[NewPacifica] Don White: My Recollections and Pictures since 1985



Article with pictures can be viewed at:

http://la.indymedia.org/news/2008/06/218516.php

Text of article, without pictures, appears below:

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I've learned and benefited a great deal from my encounters with Don 
White over the years, but now that he is gone, I realize that there 
is still more to be learned by considering the example that he set 
for others.

Don was a relentlessly positive person.  He listened to all points of 
view, and then attempted to move in a direction where the community's 
energy was not blocked and where progress could be made.

Don genuinely liked people - not just those who agreed with him, but 
virtually everyone with whom he interacted.  His path to 
enlightenment was through the heart, and through his service, rather 
than through abstraction or formal argumentation.

In addition to his direct affection for people and for the community, 
there was also a sense of ethical purpose and duty that probably came 
to some extent from his exposure to the liberation theology current 
of Catholicism that so strongly influenced the Central American 
solidarity movement in which he was a leader.  While Don was very 
intent upon results, I believe it was this sense of duty, and not the 
results themselves, that carried him through his many campaigns.  In 
a time of terrible reversals for the progressive movement, this sense 
of a commitment that does not depend upon immediate success helped to 
preserve our morale in the face of increasingly dismal prospects.

I first met Don White through my involvement with the Committee in 
Solidarity with the People of El Salvador during the 1980s.  The 
first attached photo shows Don (second from left) in May of 1987 with 
fellow CISPES leaders Nell, Hugh, and one other person (on the left) 
whose name I cannot recall.  During that period we were focused on 
educating the public and lobbying congress to end U.S. support for 
the Salvadoran regime.  This was done by handing out flyers and 
collecting petition signatures in public and public/private spaces.  
A number of events featuring FMLN representatives were also a part of 
this process of public education.  As the contra war developed, part 
of the focus shifted toward ending the illegal war against Nicaragua.

Around 1992 I took part in a number of demonstrations against the 
Gulf War that, once again, Don was instrumental in organizing.  I 
remember locking arms with him outside the Westwood Federal Building 
as part of a security detail that kept angry pro-war and anti-war 
activists apart, so that the focus remained on the war rather than on 
distracting altercations.  The enraged crowd pressed against us as 
they shouted at one another over our shoulders.  I was unable to find 
a picture from that period, but have included one showing Don 
performing a similar function in front of a much smaller and less 
aggressive group of counter-demonstrators during a protest against 
the present war in Iraq.

During the more recent successful struggle to reclaim Pacifica radio, 
Don was the main person who kept the various groups talking, if not 
working, together.

Once the network had been reclaimed from the renegade Pacifica 
National Board that was attempting to turn it into a kind of shadow 
NPR, I found myself in disagreement with Don over his support for 
draft B of the revised Pacifica bylaws, because that draft did not 
include affirmative action for the Pacifica election process.  
Although I have not changed my mind about the need for affirmative 
action in Pacifica's elections, the process of introducing, amending 
and approving proposals had been so conflicted that the alternative 
drafts that did include affirmative action ended up with glaring 
omissions and inconsistencies.  While the ideal solution would have 
been to amend draft B, I think that Don saw the need to reach closure 
on this issue within a very divided community as more important than 
the formal inclusion of an affirmative action mechanism, and I think 
that he sincerely believed that diversity among Pacifica's delegates 
could be attained by other means.  As it happens, Don was only 
partially correct about that.  But I do believe that Don correctly 
perceived deadlock and stasis as deadly threats to the process, and 
so even though the resolution that he supported was flawed, that 
support grew out of Don's sense of having multiple paths to the same 
result, and from his desire to release the energy of the community 
rather than to see it spent in internal division.

Throughout this intense debate, Don conscientiously maintained his 
outreach and openness to discussion with those opposing draft B, 
including myself.  I have included a photo of Don speaking amicably 
with Leslie Radford, one of the leaders in the struggle for 
affirmative action in our bylaws, during a meeting at which a vote on 
draft B was taken.

Following the passage of bylaws, Don became the chair of the Local 
Station Board of Pacifica station KPFK.  Attached is a picture of Don 
chairing a meeting of the LSB in January of 2005.

Most recently, I have encountered Don time after time in his role as 
a leading organizer and speaker for the many demonstrations against 
the invasion and occupation of Iraq.  Pictures of Don serving as a 
legal observer at a demonstration outside a recruitment center in 
November of 2004, and addressing an antiwar rally in March of 2005, 
can also be viewed below.

If the above snapshots seem discontinuous and episodic, it is only 
because my own involvement has been inconsistent during this 
interval, with a number of periods of distraction and/or 
demoralization.  But I feel quite certain that throughout this entire 
time Don remained crucially and actively engaged, and this 
consistency is another aspect of Don's importance within the 
progressive community.

Because of this continuous commitment, anyone having anything to do 
with progressive struggle in Los Angeles over these past several 
decades is bound to have been inspired and informed by Don in the 
process.  There are no doubt thousands of such people who, like me, 
have stories to tell regarding how Don affected their views and 
experience.  A life well-lived is well worth examining; I look 
forward to hearing from others who have found their understanding and 
outlook improved and enriched by the time and the organizing work 
that they have shared with Don White.

(for pictures, please see

http://la.indymedia.org/news/2008/06/218516.php )

-- Carl Gunther



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