Route B - Berkeley
__________________________________________________
Do You Yahoo!?
Tired of spam? Yahoo! Mail has the best spam protection around
http://mail.yahoo.com
To learn more about the Pastors for Peace caravans to Cuba please visit www.pastorsforpeace.org
__________________________________________________
Do You Yahoo!?
Tired of spam? Yahoo! Mail has the best spam protection around
http://mail.yahoo.com
Caravan to Cuba to Be Honored
From Ellen Berstein:



Deseret Morning News, Saturday, June 24, 2006
For those of us traveling along Route D with our bus,
Desafío (the challenge), our 10 days of travel have
been full of exciting events, encounters, and learning
experiences.
Desafío began its journey in Edmonton (Canada), then
traveled west through Calgary to Victoria and
Vancouver. Many of our first caravanistas joined up at
our exciting border-crossing rally on Sunday, June
18th near Blaine WA.
We continued our journey into the U.S., gathering aid,
financial donations, and support. This has taken us
through progressive communities in Seattle, Bremerton,
Olympia, Richland (WA), Boise (ID), Salt Lake City
(UT), Boulder (CO), and Denver. Our next stop is
tomorrow in the small town of Las Vegas (NM).
From city to city, the Caravan attracts media
attention. Most of our events are preceded by press
conferences attended by local newspapers, radio, and
TV news stations. Just in Boulder yesterday morning,
we
had a 10-minute spot on the local radio station KGNU,
with 3 caravanistas being interviewed about the
Caravan, reaching hundreds of listeners.
Everywhere Desafío has stopped, we have been met with
the greatest hospitality and generosity. Our diverse
group of supporters has shared their community
centers, churches, bookshops, independent media
centers, and homes with us. When we left Richland, one
caravanista even discovered a $500 check for Pastors
for Peace, hidden amid her things! Some come to events
even to give their last dollar to our project
It is
such generosity that helps us to discover that we have
an extended family across this country, united in our
love for and solidarity with Cuba.
Our bus being the beautiful red flag that it is, weve
also met dozens of people outside of our events, who
want to know more about what were doing.
Conversations with truck-drivers, students, former
U.S. soldiers, seniors, immigrants, and all varieties
of regular people, tell us that there is support
across the board in our effort to break the U.S.
blockade on Cuba.
Many also see the faces of 5 Cuban men painted on our
bus and ask us who they are. The more we tell people
about the case of the Cuban 5, the clearer it is that
the American public wants to learn the truth about the
injustice of their trial, arrest, and incarceration.
From across the Rocky Mountains, poor and working
people here say their message is clear: The U.S.
blockade on Cuba must be lifted! The Cuban 5 must be
freed!
To all fellow caravanistas, to all supporters, keep up
the good work! Well see you at the border!
HASTA LA VICTORIA SIEMPRE!
VENCEREMOS!
--Route D Caravnistas
Riding the Rockies to Break the Blockade!
A Route-D Report-back
June 28
For those of us traveling along Route D with our bus,
Desafio (âthe challengeâ), our 10 days of travel
have been full of exciting events, encounters, and
learning experiences.
Desafio began its journey in Edmonton (Canada), then
traveled west through Calgary to Victoria and
Vancouver. Many of our first caravanistas joined up at
our exciting border-crossing rally on Sunday, June
18th near Blaine WA.
We continued our journey into the U.S., gathering aid,
financial donations, and support. This has taken us
through progressive communities in Seattle, Bremerton,
Olympia, Richland (WA), Boise (ID), Salt Lake City
(UT), Boulder (CO), and Denver. Our next stop is today
in the small town of Las Vegas (NM).
From city to city, the Caravan attracts media
attention. Most of our events are preceded by press
conferences attended by local newspapers, radio, and
TV news stations. Just in Denver yesterday morning, we
had a 10-minute spot on the local radio station KGNU,
with 3 caravanistas being interviewed about the
Caravan, reaching hundreds of listeners.
Everywhere Desafio has stopped, we have been met with
the greatest hospitality and generosity. Our diverse
group of supporters has shared their community
centers, churches, bookshops, independent media
centers, and homes with us. When we left Richland, one
caravanista even discovered a $500 check for Pastors
for Peace, hidden amid her things! Some come to events
even to give their last dollar to our project⦠It is
such generosity that helps us to discover that we have
an extended family across this country, united in our
love for and solidarity with Cuba.
Our bus being the beautiful red flag that it is,
weâve also met dozens of people outside of our
events, who want to know more about what weâre
doing. Conversations with truck-drivers, students,
former U.S. soldiers, seniors, immigrants, and all
varieties of regular people, tell us that there is
support across the board in our effort to break the
U.S. blockade on Cuba.
Many also see the faces of 5 Cuban men painted on our
bus and ask us who they are. The more we tell people
about the case of the Cuban 5, the clearer it is that
the American public wants to learn the truth about the
injustice of their trial, arrest, and incarceration.
From across the Rocky Mountains, poor and working
people here say their message is clear: The U.S.
blockade on Cuba must be lifted! The Cuban 5 must be
freed!
To all fellow caravanistas, to all supporters, keep up
the good work! Weâll see you at the border!
HASTA LA VICTORIA SIEMPRE!
VENCEREMOS!
--Route D Caravanistas
__________________________________________________
Do You Yahoo!?
Tired of spam? Yahoo! Mail has the best spam protection around
http://mail.yahoo.com
The Cuba Caravan Event--There was a thunderstorm in Bloomington last
night-- during the Cuba caravan program---problems with holding outdoor
event---last year it worked so well--same place/same park---we had music,
food, information, rev Thomas Smith had the opportunity to speak-- a few
questions---good conversations--some newspaper interviews----for those who
did attend--informative and friendly and enjoyable--this
morning--Tuesday---photo of the pastors for peace Cuba caravan bus with its
driver--Kevin-- appeared in the Bloomington newspapers---one of the members
of the caravan has the newspaper photo--also a proclamation for the Cuba
caravan and pastors for peace from bloomington's mayor-- a copy of this was
given to the caravan
Tuesday morning---the members of the caravan had breakfast at the home of
one of Cubamistad's members--Ann Schepper and her husband Gary---Ann is a
nurse --has been very helpful in getting medical/hospital supplies for our
community's shipment--a very dedicated--strong worker---the bus was
re-organized---to accommodate more offering---then the Cuba caravan bus was
packed with our offering--the caravan felt we were pretty well
organized--they seemed to appreciate this--labeled and packed our offerings
well--we sent everything from wheelchairs, hospital supplies--to toys and
roller skates for children.
Our wishing them a safe and protected and blessed journey----thanking them
for being our messengers of good and peace--helping us connect with
Cuba--with our sister-city of Santa Clara---connecting with others as
neighbor and friend--and being there for one another
take care---best wishes with this effort
l'chayim ule shalom---to life with peace..for all
Arthur Stein
Cubamistad--Bloomington, Indiana
The Cuba Edmonton Solidarity Committee along with several Edmonton Churches
held the FIRST event of
the 17 Friendshipment Caravan, at the Stanley Milner Library on June 14,
2006 in Edmonton, Alberta.
The event was called 'Support the Caravan – Edmonton Style' as our
style from the remote
north is to support with funds. Refreshments were available though the
water and juices were over
looked and never made it out of the ice chest in all the excitement! We
did very well raising
donations, considering we had the competition of an Edmonton Stanley Cup
Final hockey game. The
Notre Dame des Bananes [an excellent choir that sings songs of
struggle] and Raging Grannies [the
well known gaggle of out spoken mature women who sing songs of social
protest] performed socially
responsible songs. The main feature talk was given by Dick Becker, Noted
Activist, and Caravanista
who arrived after long flight delays just as the event was to start. Dick
Becker gave a very
interesting talk centering on the reason we need to confront U.S.
imperialistic actions.
A small (45 persons) but enthusiastic crowd welcomed Rev. Lucius Walker and Pastors for Peace to Ottawa, the first stop in Canada for the 17th Caravan. The event--speeches, music, food, literature display and sales, was co-sponsored by Ottawa-Cuba Connections, Cafe Justicia and Punto De Encuentro. CTV was present, but we are still waiting confirmation that their interview with Rev. Walker made it to television.
June 22, 2006
Ashland, Oregon is a beautiful town, surrounded by
rolling hills and mountains. It is home to a
Shakespearean festival. No sooner did we stop the bus
downtown than a young couple came up to ask Woody what
the bus was all about. In Ashland, Woody really
demonstrated his skills as a driver. He had to back
down the windy mountain road after loading aid on with
Brad Jones at his mother Mary Ann Jones' place. Brad's
shed is jam packed with bicycles for Cuba. It is so
gratifying to see how supporters like Brad spend so
many hours on solidarity work. Travelling on the
Caravan really makes us appreciate this.
__________________________________________________
Do You Yahoo!?
Tired of spam? Yahoo! Mail has the best spam protection around
http://mail.yahoo.com
Hello all-
June 21, 2006
The Eugene, Oregon event on Route B is hosted, as it
has been for years, by the Committee in Solidarity
with the Central American People (CISCAP). We load on
aid at the CISCAP office which is housed in an old two
story house shared by social justice groups. Then we
head to the spacious First Presbyterian Church. Carol
Cross asks how many people have been to Cuba and half
of the 50 people in the audience raise their hands.
During the potluck and speech, many people visit the
sales table-- buying is brisk and they top up their
cheques with donations. (This becomes the norm has we
continue to head south). A young Cuban American woman
with a baby purchases a lot because she wants her
money to benefit the Cubans. Among them are relatives
who she has not seen for three years. She asks if the
blockade is easing so that she can visit her family.
Unfortunately, we cannot give her good news. A woman,
with her partner and two children, expresses
enthusiastic interest in going on the Caravan next
year. A Cuban who teaches Cuban literature at the
University of Oregon also is interested.
__________________________________________________
Do You Yahoo!?
Tired of spam? Yahoo! Mail has the best spam protection around
http://mail.yahoo.com
Jun 23, 2006
Ithaca artist will be joining Cuba-bound protest group
By Elizabeth Lawyer Special to The (Ithaca) Journal
A local artist is planning on traveling to Cuba in defiance of the U.S. trade sanction and travel ban with the country.
Dan Burgevin, a painter who has created several murals in the Ithaca area, will be traveling with Pastors for Peace in a caravan full of art supplies and other donations to take to Cuba. The caravan will travel to Texas and cram into buses with their supplies and cross the border into Mexico. From there they will fly to Cuba.
This will be the 17th Pastors for Peace Caravan since 1992. Over 500 people have traveled to Cuba with the program. The caravan, run by Lisa Valanti, head of the US/Cuba Sister City Association, will be stopping in Ithaca today. The Cuba Friendship Group of Greater Ithaca will host a dinner at the Unitarian Church in honor of the caravan. Friday has also been officially declared “Cuba Friendship Day” in Ithaca by Mayor Carolyn Peterson.
“If you want to change a policy, you must do the work, gather support and spread the word about it,” Valanti said. “That's what this is — doing the work.”
Valanti, who has been to Cuba with every caravan since the first one, said her ultimate goal is to bring transparency to the hypocrisy of the situation. U.S. policy does not reflect the sentiments of the American people, she said as she rolled into town on Thursday. Valanti said the caravan often goes through Ithaca and has always found it to be a supportive community.
Bergevin said he's been fascinated by the island nation ever since he heard Fidel Castro speak at the U.N. when he was a child. He decided to go with Pastors for Peace because it shares his goal to end the 40-year economic sanctions against Cuba.
This is his first trip to Cuba, and he plans on meeting with Cuban artists to “share ideas, taste the food and meet the people.” He will also give a lecture to a class at an art school. He said he wants to “de-mystify” the country that has held his imagination most of his life.
“It's an interesting, fine place. What's the big deal? Why shouldn't we go there?” he said.
Bergevin has painted murals at several places in Ithaca, including Collegetown Bagels on Aurora Street, the Museum of the Earth, P&C supermarket on Hancock Street and a new one at Pancho Villa Taqueria.
One of his dreams is to travel through South America with South American artists, painting murals. He said though other people his age are thinking about retiring and resting on their laurels, he feels the urge to keep going.
“I want to die on my way to the next mural,” he said jokingly. “Thunk! In the mud. ‘Oh, he's dead. Grab his pack.'”
He said his art focuses on things that are common to all humanity — what brings people together and what pulls them apart. “As a muralist, you have to make political statements,” said Burgevin, whose credentials include time on a Greenpeace boat.
The travel ban prohibits Cuban Americans from visiting their families more than once every three years. Currently, only a few American cities have permission to have flight connections to Cuba, and only people with permission from the U.S. government can take those flights, including journalists, academic researchers and Cuban Americans. Those who violate the ban and enter Cuba through another country, as the caravans do, run the risk of being fined. However, Burgevin says these threats are all smoke and no fire.
“We want to bring to light the issue of the unfair sanctions,” Bergevin said. “We should treat our neighbor like we would people in our neighborhood. Would you refuse to sell food to your neighbor?”
Roy Josef, a Cuban living in Ithaca, said he hopes the caravans will attract attention to the cause. His mother still lives in Havana.
Burgevin said he expects trouble at the U.S.-Mexico border, but the customs officials always let the caravan through with their goods. On one of the first caravans, U.S. officials seized a small school bus and refused to let it pass. Valanti and others in the caravan went on a hunger strike lasting 23 days, eventually garnering international attention and even receiving mail addressed to “the Little Yellow School Bus.”
www.Ithacatimes.com
We Must Find A Better Way
June 23, 2006
By Chris Outcalt coutcalt@seacoastonline.com
Blockade Busters Pick Up Cuba Aid
KITTERY, Maine - Cuba blockade bustin’. Humanitarian aid by any means necessary. Cuba is our neighbor.
Those are just a few of the phrases painted on a bus that was parked outside The Space in Kittery Sunday evening.
The bus belongs to Pastors for Peace and Interreligious Foundation for Community Organization. The bus is one of 14 collecting 100 tons of humanitarian aid for Cuba.
The 14 caravans will travel on separate routes and will make stops in 127 cities spanning all mainland states before converging in McAllen, Texas. The caravans will be put on a boat bound for Cuba.
The effort is part of the group’s initiative to challenge the government’s economic blockade of Cuba. The blockade has been in effect for more than four decades and prohibits economic, commercial and financial aid to the country.
“As people of faith and conscience, it is our duty to resist and condemn this cruel U.S. policy,” said Lucius Walker Jr., executive director and founder of IFCO. “We reject this licensing system as both immoral and illegal.”
IFCO Associate Director Ellen P. Bernstein gave a brief speech to about 20 people who gathered in support of the group Sunday.“We travel to Cuba to talk and to break down the blockade, but most of all, we’re just trying to take aid to Cuba,” Bernstein said.
The ecumenical initiative has delivered 2,450 tons of assistance to Cuba to date. The aid delivered by these campaigns ranges from wheelchairs and medical supplies to computers and bicycles.
“We really think this blockade is immoral,” Bernstein said. “We want to try and hold our government to a higher moral standard.”
Bernstein is one of more than 100 Pastors for Peace volunteers from the U.S., Canada and five European countries who will travel to Cuba next month.
For more information on IFCO or Pastors for Peace, call (212) 926-5757 or visit www.pastorsforpeace.org
June 20,2006
We've arrived in Ithaca, NY (on our way to Pittsburgh on Saturday, where we will pick up a bus, a mini-bus and many caravanistas).
So far so good, as we have met many supporters of Cuba and have picked up quite a lot of aid to be carried to McAllen, Texas and then over the border on its way to Cuba.
Today, we met a very interesting Cuban man named Roy. He joined us in an interview with a newspaper reporter here in Ithaca. Roy spoke about the first caravan that he observed while he was still living in Cuba. He told the reporter how much appreciation the people of Cuba have for Pastors for Peace and how useful the busses that have been donated to Cuba are for the people who are there.
We have many more miles to travel and many more people to meet. We look forward to all of the experiences that lay ahead for us on the road to McAllen.
Todd Ricker
The meeting last night was very good. I gave a short introduction to our work with the caravan in past years, and then introduced Reverend Smith. He spoke for about 20 minutes, and then fielded questions and comments for another 30 minutes or so. It developed into a good discussion at several points. His talk was very well received. We then made a financial appeal and collected $710.00 which was pretty good from a group of about 50 people. (This morning, we received an additional $100 bringing the total to $810.00)
We then introduced the Winnipeggers going across the border and Ramon gave a short talk about why he is so happy to be making the trip. In Cuba, he had worked for the Ecumenical Council for 6 years, and was involved in the receiving of the Caravan in those years. He told the audience how the Cuban people feel about the donations and the solidarity they represent. He mentioned how nice it is to see the ambulance in Cuba which we drove a few years ago with the sign on the side "Donated by the people of Manitoba".
Afterwards, people stayed for refreshments and discussion for another hour or so. Altogether, it was a very successful evening. We had some media coverage -- a TV news spot during the supper news on Tuesday, recorded during the day, so Reverend Smith wasn't here yet. Also a short article in the Winnipeg Free Press
I made an appeal last night to anyone who was a 'close personal friend' of the Manitoba Health Minister to talk to him about Manitoba donating some of the ambulances they are currently phasing out to Cuba for next year's Caravan. After the meeting, a woman approached me confirming that she is a cpf of the Minister and she would talk to him. So we are aiming big for next year to drive an ambulance or two down the whole way -- I will keep you posted of course.
Diane Zack - Manitoba Cuba Solidarity
June 19, 2006
There we were on Saturday 17th in a quiet side street in the South Bronx in New York - a few people painting one of the buses going to Cuba, and a few people finishing off loading New York aid into an almost full box truck. And then Bronx News 12 Cable TV turned up - responding to a phone call from one of our group - and they filmed, and filmed, and interviewed everybody - and suddenly that evening we were headline news in the Bronx!
About 100 participants representing Cuban solidarity organizations from western Canada and the US converged Sunday, June 18 at the Canadian/US Peace Arch border south of Vancouver. People came from Vancouver, Powell River, Saltspring Island, Pender Island and Victoria, British Columbia as well as supporters from Olympia, Seattle, Blaine and Bellingham, Washington. The representative of Pastors for Peace, Dick Becker, from San Francisco was winding up a speaking tour of several Canadian cities in preparation for the caravan. These groups came together to challenge, expose and break the US blockade against Cuba by bringing humanitarian aid across the border from Canada into the US.
The Pastors for Peace Caravan has started in Canada.
The 17th Pastors for Peace US-Cuba Friendshipment is starting
On the evening of Thursday June 15th the 17th US-Cuba Friendshipment will be officially launced at a rally in New York at 7pm in the auditorium of Union Local 1199, 330 West 43rd street between 8th and 9th Avenues.
The principal speaker will be the Rev Lucius Walker Jr, executive director of IFCO/Pastors for Peace. Also invited to speak is Ramsay Clark - former US attorney General under Carter and founder of the International Action Center. There will be short contributions about two other Travel Challenges - the Venceremos Brigade and the US-Cuba Labor Exchange - and about the case of the Cuban 5.
But if you are from Edmonton in Alberta you will know that the caravan will have started before the 15th June. Our first stop on our longest route is in Edmonton on wednesday June 14th. It is one of 13 Canadian cities participating in the caravan by hosting events or sending aid across the border into the US and on to Cuba.
Overall the 13 routes of our caravan will pass through over 110 US cities in virtually every mainland state during a two week period before we all unite - over 100 people - at the US-Mexico border at McAllen Texas on July 2nd
To find out where and when the caravan is coming to your state or province, consult the look up table on the front page of our website
AND WATCH THIS SPACE to follow the news as it breaks about what is happening on the routes
John Waller
Ten months after seizing 45 boxes of computers and supplies destined for disabled Cuban children, US Customs officials in Hidalgo TX are returning the aid to IFCO/Pastors for Peace, after the faith based group threatened a Federal lawsuit. More »
The 2006 17th Friendshipment Caravan to Cuba blog is now live - check back often to read the latest news from the caravan and from the road.