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bigtree

(85,996 posts)
Wed Jan 27, 2016, 11:57 AM Jan 2016

I was just a naive and idealistic teen when I first saw Connie protesting war out in front of the WH

...she was waking up protestors who, at that time, had their protest signs arranged as a lean-to shelter against the White House gates - offering them coffee and food that she had brought. I was in awe of this incredible lady then; in awe of her throughout every WH protest that I bothered to go down and attend; and very proud to see her still standing there in 2013.

Thanks, Connie, for all you've done for us in the name of peace.



(Kevin Clark)


WaPo from 2103:

Connie Picciotto has kept vigil near the White House for 32 years. Why, and at what cost?

____ The historic vigil began officially on June 3, 1981, when Connie joined William Thomas, a protester who had positioned himself outside the White House gates with a hand-lettered sign: “Wanted — Wisdom and Honesty.”

Connie, a former embassy secretary in New York who was working as a part-time nanny for a local family, had come to Washington to plead for the government’s help with a family crisis. Thomas (he was known to everyone by his last name) was a self-described philosopher, a wanderer who had dropped out of high school, pilgrimaged overseas and held odd jobs in New York and New Jersey before winding up in Washington . . .

She sat down beside him. Within hours, they were arrested for illegally camping in Lafayette Square. When they were released, Thomas told her, “Since we are both seeking peace and justice, we should become a team.” So they did.






Connie had read about nuclear issues and had been horrified by photographs of the aftermath of the Hiroshima and Nagasaki bombings. She adopted Thomas’s message as her own: They were pro-peace, anti-nuclear proliferation and anti-government deception. They dedicated their lives to their cause, which mostly meant that they would sit across the street from one of the most powerful buildings in the free world and talk to the visitors who came by, hand out literature and display their signs. They would do this night and day, in freezing cold and scorching heat, through rains that soaked their clothes and winds that scattered their pamphlets across the pavement. They had only their flimsy umbrella-shelter for protection; actual tents had been banned in the park___

Connie and Thomas believed that changing even a handful of minds through their signs, their words was enough. Their endurance alone would be a powerful testament, an ever-pre­sent symbol of the need for change . . .


read more: http://www.washingtonpost.com/sf/feature/wp/2013/05/02/connie-picciotto-has-kept-vigil-near-the-white-house-for-32-years-why-and-at-what-cost/?tid=ts_carousel


Connie stands near one of her signs. (Bill O’Leary)


Connie Picciotto died Monday...rest in Peace, Connie.

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I was just a naive and idealistic teen when I first saw Connie protesting war out in front of the WH (Original Post) bigtree Jan 2016 OP
Rest in peace Connie. The need for change . . . will be met Autumn Jan 2016 #1
K & R n/t TubbersUK Jan 2016 #2
I remember her well from the actions I attended in DC mattvermont Jan 2016 #3
41 years ago bigtree Jan 2016 #4
heroic. what a great soul. Came to Earth to do peace. RIP, great lady roguevalley Jan 2016 #12
RIP n2doc Jan 2016 #5
........ daleanime Jan 2016 #6
Bless you Connie Highway61 Jan 2016 #7
requiescat in pace, brave soul. you are such an inspiration. niyad Jan 2016 #8
Such beautiful courage kenfrequed Jan 2016 #9
... malthaussen Jan 2016 #10
Connie... Dont call me Shirley Jan 2016 #11
Blessed are the peacemakers avaistheone1 Jan 2016 #13

mattvermont

(646 posts)
3. I remember her well from the actions I attended in DC
Wed Jan 27, 2016, 12:11 PM
Jan 2016

My first was MLK Jobs, Peace, and Freedom. 20th Anniversary of the Original.
I was 17. Saw her on later visits, as well.

bigtree

(85,996 posts)
4. 41 years ago
Wed Jan 27, 2016, 12:25 PM
Jan 2016

...Connie's striking image resonated with me, and remains the most enduring symbol of anti-war protest I've experienced.

Protesting war in D.C....is there anything more sublime and defining of our humanity?

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