Organize Locally
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- Host a speaking tour or teach-in. If you are at a school or university,
ask educators to assist you and hold a public teach-in on Guatemala. In your community,
organize a teach-in at the town hall, a local place of worship, or another community
space. You may have speakers for the teach-in in your own community (if you or
someone you know has traveled to Guatemala recently, this is a great opportunity),
or you may be able to help local organizing for
NISGUA's Annual Fall Tour of Guatemalan Speakers.
- Set up information
tables at local cultural events related to Latin America. If a concert, dance
performance, movie, or other special cultural event is coming to town, contact
the event promoter and ask if you can set up a table at the door to hand out information
and sign up new activists. If it's not possible to get a table inside the event,
have people outside the doors hand out fliers and use sign up sheets on clipboards.
If you have a letter to send to a member of Congress, bring copies of the letter
so that people can sign and send them right there. If you have a very cooperative
promoter, ask if you can make a two-minute presentation before the event begins.
- Set up an information table or have volunteers circulate with fliers
at regular community events, such as farmers markets, flea markets, and street
festivals. Again, if you have a letter to a member of Congress or other urgent
action, make sure to bring them so that people can take action on the spot. These
are opportunities to engage the local community with your issue.
- Ask local
activist groups that don't deal directly with Guatemala if you can speak briefly
at their next meeting. If you have local chapters of Amnesty International, local
immigrant organizations, and other groups that may have an interest in Guatemala,
see if you can come and speak to them about a specific action that you are working
on. Most groups are more than happy to give other activists a few minutes to discuss
a new topic.
- Involve your religious community in advocacy for a more
just U.S. policy toward Guatemala.
- Hold a call-in or letter-writing day
in a local community space. This technique is especially useful leading up to
a major vote: members of your community can voice their concerns over a particular
issue related to Guatemala and ask their member of Congress to support a bill
or amendment to help change the policy. To set up a call-in or letter-writing
event, you'll need the phone numbers and addresses of your members of Congress,
and talking points on the issue for a phone call or letter. You may also want
a sample letter help guide writers. For additional resources on how to effectively
address Congress, please
click here.
- Organize a town or city council resolution. Across the
country, cities and towns have passed council resolutions expressing concern over
various human rights issues. These resolutions stand in solidarity with peoples
in other countries and often urge Congress to support peace and social justice
in U.S. foreign policy. Click
here for more information about how to draft and organize around such a resolution.
- Hold a rally, vigil, or parade in front of your member of Congress' district
or state office (you may need a permit, so be sure to go through the proper channels
a month or so before you hold the event!).
- Organize a film festival.
Ask your local movie theater to sponsor a series of films with a Guatemala/human
rights theme, or plan your own film festival on campus or in a local community
space.
- Coordinate thematic meals. Host a dinner featuring dishes from
Guatemala, either by preparing food yourself or gathering at a local restaurant.
Have a theme, play Guatemalan music, and decorate – and then during the event,
hand out information, or give a short talk about the issues you are working on.
Be sure to include an action and a way participants can remain involved with your
group/issue.
- Hold an art show. Ask art students or local artists to create
and donate works with a peace and justice/Guatemalan theme for an exhibition and/or
raffle.
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