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Ithaca mothers/First Report from Crawford
8:50pm Sunday We have arrived in Texas. After our plane arrived in Austin, we rented a car and began driving to Waco, where our hotel is located. The area is rural but with strip malls interspersed among the cow pastures. We pulled into practically the first restaurant we saw and had an excellent Salvadoran meal of rice beans, yucca, pupusas and guacamole. It is hot but with a strong breeze. Everything is very green because there have been lots of thunderstorms here recently. During most of our drive from Austin to Waco there was a brilliant rainbow that appeared to touch down in the field along the highway 12:28 am Monday We drove along Texas Hwy 6 and 185 from Waco to Crawford just as it was getting dark. We drove into Crawford, a tiny crossroads town, and began to look for signs of the peace gathering. Right near the main intersection we discovered a small house with many cars in front, signs, people and a glow with lights and a party type tent set up. It had a beautiful garden with mulched walkways for people to walk through and meditate on peace. We parked and went into the small house. People were set up in every corner working on computers, there were large poster boards with volunteer sign up and logistical information around the walls. There were also many pictures of young men and women with names below. They were service people killed in Iraq. Many people were walking around wearing t-shirts bearing photos of their son or daughter, brother or sister killed in Iraq. Many people seemed extremely exhausted and we heard how their had been thousands of people there all weekend with constant shuttles running from the house to Camp Casey. We heard how just two weeks before, Peace House had been at the point of having their phone shut off because of lack of funds. After a few minutes we were directed by Brigid to a minivan which would take us to the vigil site, near Bush’s ranch. The minivan was driven by Brigid’s mother, Donna. At the crossroads are two enormous fake granite plaques bearing the ten commandments. I was struck by seeing “THOU SHALT NOT KILL” in huge letters just a few miles from George Bush’s ranch. Donna told us how there had been thousands and thousands of people here over the weekend. As we pulled up we saw the roadway was lined as far as we could see with crosses remembering soldiers killed in Iraq. Donna told us that the landowners on both sides had prohibited anyone to step foot on their property. This means that people must hang signs, vigil and camp on the narrow public easement. We saw one family with two babies, one asleep in a porta crib, camped along the road side. It was a pleasant night with a strong, cooling breeze. There were probably about forty people camped along the road. There was a large tent set up with food, water and other supplies. People sat in lawn chairs talking or playing banjos and guitars. There were signs with each family’s camp reading things like: “George: Meet with Cindy,” Support our Troops, End the Occupation of Iraq”, “If you are not outraged you’re not paying attention”, “What is the Noble Cause?” When we got back in the shuttle that would take us back to the peace house, we met Mary. Mary and her husband have owned an Italian restaurant in Waco for over 30 years and their families have been in the area for hundreds of years. They had heard that Cindy was a vegetarian and brought her their special whole wheat crust vegetarian pizza. It turns out that Mary has a son in law in Iraq and her son is in basic training for the Marine Corps. Now I understood better why Mary was so overwhelmed by the site of the crosses along the road.
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