This was sent as a letter to a number of Canadian media. The author
obviously wants it as widely circulated as possible
  cheers, Ken Hanly

Testimonial on the Anti-FTAA Demonstrations, April 18-22, 2001
April 24, 2001

I want to write about what I saw this weekend in Quebec City.  I volunteered
as a Street Medic for the anti-FTAA protests, from Wednesday afternoon until
Sunday afternoon.  In the course of these days I saw so much that I hope to
never see again.  I treated hundreds of injured people, got tear gassed,
felt the effects of pepper spray, and mostly felt the kind of turmoil that a
peaceful society ought not to experience.
Throughout the event medics were targeted by the police:  wherever my
partner and I would be treating people, tear gas canisters would land right
beside us.  Some medics got hit with rubber bullets.  On Friday, my friend
Sean was on his knees treating a patient in a tear gas cloud on the front
lines, when a canister fell right under his face and exploded.  He inhaled
so much of it right there, then he tried to stumble to his feet only to
narrowly miss a canister aimed at his head.  Another canister hit the wall
behind him, bounced and hit him in the back, knocking him flat.  A final
canister rolled by his face again and exploded.  He was rescued by another
medic team and spent the next two days recuperating in the medic clinic on
Cote D'Abraham.
On the front lines on Friday we began treating people as the gassing began.
We kept having to retreat more and more to avoid the clouds of gas.  At one
point a canister exploded right next to me.  I can't begin to explain the
agony of being hit head on with tear gas  first of all it suffocates you.  I
began to walk very quickly, barely restraining the panic, as I coughed and
choked.  I thought I would die, that any minute my asthma would kick in.
Everywhere we turned there were more riot cops, more gas, and no safe space
to calm down and decompress.  My eyes were fine, being sealed under swim
goggles, but my skin was burning like fire.  Finally we managed to find a
corner without gas and I got my breath back.  I can't explain the fear that
set in afterwards  I was so scared to go anywhere near the cops.  But I was
in Quebec to do a service  treat injured people who were in pain.  Now that
I knew what that pain was like, I also knew I had to go back into the fray.
As we walked back into the chaos, we came upon a girl who had been hit by a
canister of gas, which exploded all over her body.  Medics were treating her
by stripping off her clothing and pouring liquids all over her.  The poor
girl was crying and screaming, in so much pain.  Around us were clouds and
clouds of gas, and cops advancing on all sides.  The cops began shooting
canisters high into the air, into the back of the crowd, where we were.  In
that area were only peaceful protesters; we were not up by the perimeter
fence, and we were not involved in Black Bloc activities up by the front
lines.  Our space was full of individuals being treated for various
injuries, and just trying to recuperate.  Yet we were getting hit with
dozens of canisters!  We had to watch the sky, hoping the canisters wouldn't
land on us.  We had to continually stand in the center of the action,
yelling at people to walk, walk, walk to avoid a mob scene and tramplings.
It's so hard to stand still or walk slowly when tear gas canisters at a
temperature of hundreds of degrees Celsius are being shot straight at you or
above your head.
I broke down so many times in the fracas, because the emotion just ran so
high.  I thought I was either going to die or be incapacitated or arrested.
At one point we were in the middle of a city block when a fire truck came
through and the protesters attacked it.  At the time I couldn't understand
why, why would they attack firemen, but later on someone helped me realize
that the truck was going to be used as a water cannon, so people wanted to
trash it.  Finally the truck went through, after having all its water
emptied and the equipment taken.  Later a row of riot cops formed at one
intersection, and lobbed gas canisters to block off the end of the block.
There was no escape route for my partner and I and the dozen or so
protesters still there.  Again I began to choke and almost panic, but we
ducked into a driveway.  When I saw the pain the others were in the
adrenaline kicked in, and I began to treat them.  I didn't even think about
my state, because I didn't feel it once I saw the injured people that needed
my help.  We managed to escape through backyards onto another block.
This weekend was a war zone.  I felt like I was in the middle of civil war
and urban warfare.  I treated so many burned hands, from people who wore
thick gloves to throw tear gas canisters back at the cops or away from the
crowd, yet got their hands burned.  I saw third degree burns.  I flushed
hundreds of eyes with water and sometimes with LAW  liquid antacid mixed
with water in a 1:1 ratio.  When we were safely away from gas, I did MOFIBA
skin decontamination treatments (mineral oil followed immediately by
alcohol) to take away the pain.  I treated so many injuries from people hit
by tear gas canisters and also those hit by rubber or plastic bullets.  I
saw back injuries, head injuries, broken fingers, leg wounds, and so much
more.
On Friday night we ended up under siege in our medical clinic as the cops
advanced down Cote D'Abraham, firing rounds and rounds of tear gas.  The air
was so contaminated that we had to breathe through our vinegar-soaked
bandannas INSIDE the clinic.  We had all the lights out and were speaking in
whispers.  It was so scary.  I thought we were for sure going to be
arrested.  Finally we managed to evacuate down the stairs outside, and get
away.
On Saturday night it was a different story.  I wasn't there, I was at Ilot
Fleurie under the highway, in the middle of the big party.  But I heard from
many medics who were there, and here's the story:  The cops advanced down
Cote D'Abraham, shooting tear gas like crazy and shooting rubber bullets
down alleys and driveways.  When they reached the clinic they marched
everyone who was in the alley (the decontamination space) out at gunpoint.
This included many medics and their patients, even seriously injured ones.
The cops forcibly removed all the protective gear from everyone, including
gas masks, vinegar bandannas and any goggles, saying "No more protection for
you guys!".  They also took all the medical supplies and equipment that was
in the alley or being carried by the medics.  They then marched them, hands
in the air and at gunpoint, out into the gas.  They made them walk one way,
then changed their minds and marched them another direction.  My friend Sean
said that one guy next to him was hit in the head with a rubber bullet, and
the cops wouldn't allow him to stop and treat the person.  Finally they let
the group go, without any arrests.  Needless to say, the clinic was
evacuated and set up in a different location.
Other injuries I heard about from medics were:  Derek and his partner
treated a guy who was severely beaten by police.  He had a skull fracture,
was in serious shock and had a compound leg fracture that made it almost
severed.  They waited in clouds of tear gas, with more and more canisters
being hurled at them, for the ambulance.  Another medic treated a guy whose
finger was cut off as he tried to scale the wall.  One girl's shoulder was
dislocated.  I treated a guy who got hit in the back with a tear gas
canister.  One guy got hit in the Adam's Apple with a rubber bullet and
underwent an emergency tracheotomy.  My teammate Leigh had a serious asthma
attack in the clouds.  There were many victims of beatings at the hands of
police  serious injuries from police batons.  One guy had his earring ripped
straight out of his ear by a riot cop.  There were so many more, I just can'
t remember them all.  And the funniest thing is, the mainstream media (i.e.
the Montreal Gazette) reported only 300 injuries total  hahaha that's
laughable, since I must have treated that many MYSELF!!!  And there were
probably 50 medics treating that many injuries each!
In the midst of all this chaos and fear and pain there were bright moments.
On Thursday I was present at the start of the Women's March, which was
colourful, beautiful, peaceful, magical.  There were huge puppets and
decorated artwork that the women wove into the Wall of Shame.  That night I
walked with the Torchlight Parade all the way from Universite de Laval to
Ilot Fleurie.  Along the entire route, for many countless hours, the group
sang songs, chanted, drummed and danced.  Slogans such as "This is what
Democracy looks like",  "Whose streets?  Our streets?", "Ain't no power like
the power of the people and the power of the people won't stop" and "So So
So, Solidarite!" were repeated over and over.  There was a festive
atmosphere, with many residents waving from their homes and calling out
their support to the crowd.  On Friday things went bad as soon as the next
march from Laval reached the perimeter, but I saw some beautiful things
through the clouds of gas.  A group of women joined hands and danced in a
slow circle, singing beautiful songs about peace and nonviolence.  They were
angelic, young and old, a space of quiet in the midst of a thunderstorm of
pain.  Starhawk led her Pagan group with blue banners and an aura of calm,
straight into the tear gas.  I saw them go by and felt safe for just a
moment.  I heard later that they went straight through the gas and the
bullets, and sang and danced right by the row of riot cops.  Apparently some
were later treated for injuries.  Their courage and faith was inspirational
to many, including me.  On Saturday down at Ilot Fleurie a party was going
on all day long.  In this space, supposedly the "Green Zone" (safe,
non-confrontational, nowhere near the perimeter) had a booth set up for Food
Not Bombs, a group that fed us all weekend long.  Everyone was welcome to
come and eat for free any time of day, and there were containers to eat out
of with a washstation nearby that everyone was expected to wash their dish
out in after eating.  There was also an art space set up where artists would
fashion their work to use in the protests.  By late afternoon there was a
huge fire going in the street, with people dancing around it.  Many people
ripped down street signs and used them as musical instruments  a steady beat
went on for hours and hours, late into the night.  There was a group dancing
to the beat, and everyone felt so free and beautiful.  It felt like the kind
of society I want to live in.at least until the cops arrived and the fear
set in.  A whole phalanx of riot cops stood their ground at the top of the
stairs looking down on Ilot Fleurie, and were an intimidating presence for
hours on end (from approximately 5 pm until they gassed us at 2:30 a.m.).
Six choppers circled overhead as well.
Getting back to good moments:  while we medics were holed up inside a shack
that was being used as a "Free Space" in Ilot Fleurie (they let us use it as
a makeshift clinic), a guy was brought in with a serious asthma attack.  He
had been having the attack for about a half hour, and his breathing was
extremely laboured.  I sat him down and attempted to calm him down, but it
only got worse.  I could hear the wheezing and feel his body shaking with
every effort, and I knew the pain he was in because of my own experiences
with asthma.  I recognized his panic.  He also didn't have his ventolin
inhaler.  As I sat there by his side I went over my options in my head  and
realized I had none.  An ambulance wouldn't come into such a "hot" area, our
clinic had just been busted by the cops, and I had no ventolin or adrenaline
for him.  So in a moment of clarity I realized I should try my only other
option  an acupressure point I had learned the week before, that supposedly
stops asthma attacks immediately.  I admit that before Saturday night I was
very skeptical of these techniques, but when I was confronted with this guy'
s obvious need, faith just kicked in.  I knew it would work, I just knew it.
Maybe because I believed it so much, maybe because of something else, it
worked.  Within seconds of my pressing that point on his hand, his breathing
began to slow down.  Within a minute he was calm, and walked out of the
clinic!!!  That moment for me was magic  without any Western medical
techniques or medication of any sort, I managed to take away this man's
pain.  Unbelievable.  I began to cry as soon as he walked out  I was so
shocked and so relieved.

What I saw this weekend, what I went through, what I saw people going
through  it made me realize how much stronger I am than I previously
thought.  I kept saying to myself  if you can get through this moment, you
can get through the next, and the next, and then whatever life drops on you.
And I got through it all.  Without serious injury, without arrest.  But I
have to say, I didn't get away scott-free.  My heart hurts.  My mind hurts.
Most of all, my soul is aching with pain and disbelief.

I can't believe how people hurt each other.  I am shocked at the violence I
saw in the span of two days, Friday and Saturday.  I can't believe the
ferocity of chemical weapons, and that a government would allow its police
force to use such arms against its own people.  I am angered that a) the
Black Bloc, formed of a handful of protesters at any one point, attacks the
police and that b) the police react by gassing the thousands of peaceful
protesters!!!  I fully appreciate the cops need to defend themselves against
the concrete and plywood wielding Black Bloc-ers, but each of these cops is
heavily armed and protected, and a handful of them could have easily
surrounded the Black Bloc and dealt with them instead of affecting the
peaceful demonstrators.  Tear gas was being shot deliberately at the
peaceful demonstrators at the back of the crowd!

I know all this because I was there.  I am not spreading misinformation or
propaganda of any sort, because I saw the majority of this with my own two
eyes.  The information that I heard from other medics is 100% reliable
because I worked with these people all weekend, and much of this was talked
about in our debriefings at the end of every night.  No one in those
debriefings was lying, and none of these stories are without two or more
witnesses.

I am sending all of you my story because I believe that the mainstream media
is very biased.  I want you all to know what really went down.  I haven't
even told you the half of it in this letter, but I've tried to give at least
a taste of the pain I saw all weekend.  I am having a very hard time
processing and dealing with this  the feelings I am experiencing are similar
to those I had when I came back from the death camps in Poland.  I cannot
function adequately right now, and this letter is part of my healing
process.  If you have any questions, please ask me.  ASK ME!  I want to
spread this message to as many people as possible.  I want the world to know
what went on in Quebec, how undemocratic and unfair and immoral and
oppressive the situation was.

Yet I also want people to know that a better world is possible -  through
the gas and the pain and the fear I also glimpsed the possibility, the hope,
of that new space.  People from all walks of life, backgrounds, ages, races,
and more came together in Quebec to fight against corporate rule, and to
fight for basic human rights, environmentalism and fair trade.  We have a
vision of a future where things will be better.  I don't stand with the
anarchists who want to break this society in order to form a new one, and I
don't stand with the protesters shouting "Revolution" in the armed sense.
But I do stand with the ordinary individuals, grandmothers, kids, labourers,
environmentalists, humans, who want to change things.

So I went to Quebec City as myself, and I came back as myself but with eyes
washed clear by tear gas and pepper spray.  As the song says, "I can see
clearly now the rain has gone  I can see all obstacles in my way".  I can
see, but at what price to my psyche?  I still don't know.  I find myself
asking, would it have been better to have stayed home and watched it all on
TV???  It would have saved me the pain and heartache, but it would also have
left me in my little bubble of idealism.  Not to say I am not still an
idealistic, romantic, optimistic woman  I am  but I am also just a little
bit more realistic.

I hope that you have read this far, and if so I congratulate you on being an
open-minded and intelligent individual.  Please send this letter on to
whomever you may choose  and send my email address along with it so I can
field any questions.

As we said in Quebec City, Be Safe.

Love
Sara Ahronheim




Sara Ahronheim
Biology 2001, Queen's University




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