Brother of fallen Marine for whom ‘Camp Alex’ was named commits suicide
Brian Luis Arredondo, 24, took his own life in Norwood on Dec. 19, according to a statement from his father Carlos and stepmother Melida. Brian and brother Alexander grew up in JP. Alexander was memorialized this year in the post office renaming, and also in a “Camp Alex” anti-war display that appeared at Occupy Boston and currently in an Occupy JP display at Monument Square’s First Church in Jamaica Plain Unitarian Universalist. Alexander’s name is also memorialized in an honorary street sign at the intersection of South and St. Rose streets.
According to the family statement, Brian Arrendondo “never was able to recover from his deep sadness over the death of his brother Alex, a condition called complicated grief.”
http://tinyurl.com/7mz8arc
Manger Square meets Dewey Square: Occupy protesters mark Christmas
Around 20 members of Occupy Boston returned to Dewey Square Park for a holiday-themed protest today, the first day the park reopened to the public following the eviction of protesters by police Dec. 10.
Arriving at noon, protesters and protest chaplains – a group of clergy and lay people who have brought a spiritual framework to the Occupy movement – donned biblical garb and held up signs with messages such as “There is still no room at the inn” and “Peace on Earth, goodwill to the 99%.”
http://tinyurl.com/85gpumu
It’s time to occupy, my friends
At the Occupy Boston encampment at Dewey Square in the city’s financial district, Shane Aspinall, a 25-year-old African-American, says he has been living there because “it’s time black people take back the initiative to reclaim their history and rewrite it together with our present and hopefully better futures.”
Aspinall, who believes that the historical economic and social discrimination against African-American communities in the US must change, says: “At the moment, this [occupation] is the only alternative we have. The Republicans and the Democrats don’t represent us . . . [President Barack] Obama will always have that history of being the first black president of the US but you’ve seen his record.
“I recognise there are structural problems in Washington with political lobby groups and the influence of business and his hands are tied. But, if not him, who? Us, that’s who.” Aspinall says the Occupy Wall Street outreach programmes to Boston’s ghettos are vital to reinvigorate civic interest in social self-help.
http://tinyurl.com/736xjhk
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