I Got Arrested for the First Time

By Maude Barlow, Council of Canadians

(Niagara At Large is posting this piece that Maude Barlow, head of the Council of Canadians, ran this September 27 on  her national citizen organization’s website.
It is a piece that not only discussions opposition to plans to build a pipeline for pumping dirty oil from the tar sands in Albert to refineries in the southern United States, but the public protests against it and the arrests of peaceful protestors by police forces that are paid for by the public and supposed to be there to protect the public – not a select few of special interests.
More and more often these days, as the state of our economy and environment is growing worse and more of us are growing frustrated and angry, are police are being used by governments that have been bought off and paid for by Big Oil and other special interests, to use whatever means they have to in order to keep us in order. In other words, if you stay home and watch the sports channel or ‘Dancing with the Stars’, that’s okay. But if you go out and protest something your government is doing on behalf of thespecial interests, chances are you will be arrested. So stay home and shut up!)

I got arrested today for the first time today. Just before noon, I walked hand in hand with colleagues and friends, the steady and haunting beat of First Nations drums behind me, to a four-foot barrier near the front of Parliament Hill, erected to keep me and other protesters away from the doors of Parliament. I took a deep breath, stepped on the barrier and crossed over.

Canadian activist Maude Barlow being hauled away in cuffs by our police

We were on Parliament Hill to show our opposition to the extension of the Keystone Pipeline, which would take raw bitumen from the tar sands of Northern Alberta over prime farmland and the Ogallala Aquifer to a refinery in Texas. Keystone is only one of a number of pipelines planned or built to export bitumen to other places for refining. Together they resemble a snakes and ladders board game, taking more and more heavy oil, the dirtiest in the world, to communities and countries around the world. My concern is that we are exporting our dirty oil as well as the process to refine it, which also pollutes local water sources. Also, by investing trillions of dollars into these pipelines, governments and the energy industry are ensuring the continued rapid acceleration of tar sands development, instead of supporting a process to move to an alternative and sustainable energy system.

Opposition to Keystone is growing in the United States with the greatest concern being for the safety of the Ogallala, a closed and overworked aquifer. One bad spill and the aquifer could be severely damaged putting the food supply and livelihoods of million of Americans in jeopardy. I took part in the two week rolling protests held in Washington in late August and led by the indefatigable Bill McKibbon of 350.0rg. I was deeply moved by the dignified process of non -violent civil disobedience I witnessed there and vowed to help create a similar event in Canada.

So with Greenpeace, the Indigenous Environmental Network, the Polaris Institute, and the Communications, Energy and Paperworkers Union (who represent the tar sands workers), the Council of Canadians organized a similar demonstration of civil disobedience and worked with local police forces to make it as dignified and peaceful as possible.

Over 800 Canadians gathered on the Hill, where we heard the stories of despair from First Nations people living downstream of the tar sands and the need to take our campaigns to the next step of direct action. It was not an easy decision to make. The charges could very well have been criminal and impair my ability to do work in the United States, which would have been devastating for me. I chair the board of Food and Water Watch in Washington and serve on advisory boards of several other organizations. I also speak to many American groups and at universities. The merging of the no-fly lists between Canada and the United States is a real and growing concern, as many of us fear such lists will be used to shut down peaceful dissent.

But the day comes when you have to take a stand beyond the range of your comfort zone and for me, this was the day. I have four grandchildren I love more than life itself and I want them and all children to grow up in a safe and healthy world. I was lucky to have on one side Dave Coles, the fearless president of the Communications, Energy and Paperworkers Union and on the other, Fred Wilson, senior adviser to Dave and a wonderful board member of the Council of Canadians. Banks of cameras caught our every move and I found myself wishing I had told my mother I was going to do this.

I was asked three times by a very respectful police officer to go back over the fence and when I refused, he arrested me for obstructing a police officer, a serious criminal charge. I was handcuffed, searched and escorted by an also respectful policewoman and sat, as did my friends, for a long time while they decided what to do with us. Finally, they thankfully decided on the lesser charge of trespassing and we, and the 200 others who followed us over the fence, were given a fine and an edict to stay away from Parliament Hill for a year. (Not sure how that can be constitutional but that is an argument for another day.) Then I was taken in a paddy wagon and escorted off the Hill. “Damn!” I thought. I wanted to go back to the protest.

I realize that at no time was my life in danger as is the case for activists in some other countries or even some groups in our own. But I also for a short time, felt the unnerving experience of being totally and completely out of control of my life and it has left me shaken. Mostly I feel privileged to have been part of a wonderful experience where people of all ages and from all over the country came together to put themselves on the line. I did it because I fear we are killing the planet and I can no longer be content to only write and speak about it. Today my feet spoke for me as I crossed that barricade and took away one more fear in my life.

Maude Barlow is an award-winning public activist and author who heads up the Council of Canadians.

(Niagara At Large encourages you to share your views on this post below. Please remember that we only post comments by readers who share their first and last names. Anonymous comments or comments sent in under false names will not be posted.)

13 responses to “I Got Arrested for the First Time

  1. There is nothing like the other side of the barricade ….we must all cross if we are to stand for anything.

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  2. I agree with all of your rights until you became a self-admitted criminal.

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  3. I was lucky enough to be able to tell Maude Barlow this evening that I wish I had been beside her when she crossed that barricade. I agree with you, Cath — sooner or later, many of us are going to have to do it.

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  4. While I can understand the feelings of some people I have a problem with the result of some of their actions. Where is the stop point? Once you cross the barricade how far do you go? Up the Lawn? To the front door? Inside the chamber? To the speakers chair? If there comes a point when civil protests beget violence on both sides then both sides lose. If not at the barricade where is the stop point?

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  5. The several hundred people at the protest knew what the security demarcation point was and chose to cross it. Fines levied, point made, next…

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  6. Either we make a stand for our freedoms or we are in the dictatorship that exists at the present time with more draconian laws to be passed.

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  7. You’re right, John. That’s it, exactly.
    @Mr. Struger: “self-admitted criminals”? Citizens of a democracy have the right to peaceful protest. The whole point of this exercise was that it was entirely peaceful, and the RCMP was informed about what the protesters wanted to do, and prepared accordingly. Both “sides” showed mutual respect.

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  8. You have not answered my question from September 28th. Where is the stop point? Your definition of peaceful protest is my definition of law-breaking? What makes you right and me wrong when I am on the side of the law? Would you allow “any group” to protest on Parliament Hill and ignore the police barricades?

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  9. Civil Disobedience at the House of Commons on September 26, was non-violent, and largely symbolic. Maude Barlow could answer this much better than me, especially since she was likely involved in the pre-demonstration “training”, but my understanding is that there was dialogue with the police before and after the incident. Both the police and the protestors carried themselves with dignity and respect.

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  10. @Nick Struger: the protesters did not ignore the police barricades — they stepped over them, and were arrested, as they expected to be. They gave no trouble to the RCMP, who, in turn, treated them with respect. The stop point? I guess the stop point is when the Harper Tories finally realize that the government is there to serve the Canadian people — ALL the Canadian people, not merely those who voted Tory — not the other way around. I think that’s called democracy.

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  11. I think you are a little confused by the term “stop point”. It is physical not mental. By the way did you read where the people protesting in New York City are coming to Toronto, Ottawa, Montreal, etc. Only about 700 arrested so far so I imagine that this will be another “peaceful protest”. Also it is impossible for the government to serve ALL the Canadian people because they do not ALL want the same service.

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  12. The “stop” point, as pre-arranged, was a foot or two on the other side of the barricade.The intent of the people engaging in the Sept. 26 civil disobedience at the House Of Commons was to get arrested. That’s it. They didn’t have any intention of going further.

    You’ll notice from my article that I participated in the rally (though I chose not to get arrested). The rally was very peaceful and informative.

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  13. Sort of guilty is the same as sort of pregnant.

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