregation marching in different contingents. We paused to watch a man and a woman expertly climb lampposts across Webster Street and unfurl a banner that read “Occupy the Banks”. I noted that there were some who knew exactly where we were going and in fact had plans for the route. We moved from that corner to pause briefly at the large Bank of America on Harrison St. and then back to Broadway for the march back to the city center. The crowd was innumerable. The sense of peace and hope was immeasurable. The sense of community and common destiny was palatable.
There is one troubling part of November 2nd. I did not see many African American clergy beside myself and a few students. I was asked by a reporter why that was the case and what did I think African Americans think about the Occupy Movement. Well the second question was the easiest to answer. I told the reporter that I could not speak for African Americans nor accurately reflect any imaginary consensus they may hold. The first question, however, does give me pause. I am a part of several clergy groups and all except one have ignored the movement. None have yet engaged any theological reflection on the dynamic of our time or how it is embodied in the Occupy Movement but it is time.