A History of Uprisings
Political
protests — both violent, peaceful and downright strange — have a rich past,
with varied degrees of success in accomplishing what they originally
set out to
do.
The
following historically significant political protests include a decisive event
in the Civil Rights movement, two history-changing moments that occurred within
one year and the medieval defiance of one man:
The Protestant Reformation
The Protestant
Reformation began with the quietest and most
orderly single protest in this list — the nailing to the door of a German
church a treatise on the abuses of Catholicism by Martin Luther, in 1517.
However, the movement that followed would ultimately spill blood and tear
empires apart.
The Storming of the Bastille
This one act of July 14, 1789, has come to symbolize the entire French
Revolution and indeed was a major catalyst
to the 10-year-long rebellion against the crown. On that day, a throng of
Parisians descended on the Bastille (long a symbol of royal authority and
excess), beheaded its governor and overtook the prison.
Gandhi's Salt March
Another protest against British taxation sent Mahatma Gandhi on a
23-day, 240-mile journey to the coast of India to collect his own salt, which
was illegal under crown laws. More than 60,000 people, including Gandhi
himself, were incarcerated for participating in the salt march, but it
ultimately turned the
tide of world sympathy towards Indian,
rather than British, interests.
The Boston Tea Party
Despite its
quaint-sounding name, the 1773 "tea party" was in fact a bitter
reaction to harsh new British taxation acts. Over the course of three hours on
Dec. 16, more than 100 colonists secretly boarded three British ships arriving
in harbor and dumped 45 tons of tea into the water. The unorthodox protest was
a key precursor to the American Revolution.
South Africa's National Day of Protest
Nelson
Mandela's ANC party organized this anti-apartheid work stoppage in 1950, in
retaliation for a new bill effectively allowing the government to investigate
any political party or organization. On June 26, hundreds of thousands of South
Africans participated in the "Stay at Home," a tactic that was used
several times in the next decade. June 26 was celebrated as National Freedom
Day in South Africa until 1994.
March on Washington
Martin
Luther King's historic "I Have a Dream" speech was delivered during
this August 1963 rally to promote racial equality in the United States. More
than 200,000 demonstrators gathered peacefully at the Lincoln Memorial in D.C.,
and the event is credited with pressuring President John F. Kennedy to draw up
firm civil rights legislation.
Tiananmen Square
A mass of at least 1 million people, mostly students seeking democratic
reform, had peacefully occupied Beijing's Tiananmen Square for seven weeks when
the Chinese military unexpectedly
rolled in tanks to clear them out. Numbers
are imprecise, but it is estimated that at least several hundred protesters
were killed in the city, drawing harsh criticism from the international
community.
Berlin Wall Protests
The
concrete division that had separated East and West Berlin for 28 years came
down just two months after public protests occurred throughout Germany.
Pressure to take down the wall had been growing in 1989 and the demonstrations
were the final straw for the East German government, which finally opened the
gates on Nov. 9.
Iraq War Protests
Millions of
people in cities around the world gathered for anti-war protests in the months
leading up to the invasion of Iraq, which went ahead despite their efforts in
March of 2003. The biggest crowds occurred in London in conjunction with global
marches organized for Feb. 15, when at least 1 million people assembled in what
is believed to be the largest ever political demonstration in UK history.
The Orange Revolution
In late
2004, hundreds of thousands of people flooded Kiev's main square to protest the
results of the Ukrainian presidential election. Demonstrations continued for 12
days through sleet and snow until a revote was called, reversing the results
and putting the opposition candidate (whose party colors are orange) in office
instead.
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