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EdgeLeft: Grace Notes

edgeleft
An occasional column
by David McReynolds.

As a preface for this short EdgeLeft column, folks in the NYC area should know that PEN is having a tribute to Grace this Tuesday (I assume at 7 but not sure) at Cooper Union. I can't make it because of a conflict - it is the monthly meeting of the New York Bromeliad Society. I certainly hope there will be another and broader Memorial for Grace. If you are in New York, I hope you can make it.

EdgeLeft: Grace Notes

Sun, 4 Nov 2007

by David McReynolds

Grace Paley died this August 22, at the age of 84, in her beloved Vermont, survived by her husband, Bob Nichols. Most of the world knows Grace for her writing, but to many of us in the peace movement she was at least as well known for being on the front line of actions.

This is a remembrance of Grace on two occasions, 1967, and 1971, small "grace notes" for a great woman.

In New York City, in 1967, War Resisters League had taken on the first day of a week-long series of actions aimed at closing the Whitehall Street Induction center. I found it amusing that the coalition of anti-war groups, which was not united on the concept of nonviolence, agreed to let the WRL take that first day for what was described as "traditional civil disobedience". (In theory I was in charge of organizing that event, though Maris Cakars did the major part of pulling the event together).

Maris and I were excited when we found Ben Spock had signed our list of people who would be there at 5 a.m. on December 5th. Neither of us wanted to call Spock to ask if he planned to join the civil disobedience or would be part of the larger "legal witness". Our fear was that Ben, who was known as a moderate sort of person, would withdraw entirely if he found out that arrests were planned. How groundless our fears - Ben led the way that day, and was among 264 folks arrested. It was, I believe, his first arrest.

Grace Paley was that rare "public intellectual" who both enriched the world by her writing and put herself on the front line, not once, but many times.

As we gathered in the darkness of pre-dawn I suggested to Grace Paley, whom I knew only as a key figure in the Greenwich Village Peace Center, that she and I take two groups of "non-celebrities" around to the rear of the Induction Center, and leave the front of the building for the celebrities. (Ah, it show how little I was keeping up with the field of literature, where Grace was already a celebrity).

Grace Paley, 1979
Grace Paley, 1979.

We took our groups to the back, out of sight of the press. My own group - which was just out of sight of Grace's group - was quickly picked up by the police, tossed a few feet through the air, and arrested. But Grace's group, I later found out, had been charged by cops on horses, and several were injured, including Dr. Conor Cruise O'Brien and his wife. Grace had at once marched up to the officer in charge, grabbed him by the collar, and, shaking him like a misbehaving puppy, demanded he call off his men. Which he did. read more »