Report From New York

By Roane Carey

December 15, 1999

As workers and holiday shoppers spilled out of Manhattan's midtown skyscrapers and stores during rush hour last week, they were confronted with an unusual sight: Several thousand demonstrators, shouting "Down with Nike!" and "Shame on Disney!", marched from Niketown on 57th Street to the Christmas tree at Rockefeller Center, where a rally was held decrying horrible working conditions in the sweatshops that manufacture goods for these and other companies like Wal-Mart, Liz Claiborne and the Gap.

» More

Most Read

Issues »

The New York rally was part of the third annual nationwide International Human Rights Day campaign, with demonstrations scheduled in more than a dozen cities, from Boston to Albuquerque and Baltimore to tiny Kodiak, Alaska.

Sponsored by the National Labor Committee, the New York Public Interest Research Group and the People of Faith Network, the New York march was truly a gorgeous mosaic: Asians, African-Americans, whites and Latinos were all well represented. Although there was a healthy contingent of older activists and sixties veterans, the demonstration was predominantly young, with a huge turnout from high schools and colleges--the result of years of outreach to schools by the sponsors. Twenty grammar schools and high schools were represented, as were six of the SUNY campuses, City College, Brooklyn College, Columbia, NYU, Princeton and Yale. The United Students Against Sweatshops, a fast-growing activist presence at high schools and college campuses across the country, was at the rally in force.

Organized labor was also present. AFL-CIO president John Sweeney told the students in the crowd, "You are leading the way...you are our inspiration." People from UNITE, Jobs with Justice, the Laborers union and the United Food and Commercial Workers were at the rally as well. The antisweatshop movement in New York has been growing steadily; each year this demo has doubled in size.

The spirit of Seattle was definitely alive in these demonstrations. The campaign against sweatshops is part of a growing international movement against corporate domination, as embodied in the World Trade Organization, and for fundamental labor and human rights everywhere. Like the multinational corporations they're combating, the students and workers at these rallies fully understand the global nature of the struggle. They were fighting with equal vigor against labor abuses from Borough Park, Brooklyn, to Bangladesh, from Saipan to San Juan, Puerto Rico.

About Roane Carey

Roane Carey, managing editor at The Nation, was the editor of The New Intifada (Verso) and, with Jonathan Shainin, The Other Israel: Voices of Refusal and Dissent (New Press). more...
Most Read

Issues »

Most Emailed

Issues »

Popular Topics

Blogs

» Campaign 08

Senate: Democrats Leading/Tied in Races for GOP Seats | New numbers from Georgia, Mississippi, North Carolina suggest significant movement in the South.
John Nichols
Posted 9 minutes ago

» The Dreyfuss Report

Thirty Years' War in Afghanistan | It might be unwinnable -- or it just might take several decades. A sober look at that other war.
Robert Dreyfuss

» Editor's Cut

The Woman Greenspan, Rubin & Summers Silenced | How Brooksley Born might have helped us avert this financial meltdown
Katrina vanden Heuvel

» The Notion

Is the Second Superpower of the Cold War Going Down? | The Soviets were bankrupted by an Afghan War that wouldn’t end. Now, is it our turn?
Tom Engelhardt

» The Beat

No More Stolen Elections! | A new campaign seeks to avert a repeat of Florida or Ohio in 2008.
John Nichols

» Capitolism

Expert Failure | How the elites failed us.
Christopher Hayes

» Act Now!

S. Dakota Goes After Choice (Again) | Meet the Rev. Steve Hickey. He believes that S. Dakota has been chosen by God to upend Roe v. Wade.
Peter Rothberg

» And Another Thing

Are You the Very Model of a Modern Vice-President? | Sarah's not the only one with a special skill.
Katha Pollitt