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I was able to attend a couple of events of the Tulane Maya Symposium. The highlight was the keynote address by Dr. Karl Taube, discussing interesting less well known aspects of iconography and tying them in to the same motifs in other parts of Mesoamerica and up to the US Southwest-- including nifty illustrations of ancestors arriving from creation on the flower road featherd serpent shown from formative murals in Guatemala to Pueblo art some 3,000 years later. Super fabulous for folks interested in such things.

Yesterday was moderately cold but clear as I drove downtown in the afternoon for Krewe du Vieux. On the way down Loyola Avenue I saw a small group gathered in front of City Hall. Today's paper explained it: A Catholic group was protesting Blasphemy in a Krewe du Vieux parade 2 years ago! To quote:

"The crowd recited the rosary and sang hymns "in reparation" for "blasphemies" they said were perpetrated by the krewe in the 2005 parade. While much of the reaction to the 2005 parade was delayed, based on viewing of images on a Krewe du Vieux Web site, many Catholics were angry about one participant's use of fake breasts next to the words "Our Lady of very Prompt Succor" [....] They also protested one float's use of the image of a lamb chop, with signs proclaiming "He Died for Ewe" "


My immediate reaction on reading this: Ha ha ha ha!

Usually we've only gotten Jimmy Swaggart fundamentalist protestants protesting Carnival. Welcome to such distinguished company. Actually I think such "blasphemies" are very traditional for Carnival: In Europe back in the day, they would crown a fool as "king" and recite a silly nonsence "mass", making fun of the two things that had to be held most sacred of all the rest of the year.

The Krewe gathered at the warehouse den down in Marigny a few hours before the parade, with kingcake, beer, and dancing to a nice band. I was with one of several groups doing Alice In Wonderland related stuff for the "Habitat For Insanity" theme. We were assigned to make Mad Hatter hats out of paper bags. Some artistic cosumers can do something impressive with such a start; as I didn't feel up to that I decided to make the cheapness work for the concept, and did little other than a quick spray paint and adding signs on either side reading "FEMA HAT /In this style/ 16 month wait". It seems to have gone over well, as throughout the march I was hearing spectators saying "Look, FEMA hat!" and "Ha ha! FEMA hat!".

This is the first time I marched without my glasses (post eye operations). I left my driving glasses in my car and just carried a small pair of reading glasses in my pocket (which I only needed to pull out briefly when signing in at the Den). A number of aquaintances seemed not to quite recognize me, getting that "I know I know you, but I can't quite place..." look. While I saw a number of folks I knew long the route, for the second year I saw no sign of the group of friends who said in advance they'd be catching the parade in front of Molly's. I flung handfulls of stuff into the crowd there anyway. Afterwards, post parade party at the Lowe's Palace.

Today Ms. Hollie & I are having our Super Bowl Avoidance celebration.
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The Anti-Violence March on Thursday went well.

Ms. Hollie and I took the Canal Streetcar to the main gathering point by the World Trade Mart, where a good crowd gathered. The group started marching a bit before the 11:30 time, back on Canal Street, up Tchopitoulas, then back on Poydras to Loyola, to City Hall. On Poydras I could see 2 blocks of crowd in front of us and at least 6 block fulls more of people behind us, a real big turnout.

Various "feeder" marches came from Mid City, Marigny, and Central City. I've heard estimates of the total being 3 to 5 thousand. (And this was on a week day.) A disappointment was how "white" the crowd was; it seemed about 95% in the Canal Street marching group. The Central City group was almost all "black"; they were the last to arrive at City Hall and got a loud reception of cheering and applause from those already there, but I think the group as a whole was still about 80% "white".

Lots of signs, the most common being the "Enough" and memorials for Hill and Shavers. There were many other signs for other crime victims. Lots criticizing Mayor Nagin and police chief Riley. A few individuals with contradictary messages here and there, eg "We need less guns" / "We need more guns" and "Support the Police" / "The Police are part of the Problem". However overall a very unified community feeling expressing the "We're mad as hell, and not going to take it any more" message. I was glad to see how many noted the importance of education. That's a point I've been stressing myself for over 20 years. We need to pay attention and proper resources to public education as if our lives and freedom depend on it , as they do.

Like some 2/3 to 3/4 of the crowd, we were across the street from the speakers on the grounds in front of City Hall. With distance and the CNN, NBC trucks between us, most of us couldn't hear more than occasional bits of the speeches.

On our way back in the Canal Streetcar, some folks who were up front said the speakers laid it on the line in no uncertain terms. Mayor Nagin and Police Chief Riley were there, but were not given a chance to speak-- they'd held a press confrerence the day before, and the organizers decided this was a chance for the rest of the community to speak for a change. Nagin and Riley looked very uncomfortable. Someone expressed the wish that Bush could get a similar public dressing down, to streetcar wide murmers of "Worst President Ever".

Times-Picayune article

New York Times article plus comments

Speech by local blogger b.rox Good stuff

My photos



Edit: additional good links

"Laissez la révolution rouler" on People Get Ready

Dangerblonde's account

Karen Gadbois speech on her "Squandered Heritage" blog

Maitree's Anti-Crime March & Rally Media Roundup; includes multimedia links to some of the speeches
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Coinciding with George W. Bush's visit to New Orleans today, a rally in favor of improved levees and coastal restoration for flood protection was held in the French Quarter this morning.

A few pix on the nola_photos community
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Friday evening was the premier showing of a film about the "Jazz Funeral for Democracy" protest event back in January (http://www.jazzfuneralfordemocracy.com seems to be down at present). Yep, I and a number of friends are in it. The film turned out pretty good, and was well recieved by the audience (of course a large number of whom were participants).

The "Constitution Brass Band" (consisting of the musicians other than the Treme Brass Band who showed up) turned turned out to sound pretty damn good.

It's out on DVD from Healing Waters Productions, with a short of Tuba Fats' funeral as a bonus. This will be #5 in my DVD colleciton.

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