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  • 30
    Apr
    2013
    3:32pm, EDT

    From Gandhi to Bobby Sands: Hunger strikers through history

    By Matthew DeLuca, Staff Writer, NBC News

    Few forms of civil disobedience attract the same level of public attention as a hunger strike.

    Visceral, agonizing, and striking at a person’s most simple needs, the method of protest has been used the world over to galvanize popular support, unite a cause, and draw attention to issues that otherwise might go ignored.

    Entirely reliant on how long the striker can hold out against his or her most basic instincts, hunger strikes don’t require placards or meeting halls or television cameras. It’s a means of dissent available to almost anyone, anywhere in the world.

    AFP – Getty Images

    Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi in an undated file photo

    President Obama vowed on Tuesday to make good on an old campaign promise and close Guantanamo Bay, where more than half of the terror suspects held at the prison camp are on a hunger strike to protest their living conditions and continued detention.

    Here are some others who have achieved notoriety for not eating:

    1. Marion Wallace-Dunlop
    After being arrested for mounting a protest outside the House of Commons in July 1909, Wallace-Dunlop became the first British suffragette to take up a hunger strike. She held out for ninety-one hours before being released by authorities worried for her health. The tactic caught on in popularity among other incarcerated members of the Women’s Social and Political Union.

    2. Mohandas Gandhi
    The man credited with helping found an independent Indian state and the inspiration for countless non-violent protests, Gandhi used hunger strikes as a tactic numerous times. Some proved unsuccessful, like a twenty-one day fast against British rule that Gandhi began in February 1943. Another fast in 1948 ended after five days, with Muslims, Sikhs, and Hindus saying they would work toward Gandhi’s vision of greater national unity.

    Sal Veder / AP

    United Farm Workers leader Cesar Chavez at a rally in Salinas, Calif., in 1970.

    3. Cesar Chavez
    The Latino-American labor rights leader used hunger strikes multiple times while agitating for farm workers. In 1968, Chavez undertook a 25-day fast to gain recognition for the union he helped co-found, the United Farm Workers. He repeated the fast for 24 days in 1972, then carried on a 36-day fast in 1988 at the age of 61.

    4. Guillermo Farinas
    A Cuban journalist and dissident, Farinas has mounted hunger strikes to protest the death of a fellow activist, denounce his country’s position on Internet censorship, and demand the release of political prisoners.

    5. Bobby Sands
    This Irish nationalist died 66 days into a hunger strike in 1981, demanding that Irish Republican Army members be held as political prisoners by the British during the Troubles. The 27-year-old Sands lost 60 pounds before he died. He actions drew the ire of then-Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher, who called him a "convicted criminal" after he died, who "chose to take his own life." Nine more hunger strikers died after Sands.

    AFP – Getty Images

    Undated picture of North Ireland's Bobby Sands.

    6. Saddam Hussein
    No matter how harrowing, not all hunger strikes elicit the public’s good will. Iraq’s deposed despot announced in February 2006 that he had gone on a hunger strike to protest his trial. Hussein lasted nineteen days, citing health concerns when he threw in the towel.

    7. Mia Farrow
    The actress made it through 12 days of a planned three-week fast to protest the expulsion of aid agencies from the embattled region of Darfur in 2009. The “Hannah and Her Sisters” star called it quits after she lost nearly 13 pounds, she later told “People.”

    Related:

    • U.S. sending more medics to Guantanamo as hunger strike grows
    • 100 Gitmo detainees to join hunger strike
    • Guantanamo prison hunger strike notches up to 94

    12 comments

    At Guantanamo this will be easy. If Obama wants to close it, and they are on hunger strike. Slide a big plate of fried porkchops ,mashed potatoes and pork gravy under the doors of the cells. If they eat, fine. If not, we will be rid of some of the problem. The ones who eat, we might let them go home …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: hunger-strike, saddam-hussein, guantanamo-bay, mandela, gandhi, cesar-chavez, mia-farrow
  • 15
    Dec
    2011
    1:34pm, EST

    Rev. Jesse Jackson to London protesters: 'Jesus was an Occupier'

    Oli Scarff / Getty Images

    Rev. Jesse Jackson speaks to Occupy activists outside of London's St. Paul's Cathedral on Thursday.

    By F. Brinley Bruton, msnbc.com

    LONDON -- Veteran activist the Rev. Jesse Jackson compared the global anti-capitalist movement to the U.S. civil rights struggle, the battle against apartheid in South Africa and the fight for Indian independence during a visit to an Occupy camp in London on Thursday.

    "Jesus was an Occupier, born under a death warrant, a Jew by religion, born in poverty under Roman occupation," the two-time candidate for the Democratic presidential nomination told a crowd near Saint Paul’s Cathedral. "Gandhi was an Occupier, Martin Luther King was an Occupier, (Nelson) Mandela was an Occupier."


    A man dressed in a well-tailored dark wool jacket and crisp checked shirt – not your stereotypical Occupy protester – cried as he watched Jackson. "He is my hero," he said.

    While the crowd enthusiastically joined Jackson for a chant, not everybody was supportive and a few heckles punctuated his speech. 

    One man who shouted that the Occupy movement wasn't addressing the needs of the homeless was detained before he reached the podium where Jackson was standing.

    F. Brinley Bruton / msnbc.com

    John, 34, who has been camped next to London's Saint Paul's Cathedral since Oct. 15, waits for Rev. Jesse Jackson to address Occupy protesters on Thursday.

    Another Occupier, who said he's been camped out since the protest began on Oct. 15, said he welcomed Jackson. However, he remained skeptical.

    "I have mixed feelings – someone told me he's quite a wealthy person," said John, 34, who declined to give a last name. "You don't know his agenda."

    F. Brinley Bruton is a senior writer for msnbc.com based in London

    Read more content from msnbc.com and NBC News:

    • 'A new chapter': US shuts down Iraq war
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    • Rev. Jesse Jackson to London protesters: 'Jesus was an Occupier'
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    • Taliban's bloodsoaked stadium re-opens as 'peaceful place'
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    • Post-US Iraq: Welcome to Shia-stan

    359 comments

    A man who became a millionaire by screaming "I am the victim" is talking again. Wish this chump would just go away.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: europe, jesse-jackson, london, mandela, uk, featured, gandhi, st-pauls, occupy

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