San
Francisco Activists Liberate Park in Solidarity with Turkish
Resistance
2
June, 2013
On
June 1st, in solidarity with the
massive
resistance in Turkey
which began six days
ago, Liberate the Land activists in San Francisco marched to a park
space known as “Hayes Valley Farm” and began an occupation. The
piece of land is scheduled to be turned into condominiums, a
development project which the protestors plan to stop. Not only are
they physically holding the space with their bodies and multiple
treesits, the group is also planting a “Free Farm” for the
community, sharing regular meals, and holding community-building and
permaculture workshops.
Participants
have renamed the space “Gezi Gardens” in solidarity with the
current rebellion in Turkey, which began with the
occupation of Gezi park
in Istanbul. Protesters in Istanbul began occupying Gezi park when
developers started ripping up the trees to make way for a shopping
mall. The insane police response sparked an uprising that has swept
the country. There have been other solidarity demonstrations all over
the world, including the reoccupation
of Zuccotti park
in New York City, the original home of Occupy Wall Street.
Liberate
the Land plans to occupy indefinitely, and has released a statement
asking others to join them:
Liberate
the Land invites everyone to join this network in the days following
today’s liberation, to plant food, create and promote permaculture,
host and attend workshops, teach and take classes, play and enjoy
music, build, gather, experiment, play, learn, and be together.
A vibrant community of plants and people are living on this land as
of this first of June rather than the first layers of concrete
foundation for condominiums. We invite our neighbors in Hayes
Valley to join us in open dialogue to further decide what Gezi
Gardens will become.
Liberate
the Land is bringing into dialogue the concept of common space, a
classification of space that goes outside of the dichotomy of private
and public and instead places itself as the commons. The commons
exist as the spaces owned and operated neither by governments and
states, nor corporations and private individuals. Instead, the
commons are owned, or stewarded, by all people, with an understanding
that the gifts of the earth are for all to enjoy and that people need
land bases for growing food, harvesting medicinal plans, maintaining
healthy forests for building materials and firewood, wildcrafting
plants for fabrics, and hosting wildlife habitat.
Read
the rest of the statement
here,
and follow @LiberateLand on twitter for more updates
on
Gezi Gardens
Protest
in Solidarity with Istanbul Gezi Park - Proclamation - Zuccotti Park,
New York City
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