| STONEWALK
USA 1999: SHERBORN, MA to ARLINGTON, VA
PRESS ARTICLES
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Activists' Memorial Stone Impounded
Associated Press
WASHINGTON - Volunteers lugging a 2,000-pound memorial to
civilian war victims have reached their destination - the
nation's capital - after a six-state odyssey. But today they
stopped short of their target - Arlington National Cemetery.
The group pulled the stone to the middle of
Memorial Bridge, which leads to the entrance to the graveyard.
Then, project director Lewis Randa announced that because
"this stone has no home'' he would allow District of
Columbia police to impound it until Congress adopts a resolution
allowing it into the cemetery.
"Were we to complete the journey today
and bring it to Arlington, the stone would be discarded, rejected
like the very message it embodies,'' Randa said.
About 150 people accompanied the rock from the
Lincoln Memorial to the bridge, although at times it was difficult
to distinguish between cheering tourists and "stonewalkers.''
The group behind the "Stonewalk'' left
more than a month ago from the Boston suburb of Sherborn with
a 6-foot-by-4-foot granite tombstone engraved with the words,
"Unknown Civilians Killed in Wars.'' About a half-dozen
people trekked the entire 450-plus miles, traveling on secondary
roads and highways beside motorcycles, cars and 18-wheelers.
The group picked up, and dropped, additional volunteers from
each community along the way.
"We wanted to be vulnerable,'' Randa said.
"We wanted to not have enough people so people would
help us."
Turnout was overwhelming in some regions, spotty
in others. But during moments when the group lacked enough
people to drive the stone - which rests on a 1,500-pound cart
- up hills, Randa said enough motorists have always pulled
over, jumped out and helped push.
"The most impressive thing on the
journey has been the spontaneous acts of generosity by people
who were driving by and realizing these people are struggling
to get this up the hill,'' Randa said. "And many of them
didn't know what we were doing.''
"The most impressive thing on the journey
has been the spontaneous acts of generosity by people who
were driving by and realizing these people are struggling
to get this up the hill,'' Randa said. "And many of them
didn't know what we were doing.''
The "stonewalkers'' arrived Thursday in
Washington, resting all afternoon on the west lawn of the
Capitol. At night, the group pulled the stone to the Lincoln
Memorial for a footwashing ceremony and an anniversary memorial
service for those who died when the atomic bomb was dropped
on Hiroshima, Japan, during World War II.
Ultimately, the stone should rest at Arlington
National Cemetery, preferably near the Tomb of the Unknowns,
Randa said, while acknowledging he has no permission to leave
it there.
"We were told if we left it there it would
be discarded and removed from the property and treated like
protest material,'' he said. "The people of Arlington
have been clear in explaining the requirements for a stone
to go into Arlington and we've been clear that we are coming
with the stone to formally present it to them.''
Arlington National Cemetery was established
as a shrine to those who served in the armed forces, said
Dov Schwartz, a spokesman for the Military District of Washington,
which runs the cemetery.
"The law says that monuments will be accepted
only if they honor those dying in the military service of
the United States,'' Schwartz said. "The only way a monument
or memorial can be put in Arlington National Cemetery is if
Congress passes a current or joint resolution.''
So far, no one has come forward to sponsor such
a proposal.
Rep. James McGovern, D-Mass., has encouraged
the group to get support from veterans organizations.
"We'll try to help them in any way we can
but in terms of actually getting into Arlington, there's a
process you have to go through,'' said McGovern spokesman
Michael Mershon.
Rep. Patrick Kennedy, D-R.I., was asked to introduce
legislation, but he didn't feel the group's request was feasible.
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