Hartford City Councilwoman Wildaliz Bermudez told the crowd to turn around and look at the building across from the Connecticut State Capitol, just on the other side of Bushnell Park. This hotel is where several dozen families from Puerto Rico relocated following the September 2017 hurricane. They have been there through FEMA’s Transitional Shelter Assistance program. FEMA recently announced it was cutting off displaced American citizens, weeks earlier than promised. Mayor Bronin and Councilwoman Bermudez have condemned FEMA’s reversal. Governor Malloy has promised to keep these families sheltered on the State’s dime in the meantime. Bermudez, in her speech, crystallized what may have been known only in the abstract — if at all — by many of the thousands attending this peaceful rally.
The Connecticut Women’s March aligned with the anniversary of 45’s inauguration. While the 2017 rally was heavy on fears imagined, Saturday’s protest called out this new administration’s actual actions. Linking the various forms of systemic oppression, speakers and participants alike represented those in Greater Hartford and beyond, including a delightfully vocal contingent from CT Latinas in the Resistance.
If you participated in the Connecticut Women’s March on January 20, 2018, go on ahead and give a shout out to yourself (and any group you were with) in the comments here.
Ann
Performed with the New Haven Resistance Choir!
Will K. Wilkins
Great Job! Thank you!
Richard Nelson
Wonderful photos, (you had a really good perch), beautiful weather, great march. Our statement this year was about Pathology and president, and on the other side vile creature. We know though even if hey, hey, ho , ho trump has got to go, (the whole damn system would be better) that we can not cast our lots with the democrats who place Band-Aids on the gapping wounds of amerikkka. As Gloria Martin, Feminist, Socialist said, “We must change the system, otherwise we fight the same old battles over and over.” We see that in front of our faces daily. Ask anyone who has been fighting for many years. I hope that we can send a photo of Tim and I to our trump supporting family members just to rub them the wrong way, jerks that they are.
Jim Condren
Thanks for sharing Gloria Martin’s quote. She nails it. Since I came of age in the 1960s, we have been fighting the same battles over and over. I thought after Vietnam that we would never fall for the lies of those who profit from the war machine. But it seems every generation has to figure it out on their own. For each generation an enemy is conjured up to justify killing people halfway around the world. For my generation it was commies. Now it’s hadjis. Time for that shit to stop.
Linda Pagani
Phenomenal photos that give a great sense of time and place. You captured some fantastic signs. I went with a four-year-old who wore a shirt embroidered with “All Girls Can!” and carried a she made with rainbows and the slogan, “Girls Rule!”
A little girl at the rally stopped me and said she was only five years old and a boy in her class called her a bitch. That’s what her sign said, too.
I’m proud to be a fighter in this resistance with women and girls of every age, though sad we still have to fight for our basic human rights.
Barbara Austen
It was electric! Great diversity, too.
Laura Weaver
I am thrilled to have participated yesterday. So many wonderful women! We March, we RUN!
Jim Condren
Great photos! Brilliant signs! As a member of the white male oppressor class, I surrender.