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BU students organize to join Occupy Wall Street protests

Occupy Boston protests continue in downtown Boston Monday morning. Boston University students recently started their own Occupy Boston group. SCOTT DELISLE/DFP Staff

After College of Arts and Sciences junior Brandon Wood attended an Occupy Wall Street protest at Liberty Square in New York on Sept. 17, he wanted to draw in more Boston University students to the movement.

“People are really into this. People really want to get involved,” Wood, who also attended the Occupy Boston march at Dewey Square Friday, said in an interview.

Inspired by both protests, Wood decided to create a Facebook group titled “BU Occupies Boston” on Sunday. Within two hours of its creation, he said he saw the group gain more 200 members.

“If we really organize the correct way and have a message that reaches every student we can do a lot for BU, Boston and our generation as a whole,” Wood said.

BU Occupies Boston is working with Students Occupy Boston, which was formed by College of General Studies freshman Kaya Juda-Nelson. The group, also organized via Facebook on Sunday, met Monday night for its first meeting and headed out to march at Dewey Square with other protesters.

CAS sophomore Luke Rebecchi, a member of BU Occupies Boston, said that the movement speaks for the economic disparity between 99 percent of Americans and the top 1 percent.

“There isn’t one unified message, but if I had to sum it up it’s that there’s a lot of money in our political system and it kind of distorts what should be getting done. Good policies don’t come out and they affect people,” Rebecchi said.

“The quote is ‘99 percent,’ we’re the 99 percent,” he said. “We’re the people who don’t have all the money to throw at Barack Obama or whoever else is making decisions, and we want that back. We want to assert our place in our democracy.”

“It seems a bit backwards going into the streets and then planning,” Wood said. “But this is the very beginning of a movement and it is very different than any other movement.”

Demonstrations in connection to the Occupy movements have formed across the country in San Francisco, Los Angeles, Chicago and Portland since the first protest in New York.

More than 1,000 protesters attended the Dewey Square protest on Friday, The Daily Free Press reported on Monday.

Aditya Rudra, a School of Management sophomore, said the movement is about who has money and who doesn’t.

“What upsets me is that the people that are wealthy have such political power, that corporations are treated as people and that we’ve created a system where these people can make their rules and do what they want,” Rudra said. “That’s why I’m here.”

Juda-Nelson said that Students Occupy Boston is organizing a student-led march that will join the general march in Dewey this Friday at 5:30 p.m., which will likely start at Marsh Plaza.

“It feels really good to be a part of something that has potential to change the system as opposed to a bunch of people sitting around and complaining about things,” Juda-Nelson said.

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One Comment

  1. Dear Friends,
    I am so impressed with what has been accomplished and the attention its receiving, FINALLY, in some of the major media. The Powers That Be are taking notice and getting concerned. Mayor Bloomberg stupid statements the other day are no indicator of them knowing what you represent. CHANGE! STRUCTURAL! of the economic systme that has been sacrosanct for so long. Finance Capitalism has been a catastrophic failure–as predicted by many. It is on its way to destroying people and habitats worldwide and likely, inevitably–unless its stopped–it will bring down the planet.

    I’m writing today because I’m concerned about something that the General Assembly needs to take up…and soon. I wish I could be with and would if it weren’t for severe physical disability. I am, always with you in spirit, for what that’s worth. The matter for the GA is this:
    What will happen if the immense power of the 1% takes you seriously enough to take you on Head On–demonize you in an intense media campaign; place undercover cops in your midst to created violence as police coerce and assault groups or your base, and then large numbers of you are rounded up and jailed for an extended period as the “hanges on” are kept from your base and moved along, threatened with arrest?
    It seems to me, there needs to be a backup “habitat” for Occupy Wallstreet believers and joiners. Buildings, land, communal and/or co-0p buying groups, neighborgood green strips for gardens…
    Some way for a growing group of grass roots protesters and livers to stand and work together with as little dependence on the system and the living arrangements the system demends as possible. For survival sake! To keep the resistance, the rebellion going as loud and expanding as possible.

    I don’t wan this movement to be broken up. It must survive to bring about structural economic change. And at some point the Powers That Be will come down on this movement HARD…they have the tools and the will. screw the PR, it they feel threatened enough.

    If these matters haven’t been discussed by the General Assemply, it seems to me that they should be without much delay. The Power that you’re going up against is capable of more than you perhaps suspect or imagine. The core implication of Power is Control….and you are defying their illusions of Control.
    What if that spreads exponentially? They cannot allow that to happen.

    Thanks for your time and attention.
    I hope you find this useful.
    Roy Howard, your cohort…