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Title: We Shut âem Down Author: Joel Olson Date: 1995 Language: en Topics: Love and Rage Revolutionary Anarchist Federation, anti-fascism Source: 1995 Aug/Sep issue of L&R. Retrieved on 2016-06-13 from https://web.archive.org/web/20160613050331/http://loveandrage.org/?q=node/31
A neo-nazi skinhead concert scheduled to take place on May 20 in St.
Paul was cancelled after the combined efforts of Anti-Racist Action
(ARA), various independent activists, and community members of West St.
Paul forced the police to cancel the show.
Members of ARA were tipped off about the show in mid-March and began
organizing against it immediately. Because nazis know the public will
shut their shows down if they know about them, they have to keep the
address of the gig a secret until the day of the show.
They discreetly distributed fliers telling fellow white supremacists to
meet at Mounds Park in St. Paul between noon and 6:00 P.M. to pick up
tickets and a map to the hall where the gig would take place.
Anti-racist activists got a hold of the flier, obtained a permit to use
the park, and held an anti-racist picnic all day in order to occupy the
place where the gig organizers wanted to hand out their maps. When
carloads of nazis showed up from all over the Midwest, thinking they
would get a map and tickets to their rally, they were met by a crowd of
100 anti-racists led by a âbaseball teamâ who quickly disinvited from
the park any nazis who showed up. Not one nazi got out of their car the
whole day. There were no fights, and despite hoards of cops, no arrests,
either.
But the fun had just begun. Three days before the gig, members of
Anti-Racist Action got a tip that the show was going to happen at Smith
Avenue Hall in West St. Paul. Members immediately met with the owner and
confirmed that the nazis had indeed booked the hall (they lied and told
the owner they were having a birthday party). We urged the owner to
cancel the gig. Although somewhat sympathetic, he refused to cancel the
show, citing legal and financial obligations.
So we hit the streets the next day. Members of ARA went to the community
surrounding the hall, fliering homes and cars and knocking on doors,
talking to anyone who was home. We let people know that a violent Nazi
skinhead gang was planning on having a concert to recruit youth into
their movement in their neighborhood. Naturally, the vast majority of
people were very upset. We asked them to call the club owner and their
city councilmen to ask them to cancel the show. Both numbers were
flooded with hundreds of calls the next day. It was also obvious that
many people wanted to take the streets and actively demonstrate against
the nazis, so we called for a demonstration on the night of the concert.
We arrived at the hall at 7:00 to find over 200 angry community members
already there. By the time 30 meek nazi skinheads entered the club to
set up their equipment, almost 400 activists and neighbors were jeering
them, yelling âno room for nazis in our neighborhood!â After a couple
hours, the mayor of St. Paul came (along with about 75 riot cops) and
told the police to shut the show down. The nazis were hustled into a
police paddy wagon and escaped through a back alley (but not before
neighborhood folks chased the wagon and threw rocks at it!).
But it wasnât the cops who shut the show down, it was the
demonstratorsâcommunity members, ARA, punks, anarchists, socialists,
anti-racist skinheads, youth, whites, people of color, queers, etc.âwho
shut the show down. The mayor realized heâd have to do something or else
heâd have one very angry constituency to face. People were already up in
arms that the police were escorting nazis into the club and keeping
community members away from it, and at the amount of money wasted to pay
for police overtime to protect a violent gang of white supremacists.
Although there were a few tensions between activists from Minneapolis
and community residents, overall we worked together well. Many people
thanked ARA for coming, saying that if it werenât for us they never
would have known about the concert and the threat to their community.
The show was organized by St. Paulâs own Bound for Glory, one of the
biggest nazi bands in the country. Also scheduled to play were two white
power bands from Wisconsin and one from Germany. Last month, Bound for
Glory played at a celebration for Adolph Hitlerâs birthday in Idaho,
where militia members, Klansmen, and nazi skinheads mingled. It is the
politics of bands like Bound for Glory that led to the Oklahoma City
bombing, and we were having none of that in our city.
Contrary to what some people think, nazi gigs are not simply expressions
of unpopular ideas and opinions that people are obligated to respect, if
not agree with. White supremacists use these gigs as a place to recruit
alienated white youth into their movement of racist violence and hatred.
This is a fact; white supremacists use the veil of free speech to
conceal it. But we arenât fooled. We believe it is the responsibility of
all those who care about peace and justice to exercise THEIR right to
speak out against nazi organizing, and to act to stop it when possible.
Apparently, the neighborhood agreed with us. All in all, the day was a
complete success. Many nazis from around the country couldnât get maps
to the show, and only the bands and their roadies managed to enter the
hall before the gig got cancelled. There was no violence and only two
minor arrests (both released that evening).
This was a total victory for anti-racist forces in the Twin Cities.
THEREâS NO ROOM FOR NAZIS IN ANY NEIGHBORHOOD! FIGHT RACISM!