Opposing Recruiting in High School: Grannies Rage—and Sing!

Raging Grannies sing against recruitment before being forced to stop by the Board of Education. Photo by Gloria Williams.

Raging Grannies sing against recruitment before
being forced to stop by the Board of Education.
Photo by Gloria Williams.

The campaign to confront military recruitment in Albuquerque Public Schools (APS) has shifted from direct confrontation to quiet negotiations with school board members, according to Mitzi Kraft of Military Families Speak Out.

“We’ve had private meetings with a couple of the school board members who are working with us,” Kraft wrote in a recent email. “And we are trying to get together with some of the other school board members, one at a time.”

When Kraft first spoke before the Board of Education in September 2009, she was alone; several board members dismissed her with comments supporting the military, a huge industry and one of the largest employers in New Mexico.

Each time after that, she brought other people with her, including young APS graduates who had served in the military and are now members of Iraq Veterans Against the War (IVAW).

“The military teaches young people to kill,” said Micah Shaw. “It does not teach them life skills.”

Romeo Rocca, also a member of IVAW, agrees.

“I can tell you in one word what the recruiters do,” Rocca said. “Lie.”

The IVAW members carry business cards with their phone numbers and quotes aimed at prospective enlistees such as, “Call before you enlist” and “You are not alone.”

Kraft has seen the tragic consequences of militarism in her own family. Her father, a lieutenant in the Army Air Corps, flew 50 missions over Germany, including many like the notorious firebombing of Dresden. He committed suicide. Her grandson returned from Iraq with post-traumatic stress disorder.  

Grandmothers, Vets Speak Out

In December, the day after President Obama announced plans to deploy more troops to Afghanistan, Kraft was joined by fellow members of the Raging Grannies.

Wearing long skirts and wide-brimmed hats covered with flowers and political buttons, the colorful group sang to the tune of “Good Night Irene”:

Recruiters promise you good jobs
Good jobs that don’t exist
You could end up poor and homeless
If you trust them and enlist

Before they could finish their first song, the women were cut short and told that no further discussion about the issue would be allowed. When they attempted to sing another song, they were again shut down by board President Martin Esquivel, who threatened to call police.

“It seemed clear they did not want to hear our point of view,” said Marcy Matasick, one of 12 Raging Grannies who signed up to speak.

Grannies leaving
March Matasick leading the Grannies in song and out of the Board of Education chambers after they were no longer allowed to sing. Photo by Gloria Williams.
 

Kraft was the only person allowed to speak an entire two minutes before the board cut off further comments on the issue of military recruitment in the schools.

“My grandson was recruited to join the military by the ROTC programs,” said Kraft. “We want real education in our schools so our kids can be informed and adult before they make decisions that have life-and-death consequences.”

Among those who had also signed up to speak were 86-year-old Sally-Alice Thompson, a veteran of World War II and member of Veterans for Peace; Bob Anderson, a Vietnam veteran and organizer of Stop the War Machine; several high school students; and three members of IVAW.

Thompson noted the irony that the board begins each bi-weekly meeting with a slide show tribute to Albuquerque Public School graduates who recently lost their lives in Iraq and Afghanistan.

Recruitment Issue Heats Up

Kraft never reads a prepared statement for the two minutes allowed during the public forum at each meeting. Instead she speaks from the heart.

“Our children are about as safe in your schoolyards right now as a turkey before Thanksgiving,” Kraft said in November. “They’re stuffed, plucked, and served up to recruiters on a silver platter.”
Her comments sparked a heated response from the community as letters to the editor speaking against the protesters filled the editorial pages of the Albuquerque Journal.

Board member Lorenzo Garcia noted at the November 18 board meeting that it is poor and working-class youth who risk their lives in the military, and said he would like to see more come and speak out about their concerns regarding recruiters in the public schools, even if it means the meetings would be longer.

Kraft acknowledges that at this time they do not have enough votes on the school board to get them to change their policies regarding recruiters in the schools and the Junior ROTC programs. The APS Board of Education is claiming that the JROTC programs are not involved in recruitment activities.

“Things are kind of up in the air right now,” Kraft reports. “We also went to the Gray Panthers and talked to them about collaborating with us and trying to work on getting at least one school board member replaced this next election year.”

The Raging Grannies are part of an international network of nonviolent activists who have fun taking their music seriously. You can find several of them in action on YouTube. Just search for “Raging Grannies.”

Gloria Williams

Gloria Williams is a freelance writer and member of the War Resisters League National Committee.