Forty representatives from 11 Boston and Harvard organizations met last night to plan vigils, hunger strikes and demonstrations to protest the upcoming visit to the University by Chinese President Jiang Zemin.
The representatives who met in the basement of Swedenborg Chapel, compose the umbrella group Alliance For Freedom and Human Rights in Asia, a newly formed group that represents the interests of a spectrum of human rights organizations.
The event being planned by the Alliance is a rally to be held for the duration of Jiang's Boston visit.
"I've gotten calls from the Boston Globe, the New York Times, Reuters," said Metta McGarvey, a graduate student at the Divinity School and a key organizer of the Alliance. "[The rally] is going to be big."
Organizers have planned the protest on November 1 to coincide closely with Jiang's schedule for his Boston visit.
Protesters will begin a vigil at 8 a.m., at the time that Sanders Theatre, the location of the Jiang speech, will open its doors. The main rally will begin at 9 a.m. at the corner of Quincy and Kirkland streets, across from Sanders, according to McGarvey.
The protesters will begin chanting slogans at 10 a.m. Jiang, who is expected to arrive at Sanders around 10:30 a.m., will speak at 11 a.m., according to Alliance members.
In addition, the Tibetan Association of Boston will begin protesting the morning of October 31 with a hunger strike at the chapel, which is across from Sanders Later that evening, the Tibetan Association plans to hold a candlelight vigil and prayer. The hunger strike will last until 9 a.m. November 2, about the time when Jiang will be in Boston, according to Lobsang. Alliance members discussed the process of inviting speakers and gaining support from prominent Boston-area intellectuals for the event. Some of the names mentioned by organizers include Noam Chomsky, an MIT professor, Professor of Afro-American Studies Cornel R. West '74, Elie Weisel and Minister in the Memorial Church Peter J. Gomes. The Alliance, through its Harvard affiliates, also plans to have some members placed inside Sanders to conduct either a 30-second disruption of the talk or a silent protest, an Alliance member said. The rally is scheduled to end at 1 p.m., after which some protesters plan to follow Jiang back to his hotel. Organizers said yesterday that they feel optimistic about the turn-out for the protest. "We have student groups at almost all the area colleges and high schools," said Carl Williams, a Boston-area Amnesty International representative. "We're going to get 200 to 250 people to join the rally, and hopefully some for the hunger strike as well. We're going to make Jiang Zemin know our presence," he said. Read more in News