Sept. 11 families, supporters
take their burden on the road
By Adam Gorlick, Associated
Press Writer | July 28, 2004
BOSTON -- They hit the road Wednesday with little
fanfare, and their burden was heavy -- 1,400 pounds to be
exact.
A dozen peace activists -- including several who lost relatives
on Sept. 11, 2001 -- set out from Boston on a 230-mile walk
to New York City, pushing and pulling a granite slab that
looks like an oversized tombstone.
The group is hauling its message of nonviolence
from the Democratic National Convention here to the Republicans'
presidential nominating event at the end of next month.
"Our suffering from pushing this stone is
nothing like the suffering of those who have lost loved ones
to violence and war," said David Potorti, 48, of Cary,
N.C., whose brother Jim was killed in the World Trade Center
attack.
Beginning at Copley Square, in the city's Back
Bay neighborhood, the group made its way along the flat course
of Beacon Street, arriving tired and sweaty a few hours later
at an Episcopal church in Brookline, about five miles distant
-- the end of the first leg of their journey.
The Boston-to-New York walk is sponsored by September
11th Families For Peaceful Tomorrows, a group formed soon
after the attacks by victims' relatives who were opposed to
America's invasion of Afghanistan.
"I thought that was a moment when the country
would get involved in promoting international peace,"
said Terry Rockefeller, a 54-year-old documentary filmmaker
from Arlington whose sister was at the top of the World Trade
Center when it collapsed. "Instead, we responded with
violence, which only brought more violence and suffering."
Members of the group have been to Afghanistan
and Iraq to meet with people whose relatives were killed in
the wars there. They came home and tried to share the stories
of the survivors with Americans, in hopes of convincing people
the country has taken the wrong route in dealing with terrorism.
"Our work is mostly changing hearts and
perspectives one person at a time," said Potorti, who
works full time for the group. "There aren't a lot of
us, but we try to make simple, symbolic gestures that will
resonate with people."
The group first walked from Washington to New
York -- without the stone -- in November 2001.
The monument itself, a massive chunk of granite
quarried from the grounds of the Peace Abbey in Sherborn,
is inscribed to "UNKNOWN CIVILIANS KILLED IN WAR."
When it's not being hauled along the highways
and byways, it lives at the Peace Abbey, a multi-faith retreat
center that includes a pacifist memorial and animal sanctuary.
Peace activists have lobbied the government to
give the stone, or one like it, a place in Arlington National
Cemetery. A similar stone with the same inscription was dragged
from Massachusetts to Washington in 1999, but cemetery officials
declined the offer. That stone is currently in the United
Kingdom.
Once they arrive at the Republican convention,
the activists are hoping to convince delegates to push the
Bush Administration to install the new stone at Arlington.
Some walkers will stay on for the entire trip,
while others will walk a few days and be replaced by others.
Nick Burlakoff, 57, of Ossining, N.Y., heard
about the walk and felt compelled to join for the full route.
"To spend a few weeks out of my life to
do something for peace isn't really a lot to ask," he
said.
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On the Net: http://www.stonewalk.org/
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