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Meeting in Zuccotti Park, where police had forcibly evicted hundreds of protesters camped out November 15, several hundred activists of all ages shared donated platters of turkey, cranberry sauce, pumpkin pie, and other staples of the national holiday meal.
The atmosphere was a far cry from the tension during the night of the camp clear-out by riot police or the violent scuffles that marred subsequent street demonstrations around the nearby stock exchange.
One group sat around a guitarist, singing Bob Dylan songs. Another cluster listened to a cellist play Bach, while a third group took in the upbeat sounds of a traditional fiddle and banjo duo.
More than 3,000 meals were supplied to hungry activists and passersby sharing in the unusual version of the US ritual, which always takes place on the fourth Thursday of November and recalls the gratitude of the earliest European settlers in America for their survival.
Occupy Wall Street organizer Bill Dobbs said he was thankful that the movement, which aims to attack the power of the nation’s big banks and to protest against social inequity, had come through its own birthpangs.
“This is early in creating a resistance movement in the biggest rich country in the world,” Dobbs said.
Kathleen O’Hara, an author and advocate for crime victims, said she’d come from Philadelphia to experience the birthplace of a protest that has since spread to cities across the country.
“I didn’t want to do Thanksgiving in the traditional way,” O’Hara, 52, said. “It’s really very intriguing. People are getting together for something they believe in.”
The festive mood broke briefly when one of the former camp’s exuberant drummers — a source of annoyance to some local residents — launched into a performance.
Immediately, police who had been standing at the margins of the gathering intervened, some leaping over the fence that has been erected around the park. Occupy Wall Street members also rushed to the scene and for a tense minute or two the standoff seemed likely to end in scuffles and arrests.
“We want our drums!” the crowd chanted.
However, the Thanksgiving spirit prevailed and a negotiated solution was found: the drummer would respect the local community’s wish for a quiet day and resume his drumming on Friday.
“Happy Thanksgiving!” the crowd shouted at the departing police.
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