"Harken to the future,
Remember the past
The story of May Day 2000 in San Francisco is posted below, courtesy of Karen Martin.
May Day . . . May Day at last" (Casey Neil)
For an International Roundup of May Day events, check out the coverage hosted by the
Direct Action Media Network
May Day 2000 in San Francisco, California, USA was the first time in
recent memory in which May 1st was celebrated locally on a weekday. The day
included direct actions, a celebration, and a march, all in the downtown
area of San Francisco. MayDay commemorates the 1886 General Strike, and the
Haymarket Affair in Chicago, which were part of a nationwide workers'
movement which fought for the eight-hour workday. Many countries still
celebrate International Workers' Day on May 1st. Since the Middle Ages,
MayDay has been celebrated as a fertility holiday in cultures all over the
world. In recent decades, MayDay has largely been forgotten in the United
States, and Labor Day has been officially celebrated in September. Reclaim
MayDay is a 3 year-old coalition of pagans, artists, anarchists, union
members, and others in the Bay Area who come together each year to celebrate
MayDay in a way that honors all of their traditions.
May 1st, 2000 began with autonomous morning actions in downtown San
Francisco. There were at least two roving dance parties. One group of
approximately 30 people was arrested as it entered a Levi’s store. Several
people were able to get out of the store in time to observe the arrests and
told people at the celebration about the incident. Another group danced at
a Gap store. This party also spread to architectural design firm Kaplan,
McLoughlin, and Diaz, a firm that designs prisons. Four gallons of red
paint symbolizing the spilled blood of prisoners was dumped inside, and one
person was beaten as he was arrested. A truck was spotted downtown with
alternating signs reading: "Caution: Income Gap Ahead," "The Spectre of
Capitialism is Haunting America," and "Capitalism Stops at Nothing.
As many as 1500 people attended the 3-hour festival, which took place
in the grassy area just north of downtown San Francisco's Justin Herman
Plaza. Many festively-dressed people danced around a Maypole in a ceremony
initiated by the Reclaiming Collective. Food Not Bombs San Francisco and
East Bay teamed up to provide a scrumptious free meal. On the main stage,
performers included poet Jack Hirschman, singers Faith Petric and Casey
Niell, Harmonic Intervention, Art & Revolution, and the San Francisco Mime
Troupe. Bob Owens from Local 510 spoke about the links being made between
labor unions, artists, anarchists, environmental, and other activists.
About 500 people left the park to march through downtown in what some
have called a street theatre-filled "corporate tour of shame." Although the
parade organizers had not obtained a permit for the march, hundreds of
uniformed members of the San Francisco Police Department accompanied the
parade. Without being asked, the police volunteered their services to keep
the sidewalks clear for shoppers. Commanding police officers several times
threatened to arrest the entire march, but no arrests were made. The
Infernal Noise Brigade, also known as the Anarchist Marching Band that was
seen in Seattle’s WTO protests last year, provided a colorful musical
addition to the front of the parade. Stops along the route included a dance
by the Emma Said Dance Project at Victoria's Secret; punk band Shotwell
performing outside of the Citibank offices; dancing and chalking outside of
the Pacific Stock Exchange; Fidelity Investments, where a banner reading
“Fidelity Invests in Occidental Oil’s Repression of the U’Wa” was hung from
the neighboring Wells Fargo Bank; and everyone's favorite, the Gap. A
puppet symbolizing a boss was burned in the street as the parade left the
Gap store. Hundreds of people continued to walk, chanting and drumming,
past Banana Republic, and into Union Square, where the demonstration ended.
Organizers feel very positive as they look ahead to future MayDay
celebrations.
Other events which took place in the San Francisco Bay Area on that day
included labor programming on KPFA, the local Pacifica-affiliate radio
station; a video showing by the Labor Video Project; and a rave organized by
local activist dj's.
To contact Reclaim MayDay, please email: sfmayday2000@yahoo.com or call (415)
339-7801.