Today was protest day. It was frantic for me. I had to make the Jan 22 news
update. Living in the Netherlands, there is this time shift issue I have to deal with .
Since I am 6 hours ahead of most of Canada, news arrives kind of late (yesterday's
news today!) and the demonstration here in the Hague was one of the first to happen.
So I also had to get my
news page updated,
the Netherlands Facebook
rally group page
updated and prepare for a
protest/rally that I organized at the last minute.
I fully anticipated a rally of one.
The biggest challenge was a sign. I wanted a BIG one. Scanning the
many different Facebook sites for ideas and slogans, I decided on this one (shown in
actual size). The next challenge was to blow it up an print it.
I have a program that can do this but I barely know how to use it. It's an
open-source program called GIMP and it has many of the capabilities of
Photoshop. But GIMP is not an easy program to figure out.
Never try to figure out a program when you are under a deadline. It is very
stressful.
Using 2 different programs, I ended up printing out the poster on 20 sheets of letter
size paper, and then manually cutting and pasting each sheet onto a piece of cardboard
from a large moving box.
The end product looked pretty good, except in my haste, I missed the "s" on "Canadians"
which I did not notice until it was done (actually I did not notice it until my wife
pointed it out). In another panic, I printed out "Canadians" on a separate sheet of
paper to glue over top just in case somebody else showed up.
In the end, I was 10 minutes late for my own protest, but since nobody else was there,
nobody seemed to mind.
I was alone for about 20 minutes, which felt kinda stupid, and people who walked by
looked at me like I was ... uh, fill in the blank. But if you smile, they chat,
and you end up trying to explain why you are there.
My wife showed up and that was much better because then there were two of us. She is
also really good at speaking Dutch, so as a team, we became much better at explaining
why we were there.
A couple of guys came out of the embassy and locked it up as they were leaving. One
came out and asked what we were doing. I showed him my sign and he had a good laugh -
he knew why we were there! No explaining necessary. He took a picture of us with his
cell phone (the first picture he had taken with his phone), and he said he would
send it "to the boss".
And than Ward joined us, and he had his own protest sign (double-sided), and with that,
we became a legitimate protest.
So the three of us walked back and forth in front of
the Canadian Embassy and happily explained to anyone, who cared to ask, why we were
there. We got very good at it and soon people were offering their encouragement
and support because we were protesting (I love the Dutch).
The time went by pretty quickly. We stayed right up until 4:00 even though it was a
light drizzle the whole time. We left our signs hanging in the embassy fence, just
in case we have to return.
So in the end there were 3 of us in total, though we only have pictures of two protesters.
(my wife had to take the pictures). Thank you Ward and Julie, for showing up. It was fun!
I just may do this again. March 3 anyone?