***
As March 17th Approaches-Remembrances Of Saint Patrick’s Peace
Parade 2012
From
The Pen Of Joshua Lawrence Breslin
“Hey, just follow the Veterans For Peace (VFP) white
and black dove-emblazoned flags down to D Street and you’ll run right into the Saint
Patricks’ Peace Parade staging area,” a grizzled veteran, looking like a man
who had seen his share of battles in war and peace, bellowed to one and all as
Frank Jackman and his veteran and peace activist companions exited the Broadway
Redline MBTA station on that overheated March 17th 2012 Sunday
morning in order to form up in that parade the old vet had informed them about.
[As it turned out, by the way, when Frank
“interviewed” him later while they were waiting in that flag-festooned staging
area, that grizzled veteran, Bob Ballad, had indeed seen his share of battles,
having done two tours in ‘Nam, two tours as a “grunt,” an infantry man, “cannon
fodder,” during hell time, 1966-68, and also of peace time battles against
drugs and liquor, a couple of bouts of homelessness, a couple of divorces, and
a few other of the now well-known pathologies
of those who had had trouble coming back
to the “real world “ after Vietnam that Frank had witnessed in his own family,
in his own old time Hullsville neighborhood,
and among his fellow VFPers. Moreover , unlike Frank, who was also a
Vietnam veteran and had turned anti-war
while in the military, that grizzled vet had not turned against war, the rumors
of war, and all that war entails until his own son started clamoring for
permission to go in the service when Iraq exploded in 1991. That is when he put
his foot down, kept his son out and had been a stalwart ever since. Welcome
aboard, brother, welcome aboard]
Frank had to
chuckle to himself a little as he and his companions headed up Broadway among
the throngs who were forming up for the official parade that although he had
grown up in the Irishtown section of Hullsville (you could hardly walk down a
street of that town at this time of year and not be confronted with more green
than you would ever see short of maybe
Dublin , that was true even these days when the town itself, reflecting a
couple of generations more moving south of Boston had lost it dominate Irish feel) and
had lived in Boston on and off for most of his adult life he had never gone to
the official parade. Well except that one time in high school junior year when
he and “flame” Kathy Flanagan (she of the long wild red hair, light freckled
face and green eyes, and thin athletic body who disturbed his sleep more than
one night in those days) had “skipped” school (unlike in Boston which was in a
different county from Hullsville they did not have the day off from school in
the days when the holiday was celebrated on the actual day not only on Sunday) headed
via the long haul Eastern Mass bus armed with a pint of Southern Comfort, the drink of choice and
cheap, over to the parade. Except they never got there. They had stopped off at
Carson Beach and started drinking that ambrosia and well, one thing led to
another and who gave a damn about some
silly shamrock drunken parade anyway when a guy had a wild, green-eyed, red-headed
girl next to him. So, although he had many close connections with old
“Southie,” the first stop for many of the famine-borne (famine of one kind or
another, not just the food kind although that was writ large on that benighted
country’s history) Irish, including his family, this was to be the first time
that he showed up in Southie for a parade on Saint Patty’s Day. And of course
while he might be on those same hallowed streets his purpose that day was to
march with the VFP contingent in their alternative peace parade.
Frank was not sure of all the details then about why
there was a need for a separate parade, although later after the event he dug
out some of the details from some guys who were closely involved in organizing
the alternative event, but the gist of it centered on exclusion. Everybody in
town, everybody who cared anyway, knew that back in the 1990s the official
parade organizers had gone to court, hell, had gone to the Supremes, over
excluding gays and lesbians (even Irish gays and lesbians like somehow that
category could not be in Catholic-heavy Irishtown and was a dastardly thing, a
mortal sin maybe, so if there was then they did want any part of it publicly).
And won, won the right to exclude whomever they wanted from their “private”
parade, as the Supremes in one of their more arcane legal decisions that made
no sense backed them up.
See though, when you have a “right” to exclude that
can take you into some strange places so when the VFP decided they wanted march
in the official parade to protest various war actions of the American
government, or just to send out a peace message to a large crowd they too were
excluded by the official parade organizers. The “reason”-short and simple
reason, they, the officials, didn’t want the words “veterans” and “peace” put
together in their parade. Hence the
march of the excluded that VFP had first organized the previous year. And hence
Frank Jackman had responded to their call and was approaching the staging area
with that sense of solidarity in mind.
As Frank waited, seemingly endlessly waited for the
peace parade to step off (the officials
had, as part of their victory, been able to legally keep any other formations
at least one mile behind their procession) he began to think of the many
connections he had with this old section of town, this section that he had
heard had changed demographically and in other ways as the Irish moved south
and the younger more diverse set moved in and rehabilitated the old cold- water
triple-deckers that lined all the lettered and numbered streets of the section
(at least showing some sense of order since the real of the town was identified
by a miasma of odd-ball combinations). He remembered ancient first murky visits
to those old cold- water flats where some great aunts and their huge broods
lived in splendid squalor and of cheap ribbon candy offered at Christmas time
and not much else. Or funny things like the few times that he had been
“privileged” to drive his material grandmother Riley (nee O’Brian) over to Southie so that the
sisters (some of those grand-aunts) could go to one of the “ladies invited”
taverns and get drunk since Grandpa Riley refused, absolutely refused, to have
liquor in the house (or cigarettes either). He wished he could remember the
exact gin mill but he couldn’t except that it was near the Starlight
Ballroom.
Or when he was older and his uncle on his mother’s
side had taken him to Jim and Joe’s farther up Broadway, up toward M Street, and
“baptized” him with his first drink of whiskey (no beer chasers then, that
would could later). Or later still when he became something of a regular at Jim
and Joe’s while he was working his way through college servicing vending
machines for York Vending just around the corner from the staging area and the
guys, the mainly Southie guys that he worked with, “forced “him to drink with
them after work (and hence the genesis of beer chasers). Beyond those episode though
except an occasion walk on Carson Beach (with and without female companionship)
he had not been around Southie much.
After a while, a long hot while, since the weather
was unseasonably warm for March in Boston, the peace parade stepped off,
stepped off with VFP black and white dove-emblazoned flags flying in the lead
paced by several cars for those really old (so he thought) World War II veterans, veterans from Franks’ late father’s
time sitting on board. As he looked back he noticed a huge banner calling for No War On Iran and another calling for Freedom For Private Bradley Manning, another
worthy cause, and behind that contingents of LGBT in various combinations, and
behind them broken up at intervals by marching bands other progressive and
social groups wishing to express solidarity with the excluded here, and throughout
the world. Frank felt good, felt he had made the right decision to come this
day despite some medical problems recently.
As the parade turned onto Broadway, old Broadway, of
a thousand drinks and other assorted goings on, he again thought about the old days
as he passed various landmarks, or the spots where the landmarks had been once.
Artie’s where his first serious serious “flame” Sheila Shea had left him, left
him for good, Jim and Joe’s now called the Green Tavern, where he had had more cheap
whiskeys than he cared to recall, a couple of places farther up where ladies
were invited back then (quaint notion, right),and he had been invited by a
couple of ladies and then up where another small “flame” Minnie Kiley had lived, then up
the cavernous West Broadway where the triple-deckers of his early youth still
stood thick as thieves.
Then he started to notice that those self-same
triple- deckers had been upgraded and that those who stood on the sidewalks
clapping as the parade went by were not the “from hunger” Irish second and
third cousins of his youth but looked, well, wed-fed and well-cared for. And as
they marched toward the end of the parade route at Andrew Square he also noticed,
very distinctly noticed, a small section of streets where gay men were standing
with a sign and cheering. Frank then flashed back to an earlier time when the
deep dark secret in Aunt Bernice’s brood, the one from K Street, was that one
of the boys, Harry, was “different” and had been banished from the house. Yes, things
had certainly changed but he wished that those idiots who were so keen on exclusion
had moved away from those whiskey and beer chaser bar stools and come into the
sunlight…
Saint Patrick's Peace Parade
The Alternative People's Parade for Peace.
Equality, Jobs, Environmental Stewardship, Social & Economic Justice
Sunday, March 17, 2013
Assemble Time: 2:00 pm
Start Time: 3:00 pm (Approx.)
Start
Location: Corner of West Broadway & D Street,
Four Blocks East of the - MBTA Redline "Broadway
Station"
Look for Veterans For Peace Flags
End Location: Corner of Dorchester Ave. and Dorchester
St)
"Andrew" MBTA Station
'The
St. Patrick's Peace Day Parade STARTS on West Broadway (easterly), left onto
East Broadway, Right onto "P" Street, Right onto "East 4th"
Street, Left onto "K" Street, Right onto
"East 5th" Street, Left onto "G" Street, Right onto the 'Southerly Arm of Thomas Park', Left onto
"Telegraph" Street, Left onto "Dorchester
Street" and ENDING at "Dorchester Avenue" (Andrew Square).
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