http://www.nytimes.com/2005/09/19/politics/19sheehan.html
September
19, 2005
Mother Who Lost Son in Iraq Continues Fight Against War By
MARC SANTORA
Cindy Sheehan, the mother of an American soldier killed in
Iraq, last night brought her campaign to end the war to New
York, where she accused Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton of
not doing enough to challenge the Bush administration's Iraq
policies.
Speaking in front of more than 500 supporters in Fort Greene,
Brooklyn, Ms. Sheehan, speaking of Senator Clinton, said,
"She knows that the war is a lie but she is waiting for
the right time to say it."
Then, as the crowd cheered, she issued a challenge to Senator
Clinton, saying, "You say it or you are losing your job."
A spokesman for Senator Clinton, while not commenting about
Ms. Sheehan's remarks, said that the senator, while voting
to give President Bush the authority to go to war, has been
very critical of the way he has chosen to use that authority.
The main focus of Ms. Sheehan's anger, however, continued
to be the Bush administration. She camped outside President
Bush's vacation home in Crawford, Tex., for many days last
month, a move that earned her widespread attention .
Since leaving Texas, Ms. Sheehan, of Vacaville, Calif., has
been traveling around the country, rallying people against
the war. Her entourage includes other parents who lost their
children in the war, families of soldiers overseas, and veterans
who have returned from Iraq.
The tour culminates with what organizers hope will be a huge
protest in Washington Sept. 24 to 26.
Many in the crowd at the Lafayette Avenue Presbyterian Church
last night were eager to get a peek at the woman whom they
had seen on television.
"I was just passing by," said John Ullman, 37. "This
is going to be a chance for me to get my first impression
of her," he added, noting that he agrees with her goal
of ending the war.
Mr. Ullman and the others who came to the church had to wait
for more than an hour to hear Ms. Sheehan, as her party got
lost on the streets of New York.
When they finally arrived, Ms. Sheehan, whose son Casey, 24,
was killed last year, was treated like a rock star, as children
and adults crowded around her, clamoring to shake her hand
or get an autograph.
The church was an appropriate setting for a protest, said
the Rev. David W. Dyson, who helped organize the event. Built
in 1857, the church was created as part of the abolitionist
movement, and tunnels below were twice used to shelter runaway
slaves as part of the Underground Railroad.
Mr. Dyson said many people showed up because they respect
Ms. Sheehan's willingness to speak out for what she believes.
"I was opposed to the war in the beginning," Mr.
Dyson said. "I am even more opposed to it now."
Ms. Sheehan, however, was not the only person speaking to
a crowd about the war in Iraq yesterday.
Gary Qualls, an Army veteran whose son also died in Iraq,
spoke in Bryant Park in Manhattan as part of a gathering sponsored
by Families United for Our Troops and Their Mission, which
supports the Bush administration's goals.
Elsewhere,
the Times Square Choir gathered for a special service called
"Salute to the Troops" on the deck of the U.S.S.
Intrepid, which is permanently docked on the Hudson River.
Ms. Sheehan has more events scheduled in the city, including
a news conference with the Rev. Al Sharpton and other New
York leaders this morning and a rally later in Union Square.
She is to end her trip to New York with another speech at
Riverside Church.
She also faulted the media for not scrutinizing the White
House.
"It is not patriotism when you say, 'My country right
or wrong,'" she said. "Because our country is very
wrong now."