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NEWS & LETTERS, December 2002

NY students march against the war

New York--2,000 New York University and New York City public and parochial school students, community activists and residents of Greenwich Village marched through the streets of Manhattan on Nov. 20 against the looming U.S.-led war against Iraq.

The march was planned by NYU students as an outgrowth of a student walkout to protest the war. At about 12:30 p.m., students began assembling in front of the shining, multi-million dollar Stern Business School Building at W. 4th and Mercer Streets on NYU’s campus in Greenwich Village. By about 1 p.m. a large crowd of several hundred excited students had gathered. Soon after students spontaneously took to the street and started marching up University Place towards Union Square. The protest became a kind of moving street carnival with many people on sidewalks giving the peace sign in support of the anti-war message.

At Union Square, a hub of New York City radical activity throughout much of the last century, the march seemed to sputter. Police, who had been conspicuously absent up to that point, began arriving in droves. They ordered people out of the major intersection. Marchers, however, regained their momentum, and began heading back towards NYU via Broadway. Initially police had kept the marchers on the sidewalks. But within minutes, students spontaneously spilled into the streets, some locking arms as they walked jubilantly down New York’s most famous street on this warm, late-fall day. Protesters then marched into Washington Square park, where anti-war organizers had set up a stage for a speaking program.

Without question, the demonstration injected anti-war militancy into the NYU student body and the neighboring community. Several hundred high school and even middle school students as well as downtown residents joined in as the demonstration moved through the Village.

A twenty something African-American graduate student noted, "It was good to see so many people out, especially people of color." One young Black woman asserted, "I didn’t feel as alienated as I have at some anti-globalization events." Perhaps Ramon Alejandro Suarez, a NYU history graduate student, put it best: "The march brought together diverse elements of the student body against the unjust foreign policy of our current administration."

--Erik S. McDuffie, NYU graduate student

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