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Puerto Vallarta News NetworkNews from Around the Americas | August 2006 

A Year After March Against Iraq War, Another Try
email this pageprint this pageemail usSheryl Gay Stolberg - NYTimes


Anti-war activist Cindy Sheehan (2nd R) marches with supporters to the ranch of U.S. President George W. Bush in Crawford, Texas August 6, 2006. Sheehan, whose military son Casey was killed in Iraq in 2004, recently purchased land near President Bush's ranch and has sought to meet with Bush since starting her peace vigil last year. (Reuters/Jason Reed)
Crawford, Texas - It is another scorching summer in Texas, and there are no movie theaters in Crawford. But Cindy Sheehan, the sequel, was playing outdoors Sunday afternoon, on the fortified outskirts of President Bush's ranch.

Ms. Sheehan, 49, a war protester from California whose son Casey died in Iraq, arrived Sunday morning, fresh from a trip to Amman, Jordan. It was the first anniversary of her much-publicized march down a winding country road to the Bush ranch where she demanded, unsuccessfully, to meet the president.

Last year, the White House sent two senior officials to greet the grieving mother - a tactical mistake, according to Republican strategists. So it was no surprise that the reprise, with scenes of rainbow-colored flags and ukulele-strumming marchers singing "This Land is Your Land," had a different ending.

"My name is Cindy, and Bush killed my child," Ms. Sheehan announced to stone-faced Secret Service agents standing behind massive orange barricades. She held up an identification card. "It doesn't have my new address," she said, "but I do live here now."

Indeed, she does. Ms. Sheehan, working through a surrogate, bought a five-acre plot on a barren stretch of road here. A mock cemetery with white crosses and an American flag is set up there on the dusty soil, amid tents posted by peace activists from around the country.

Last year, Ms. Sheehan threw the White House off guard and captivated the news media, becoming the face of opposition to the Iraq war just as public unease was beginning to mount. This year, it was Mr. Bush who threw Ms. Sheehan off guard, by truncating his customary one-month vacation here. That forced her to move up her arrival and to throw together the march on short notice.

Ms. Sheehan paid $52,000 for her Crawford property, and on Sunday before the march, she and members of the Crawford Peace House - a nonprofit group dedicated to offering "a culturally diverse environment for spiritual growth" - held a ceremony to bless the land. But the ceremony was interrupted, briefly, by a tourist from Arkansas, who shouted, "This is an anti-American service!"

The sentiment was just as harsh down the road at the local service station, where several military veterans held a counterprotest. "She's got a right to say what she thinks," said one, a Crawford real estate agent named Darrell DeHart, "no matter how stupid she is."

Ms. Sheehan showed no sign of retreat. She said she would register to vote here and would get a Texas driver's license.

"I'm a Texan, too," she said.
A Year Later, Sheehan Resumes War Protest Near Bush's Ranch
Angela K. Brown - Associated Press

A year after her first war protest in President Bush's adopted hometown attracted thousands and reinvigorated the nation's peace movement, Cindy Sheehan resumed her vigil Sunday.

Under the blazing Texas sun, Sheehan and more than 50 demonstrators again marched a mile and a half toward Bush's ranch, stopping at a roadblock. As Secret Service agents stood silently, Sheehan held up her California driver's license and said she wanted to meet with the president.

"It doesn't say my new address, but I do live here now," said Sheehan, who lives in Berkeley, Calif., and recently bought land in Crawford for war protests. "My name is Cindy and Bush killed my son."

The group then chanted, "This is what democracy looks like! This is what democracy sounds like!" and a few people sang "This Land Is Your Land" while standing near the roadblock before returning to the protest site.

White House spokesman Tony Snow has said that neither Bush nor his staff plan to meet with Sheehan.

"I would advise her to bring water, Gatorade or both," Snow said when asked about Sheehan during a press briefing Friday. "Honestly, when you're talking about the kind of issues that we're talking about, Cindy Sheehan hasn't risen to the level of staff meetings at this point."

Earlier Sunday, about 50 protesters attended an interfaith service Sunday on the 5 acres that Gold Star Families for Peace recently bought with insurance money Sheehan received after her oldest son, Casey, died in Iraq in 2004.

The vacant land, with a field and tree groves, is near downtown, about seven miles from the ranch. Sheehan, who plans to donate the land for a park after the war is over, said she plans to register to vote and get a driver's license in Texas.

As Sheehan spoke, saying "our hearts are connected," regardless of people's races, countries or religions, a man disrupted the service with loud questions and shouts of, "This is unpatriotic!" before the protesters asked him to leave.

William McGlothlin of Marked Tree, Ark., said he was visiting his son in College Station and decided to try to see Bush's ranch, then stopped by the protesters' site because he had heard about them and was angry.

"I believe Bush is doing what he should be doing," McGlothlin said. "Freedom of speech is good until it gets out of whack."

Several Bush supporters also set up a tent Sunday in downtown Crawford, which they have done every time Sheehan has returned.

Sheehan said she expected more war opponents to arrive throughout the month. Their protest initially was to start Aug. 16, after the Veterans for Peace convention in Seattle, but she moved it up last week after learning that Bush would be in Crawford for only 10 days at the beginning of August.

A year ago, Sheehan and a few dozen anti-war demonstrators arrived in Crawford from the Veterans for Peace convention in Dallas and marched toward Bush's ranch, demanding to talk to the president about the war.

Two of Bush's top aides met with Sheehan, but she said she wouldn't leave until Bush himself talked to her, so she set up camp in ditches off a road a couple of miles from the ranch.

As her 26-day vigil swelled to several thousand people on weekends - and as locals complained of the noise, traffic and odor from portable toilets - a sympathetic landowner allowed the group to use his 1-acre lot about a mile from the ranch.

Last fall, county commissioners banned roadside camping and parking.



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