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Osman: One Postcard At A Time

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  • Osman: One Postcard At A Time

    OSMAN: ONE POSTCARD AT A TIME
    By Franny Osman/ Guest Commentary

    Zaman, Turkey
    Nov 9 2006

    Last month I joined a student fast to bring people's attention to
    the genocide now happening in Darfur, Sudan ... even though I am not
    a student, and despite my skepticism that my fast could make anyone
    aware of anything except me to my stomach's grumbles.

    On the way to the school bus stop, I mentioned the dilemma of
    the ineffective fast to a neighbor who suggested that I buy some
    postcards and sit in front of the supermarket and let people write
    to our lawmakers about the atrocities. Yes! Instead of one letter
    from me, there would be many. Now, to prepare.

    I spent two hours on the Web, mostly at savedarfur.org. I collected
    president and congress addresses. I printed sample letters and current
    articles about the rape and torture, 400,000 dead in three years,
    more than two million civilians forced from their homes.

    The first genocide of this century. I cringe as I write, "the first,"
    as if I fully expect more to come. May it never be.

    I recalled the advice of an activist friend, "You can't get it if you
    don't ask," and made the dreaded call to the manager of Roche Brothers
    to request permission to sit outside the store. I was so afraid I would
    be rejected from a place on the sidewalk by a frustrating policy. But,
    as they have so often in the past, Roche Brothers proved extremely
    helpful and friendly. "Just not political campaigns," the manager
    explained. "No, it's not. As long as you're against rape and murder,"
    I said, and he agreed with an ironic laugh.

    When I bought the postcards, I explained my plan to the clerk who said,
    "Darfur? That's familiar. What's that?" That communication was the
    first positive result of my morning's work: one more person reminded
    of what is happening right now, today, to human beings.

    By the time my preparations were complete, I had only half an hour to
    sit that morning at Roche Brothers. I hung cardboard signs from the
    card table. "Write postcards here, now, about the genocide in Darfur,
    Sudan." It was hard for me to sit there, embarrassing. How much do
    I know about this? I can't tell others about Sudan unless I am a
    complete expert on the matter. What if someone asks me a question I
    can't answer?

    Socially, it was a study in balance, wanting to catch people's eyes and
    say hello but not wanting to put pressure on busy people. I know more
    than anyone how hard it is to see tables in front of the supermarket,
    want to stop, but have a soccer team waiting for oranges or be on a
    break from work.

    During my short stint, I had only about four visitors, but they meant
    a lot to me and I hoped they would relate the information to their
    friends at home. One man took a postcard and promised to use it. He
    said he knew genocide; his family had lost 129 members in the Armenian
    genocide in the early 20th century.

    Another man with a grey beard said he traveled to Sudan when he did
    the Peace Corps in Northern Africa many years ago. He wrote a card to a
    Sen. Edward Kennedy. Two women spent a long time reading the articles
    I had printed, and wrote postcards to lawmakers. One even asked me
    a question I couldn't answer. "What is the Clinton amendment within
    the Defense Authorization bill?" she asked, referring to one of the
    sample letters. Neither of us knew which Clinton wrote it and what
    it said. I simply told her I would check, at home. Not so shameful.

    One mother entered the store with her little girl. When they wheeled
    their food out a while later, the mother said she had her work cut out
    for her with all the daughter's questions. That was it for contact
    with the public during that one "pilot" half hour, outside of many
    curious stares from rushed shoppers and basket-toting employees.

    I had reached a few people and sent a little more conversation about
    this present-day horror out into the community. And when I return to
    my table, I will know about the Clinton amendment.

    Is it worth my time to sit in front of the supermarket? I believe,
    yes. A few letters and phone calls can mean faster action by
    our government and by the UN. Martin Luther King said, "He who
    passively accepts evil is as much involved in it as he who helps
    to perpetrate it." Every day we move up the end to this horror, we
    stop suffering. The large population of Sudan means that a little
    change affects many. If I can contribute to change that helps save
    one woman from rape, a man from torture, or a child from losing his
    home to fire or bombs, it is worth my time.

    Franny Osman is an Acton resident and member of Acton's No Place for
    Hate organization.
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