
Published on Tuesday, October 4, 2011 by YES! Magazine               
Presley Obasohan is fighting foreclosure on his home by Bank of  America. Mr. Obasohan lives in Dorchester, Mass.—the most diverse  neighborhood in Boston—where building values have sunk to half or less  of mortgage loan debt. Presley is trying to save his home for his  daughters. He has petitioned; he has pled. He has waited on hold and  stood in line. But on Friday, Presely decided enough was enough and he  joined the Right to the City Alliance in a mass action of civil disobedience.
 Along with 23 other Boston residents, he was proudly arrested for siting in at the Boston headquarters of Bank of America. 
 “I blocked the doors at Bank of America so that my neighbors, and me,  can stay in our homes,” Presely told the press. “So many people have  been thrown out of their homes or lost their jobs needlessly because of  mistakes made by Wall Street banks. Yet it’s the banks who are now  rewarded with billions in tax refunds. It's time to fight back!”
 Why Bank of America? 
 As of March 2011, Bank of America had more homes in foreclosure than  any other bank in Boston, with two-thirds of these in “majority  minority” neighborhoods. Sixty-one percent of Bank of America’s subprime  mortgages were concentrated in these same neighborhoods, revealing a  pattern of pushing bad loans on people of color and the poor. 
 On Friday, Bank of America announced that it would begin charging  customers $5 per month to use their debit cards. This comes after  receiving a $4.2 billion dollar tax refund and ramping up foreclosures  on distressed homeowners in recent weeks, according to new data from the  foreclosure listing firm RealtyTrac. August 2011 saw the largest  monthly increase in foreclosures since August 2007, right after the  housing bubble burst.  
  “Across the country, we are seeing the same story: the mortgage  bubble created by Wall Street pushed predatory lending on urban  communities, and since the bubble burst the fallout has been  catastrophic," said Rachel LaForest, executive director of the Right to  the City Alliance, which led the protests. Unemployment and foreclosure  have hit communities of color first and worst. But it is urban  communities who are at the forefront of the movement to fight back. We  are took this direct action to demand payback from Bank of America.”
 Building an Alliance
 This confrontation with B of A came at the end of a raucous march of  over 3,000 people carrying colorful banners and banging drums to  confront the nation’s largest lender over its role in the economic  crisis. The march was led by members of City Life/Vida Urbana,  who carried signs that told their stories of predatory lending and  foreclosure in Boston. As the rowdy procession snaked through downtown,  they were joined by members of UNITE/HERE picketing at the Hyatt Hotel, and CWA picketing at Verizon Wireless.
 When the march arrived at the Massachusetts headquarters of Bank of  America, the crowd chanted “The banks got bailed out, we got sold out”  and “Bank of America, Bad for America” as nervous bank employees peered  through the glass. The civil disobedience team managed to block the  entrances to the building, and to occupy the lobby of the bank itself.  As they were arrested one by one, they were led through rows of cheering  demonstrators shouting, “We stand with you!”
 The Right to the City Alliance is a national movement of urban  economic and racial justice organizations, deeply rooted in the  neighborhoods that have been hardest hit by the implosion of the  economy, and where centuries of economic and racial oppression compound  the crisis.  Right to the City built an impressive coalition of over 50  organizations including the SEIU-inspired umbrella MASSUNITING,  with progressive organized labor, the Green Justice Coalition, the  Youth Jobs Coalition, the Immigrant Rights movement, and a diverse array  of progressive groups.
 Take Back The Block, #Occupy the Hood
 On Saturday, Right to the City took their message into the  neighborhood. The Four Corners area of Dorchester has been ravaged by  foreclosures. Led by the community organizing powerhouse City Life/Vida  Urbana, the group staged an occupation of a wrongly foreclosed home,  hoping to return it from the hands of Deutsche Bank to its rightful  owners—a family that was evicted and has left the area. 
 The action team cleaned the home, brought in donated furniture, hung  art on the walls and a banner off the porch. Hundreds toured the house  and cheered from the street, while music played and children danced.  
 Meanwhile the youth of Roxbury’s Alternatives for Community & Environment  took over an abandoned lot and created a community garden. They asked  people to stand with them for a blessing ceremony of the garden, and  asked for food to grow strong and the land and community to heal and be  healthy. They told the story of their journey to the 2010 US Social  Forum, and how they had toured a community garden created by young  people in Detroit, and been inspired to create a similar project in  Boston. Right to the City supported their vision and tied it to a  movement building action about the banks and the political moment. It  was indeed a powerful occupation. 
 Movement Momentum: Harnessing The Psychic Break
 These bold actions in Boston unfolded in concert with the #OccupyWallStreet protests and the launch of #OccupyBoston,  an offshoot inspired by the now famous encampment in Zucotti Park in  lower Manhattan. The growing popular sentiment against Wall Street was  an inspiring backdrop for the action, and indicates a growing  frustration with the economic status quo by people from all walks of  life.
 But what was different about this action was that it was organized  and led by community-based organizations, led by people of color, and  rooted in communities of color. This leadership shaped the message, the  coalition building strategy, and the demands on Bank of America and  other corporate targets. The march was organized long before the  occupation of Wall Street or the hastily planned takeover of Dewey  Square next to the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston. The community  organizations that planned it are deeply rooted, with long experience  uniting people around similar issues. After this action, they'll  continue that work.
 So what is the role of community organizers and progressive leaders  in this moment of #occupy momentum? After the dramatic mass arrests on  the Brooklyn Bridge on Saturday, the #occupy meme is spreading like  wildfire and progressive forces are rapidly aligning around the  protests.  
 As #OccupyWallStreet enters its third week MoveOn.org, Van Jones and his new organization Rebuild the Dream, organized labor, and community organizations have vowed to march downtown in solidarity with the protests this Wednesday. 
 On Sunday night, the Greater Boston Labor Council  appeared at the General Assembly of #OccupyBoston. They pledged their  solidarity and invited the group to meet with them to discuss how to  build together. 
 At smartMeme, we  have always been interested in “Psychic Breaks:” moments when the  dominant narrative unravels and there is an opening for a new story to  take hold on a massive scale. We saw this opportunity come and go in  2008 when the stock market collapsed and $700 billion was given to  financial giants. Underprepared and shell-shocked progressives mostly  stayed home and kept quiet while the Tea Partiers harnessed common sense  opposition to bailing out the rich into a movement that was cynically  designed to support the status quo.  
 But we believe that #OccupyWallStreet is re-opening that window and  provoking another such psychic break moment, one that can amplify common  sense progressive demands for structural change. At least we hope so. 
 We have an opportunity to offer a narrative explaining what has  happened, how we got here, and how we can move forward together. We are  faced with the potential of rooting this insurrectional energy into a  strong social movement that can rival the Tea Party and change the story  about our economic system—a movement that could unite behind real  solutions to the economic and democratic crises we face. The actions by  Right to the City this past weekend in Boston offer us an instructive  model on the kind of analysis and organizing strategy that is necessary  now. 
   
 But we must be agile and graceful and bold enough—like the ballerina  on the bull of the #OccupyWallStreet poster. We must be visionary and  courageous and tenacious enough—like the youth of Roxbury blessing their  occupied garden. And we must be brave enough, like Presley Obasohan, to  put our bodies on the line and commit civil disobedience against the  banks and for the people and planet that we love. 
 If we can do this, and build in good faith together to harness this  moment and channel the momentum towards fundamental, structural change  in how our economy and political system function, we just might be  witnessing the stirrings of the new world that beats in our hearts. Let  us dance to that beat, sing to the beat and march together to the beat,  all the way down to Wall Street. #OccupyTogether!
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                                                         Doyle Canning wrote this op-ed for YES! Magazine,  a national, nonprofit media organization that fuses powerful ideas with  practical actions. Doyle is co-director of the narrative strategy  center smartMeme, and is co-author of Re: Imagining Change – How to Use Story-based Strategies to Win Campaigns, Build Movements, and Change the World. She lives in Boston.
    
 
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