Post
by Diya Behari » Wed Nov 16, 2011 8:31 pm
Diya wasn’t really a politically conscious person. She figured it was mostly about a bunch of old white guys yelling at other old white guys about stupid stuff. She couldn’t vote anyway, so why pay attention? She had the rest of her life to figure this stuff out.
But on Tuesday, when she glanced at the news headlines on her phone, they were dominated with news out of New York City and that “Occupy Wall Street” movement that she’d heard about a couple of times. Apparently the police had busted up the park they’d been staying at, jailing people and throwing away their stuff.
Some papers said it was the end of the movement, others said it was only going to make it stronger.
When she’d been studying the walls on Tuesday afternoon, carefully avoiding eye contact with all the kids waiting to sign up to throw their Wednesday night away chasing a bunch of “leads” that really should have been the responsibility of the adults, Diya found one of the Occupy Paragon posters that had been up for a few weeks at that point. She’d almost forgotten about them. Maybe it was time to check it out, just in case Paragon decided to pull a New York and uproot the protesters.
So after class, wearing her leather jacket and carrying an umbrella under her arm, Diya trekked to Atlas Park to find these protesters and see for herself what it was all about.
The plaza in front of city hall was littered with tents of every shape, size and color. With the constant drizzle, most people were huddled inside of the tents. Cardboard signs that had been pinned or taped to the outside were wilting and the ink was running, but most were still semi-intelligible. Slogans about being part of the 99% and funny internet memes given political slants were mixed together freely, like the protest was having an identity crisis.
The only protesters braving the drizzle were in an impromptu drum circle. Most of the drummers had nice, professional looking drums, albeit worn from years of use. A few were banging on upside down buckets though. She thought she recognized a few of the bucket-drummers - she and Roach had befriended some when they were breakdancing around the city over the summer.
Her hunch was confirmed when one of the drummers raised a hand and grinned broadly to her. “Hey kid! Come to join the 99 percent?”
Diya smiled back and walked over to join him in the circle. Raul was his name. He was older than her, in his 20s. She didn’t know his story, other than he was in Atlas Park every Saturday she and Roach had been. He hadn’t been too friendly at first, but had softened when he’d seen the kids dancing.
“I dunno,” she shouted over the beat of the drums. “Just looking, I guess.”
Raul nodded and went back to his drumming for a minute before he abruptly grabbed his drum and stood. “Walk with me,” he told Diya. Without waiting for a response, he strode away, expecting Diya to follow.
Raul led Diya to the steps of City Hall. Walking up a few of them elevated them enough to get a good view of the protesters encampment, and far enough away from the drum circle that they could hear each other speak.
Raul spoke first. “Just checking us out, huh? Like we’re another tourist trap?”
Diya frowned. “No, not like that. I saw what happened in New York on the news and wanted to see this before it happened here.”
“But do you have any idea what ‘this’ is?” Raul swept his arm out, gesturing at the full plaza. Diya shrugged. “Y’know, I didn’t like you when you and your pal showed up this summer.”
“I know. You weren’t very subtle.”
“Thought you two were a couple of spoiled rich kids slumming it. And girl, you kinda were. Your friend there, he knows what it means to get by on the streets, but you have no clue, do you?”
“Hey, that’s not fair -”
“And that is what this movement is about,” Raul said, cutting her off. “We’re guaranteed that all people are created equal, right? They teach you that at your fancy school still?” Diya nodded. “We ain’t equal anymore, girl. This isn’t just fancy slogans. This is truth. Banks and corporations have all the power and just keep taking and they’re killing us, slowly but surely.”
Diya wrinkled her nose. “That sounds a little melodramatic.”
“If you think it’s melodramatic, then you haven’t been paying attention, girl. Maybe I was wrong about you. Maybe there is no hope for you, and you’ll grow up to be one of the 1% just like your parents and all your friends at that prissy little school of yours.”
“Hey, my parents work hard for what they’ve got.”
Raul smiled slightly. “You got fire girl, I like that. Your parents are lucky that hard work paid off. But what about the rest of us? You think I wanna sit on a street corner banging on a bucket to make ends meet? Sure, it’s fun and I meet the most fabulous people, but it ain’t a living. I used to have a real job, a real apartment, a real boyfriend. And then I lost the job, the apartment, and the boyfriend. I’m too poor to buy myself a real drum. That’s why I’m here.”
Diya looked skeptically at the bucket. “And how is drumming going to change anything?”
“Well, maybe my one drum can’t do nothing, but it reminds people we’re here. We occupy to remind those in charge that their choices affect real people, and those choices have sent our lives down the drain, slowly but surely.”
A pair of police officers walking by caught Diya’s eye. They were scowling at Diya and Raul, but kept moving. “Have they been giving you guys trouble yet?”
“Well, they took our generators y’know,” Raul said. “It’s colder than a witch’s tit out here at night now.”
Diya thought for a moment. “Well, I can’t stay all night. School’s got a curfew, y’know. But here, sit closer.” Diya pulled off her jacket, shivering slightly as the cool air and damp mist cut through her shirt. Now it was Raul’s turn to look skeptical, but he moved closer, and his skepticism turned to surprise when he felt the heat radiating from Diya’s body.
“Damn girl! What happened to you?”
“Long story,” Diya said, absently pulling a bag of trail mix out of one of her jacket’s pockets. “Maybe I’ll tell you about it. But for now, I’ll trade some of the extra heat I’m generating to hear more about this protest stuff from you.”