Standing up for humanity: protesters call for freedom It was just another Wednes day morning. My alarm clock went off at 8 a.m., I got out of bed, showered and sat down to breakfast. The last thing on my mind was that by nightfall I would be in jail. If someone had predicted that I would be ar rested while making a political statement tin South Africa ouside of the Eugene Federal Building, I would have thought they were crazy. But I did get ar rested and together with 86 other anti-apartheid protesters, 1 spent Wednesday night and all day Thursday in the Lane Coun ty Jail,. Certainly, I was aware that an anti-apartheid rally had been planned for Wednesday after noon at the University, J was . one of the scheduled speakers who, along with several others, made a strong statement against apartheid and United States economic cooperation with South Africa-. What happened after the rally, however, was not in anyone’s plan of events. The big question is, why did several hundred people (mostly students) march downtown to the Federal Building, occupy it and stage a sit-in while chan ting “Free South Africa’’ and “Divest Now." The answer lies in the fact that public tolerance for our government's support of South Africa, and a growing anger over the violent apartheid system has reached an all time high. On the same day that we were arrested in Eugene, 63 were arrested at Cornell Univer sity. 58 at the University of Iowa. 112 at the University of California in Berkeley, and 27 at the University of Massachusetts in Amherst. This is just a small sampling of the thousands of people who have been arrested during recent anti-apartheid protests at universities around the country. Martin Luther King Jr. once < remarked that there comes a i time when the human spirit I cries, ‘‘I can stand injustice no ] longer!” After seeing police t violence against blacks in South | Africa on television, after i reading about it in newspapers, t after learning about it at Univer- < sity events (films, lectures, s etc.), students are no longer re- i maining quiet on the apartheid. j issue. I 1 was startled at how many i people showed up for the rally in the EMU courtyard and I was { surprised when nearly 500 of ( those people took to the streets f in a protest march to the Federal { Building, calling on the state t and the nation to cut economic t ties with South Africa. The pro- i testers included members Of i fraternities and sororities, law I students, business majors, ar- I tists and activists. They -/ represented a group of people c i Impressions * by Costas Christ I a who joined together in a cause s that transcends political v ideologies. That cause is the F oneness of humanity and the re jection of a legal system of * white racial supremacy — £ apartheid. By the time everyone arrived c at the Federal Building, emo- v lions were running high. In a s spontaneous action, the mar- 1 chers entered the building and f1 sat on the floor of the lobby, F chanting “Free South Africa” F and clapping hands. I went to * the building's security person nel and told them that the group F planned to stage a sit-in that would probably last about two hours. But as people sang and F :hanted in support of divest nent and South African reedom, a tremendous sense of >urpose developed. It was then hat I realized that the protest lad transformed itself from a ally on campus into a conscien ious act of non-violent civil lisobedience. People wanted to end a firm anti-apartheid nessage that would reverberate iround the country. By 8 p.m., he police arrived in riot gear nd the arrests began. Although I had not planned in becoming a spokesperson luring the sit-in, I was so mov-. d by the the inner strength and ommitment of the protesters to ake a stand against apartheid hat I decided to speak out with riy own feelings. I was not there n an official capacity as the Imerald’s editorial page editor, was there as a human being, is the protesters were carried ut one by one to waiting police ans amid tears and applause, I nade a public statement to the aedia on why people had risk d arrest to support the nation wide anti-apartheid movement, t was then that I too was rrested. I am not happy with having pent nearly 24 hours in jail, with being fingerprinted and hotographed by the police. But do not regret having par icipated in the protest at all. I onsider it an honor to have een in the company of so many ourageous young men and women who made a personal acrifice in the name of justice a South Africa. 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