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    This Monday’s Community Gathering: “Decolonize our Minds, our Movement & our Food Supply”

    On Monday, February 27th from 6pm – 9pm, at Christ Church in Cambridge (map), members of the Decolonize to Liberate Working Group will host an Occupy Boston Community Gathering.  The Working Group invites the rest of Occupy Boston and members of the public to join in an ongoing discussion of how the goals and roots of the Occupy movement are related to the history of ongoing indigenous resistance to colonialism and corporate exploitation.  Please join us to learn what it means to “Decolonize Occupy” and how we can better create a global movement that works for everyone.

    “Unless we each decolonize our minds, and together decolonize this movement, unless we dismantle the deeply-ingrained systems of oppression that we inherited with colonialism, we risk merely creating a new version of an unjust society,” said Martin Dagoberto, a member of the working group.  The Decolonize to Liberate Working Group has been hosting weekly discussion meetings since it formed and introduced one of the first proposals passed by the Occupy Boston General Assembly, the “Statement of Solidarity with Indigenous Peoples.”

    Working group member Laurie Leyshon emphasized that the Community Gathering will not only provide a movement-building experience, but also present “a renewed call to action for the benefit of all people and all Life.”  The gathering coincides with “#F27 Occupy the Food Supply and attendees will also have an opportunity to join in on this international day of action.  Added Leyshon, “The privatization, control and manipulation of our food supply is the ultimate form of conquest.  What Monsanto and the like are doing is a continuation of a long history of colonialism – the commodification of life.

    To learn more about the meaning of “decolonization,” people are encouraged to listen to a recent radio broadcast produced by Decolonize to Liberate working group member Ukumbwa Sauti:  “Ancestral Continuum – Decolonization.  The working group has also assembled a collection of articles and materials at decolonizeboston.org.

    If you are a dedicated catalyst at Occupy Boston, a supporter, or just curious or completely new to the movement, we invite you to please join us for a unique community learning experience.  This will be a great opportunity to connect, share food, words, and build.  If you would like to take advantage of free child care during the event, please email decolonizeboston@gmail.com.

    Occupy Boston’s Community Gatherings are held every Monday evening and are free and open to the public. The Gatherings are designed to build and strengthen the Occupy Boston community through ongoing dialogues, presentations, workshops, and facilitated conversations, in order to build a resilient, widespread and inclusive social movement.

    This Saturday: Occupy Against Service Cuts/Fare Increases!

    On Saturday, February 25,  at noon, members of Occupy Boston will rally and march from Copley Square against the MBTA’s proposed fare hikes, service cuts, and layoffs.For years, the Commonwealth of Massachusetts has failed to fund public transportation adequately, and forced the MBTA to borrow exorbitant sums.   Now the MBTA is trying to balance its books on the backs of those who can afford it the least.  Drastic fare hikes, service cuts, and layoffs will devastate students, seniors, low-income communities, and everyone who must rely on the T.  The MBTA’s proposals will also force between 55,000 and 92,000 more cars on the road each day, creating traffic nightmares, and 50,000 tons of additional carbon dioxide emissions.It’s time to show the general public that we, the 99%, will not accept these proposals and that we demand to find a more sensible way of addressing the MBTA’s financial situation. Join us on Saturday at noon!

    For more information, please visit http://www.facebook.com/events/155333684580789/

    Occupy Film Today: 3000 Years to Life

    Join us today at the Community Church in Copley Square for another exciting Film:

    This Friday: Occupy Lent at Bank of America!

    Members of Occupy Boston and the Protest Chaplains will gather at the First National Bank Building (home to Bank of America) in Boston’s Financial District every Friday of Lent to pray for forgiveness from our society’s economic sins and our complicity with them. The gatherings will start this Friday, February 24 at 8 AM and continue every Friday until Easter.

    “Come join us as we repent from the sins of greed, corruption, and apathy,” said Occupy Boston member Joshua Eaton. “Come join us as we wait for the world where every chain is loosed and every yoke is broken. Come join us as we Occupy Lent.”

    The group plans to recite prayers of repentance, sing hymns, and read passages from scripture that relate to economic justice. Their event announcement quotes Isaiah 58, verse 6: “Is not this the kind of fasting I have chosen: to loose the chains of injustice and untie the cords of the yoke, to set the oppressed free and break every yoke?”

    WHO: Members of Occupy Boston and the Protest Chaplains

    WHAT:  A gathering each Friday in Lent—the season of repentance—to publicly ask forgiveness for our society’s economic sins and for our complicity with them

    WHEN: Friday, February 24 at 8:00 AM and every Friday in Lent (through April 6)

    WHERE: First National Bank Building at 100 Federal Street in Boston’s Financial District. Once the Federal Street Church, it was an incubator for liberal religion and the site where Massachusetts ratified the US Constitution. Now, as home to Bank of America,  it stands as a temple to unfettered financial capital.

    For more information, please visit:  http://www.facebook.com/events/324346397617221/.

     

    First Mass Occupy General Assembly held at UMass Boston

    The crowd inside the Ballroom /Photo by Matthew J Shochat

    On February 18, 2012, at 1pm, several Occupy members from Boston, UMass Boston, Quincy, Jamaica Plain, Newton, Salem, Somerville, Cape Cod, Brookline, and many more attended the first ever Mass Occupy General Assembly, which was held at the Ballroom on the 3rd floor inside the Campus Center. Members of Veterans For Peace, Mass Alliance, Move To Amend, and two Independent candidates running for office, who are Peter White for US Congress, and Bill Cimbrelo for US Senate, were also in attendance.

    The Lucy Parsons Center, a radical bookstore which was founded in 1969 in a small one-room basement shop in Central Square, and recently have relocated to Jamaica Plain in November 2011, was also at hand for any of the guests to take a look.

    The first part of the assembly was introductions by all those in attendance. After this, the assembly spent 45 minutes on report backs and discussing ideas regarding the MBTA fare hikes, such as its affects on Walpole, the elderly, and the disabled. Announcements were also made for upcoming MBTA events.

    The Lucy Parsons Center /Photo by Matthew J Shochat

    Immediately after, the assembly took a 15 minute break, before reconvening to discuss other campaigns, including Citizens United, Creative Actions, flyers, and SOPA/PIPA for another 45 minutes. The next item on the agenda was to break up into groups on particular actions, such as May Day, Citizens United, and MBTA for about 20 minutes, where the assembly then had to relocate to the Occupy UMass Boston site downstairs. By 5:15pm, most of the crowd had disbanded.

    The next Mass Occupy General Assembly will take place on Saturday, March 24th. More information is to be announced.

    Contact us

    Occupy Boston Media <Media@occupyboston.org> • <Info@occupyboston.org> • @Occupy_Boston