FIRST GI CAFE IN GERMANY OPENS ITS DOORS
FIRST GI CAFE IN GERMANY OPENS ITS DOORS
by Helen Jaccard and Gerry Condon
Kaiserslautern, Germany, March 25, 2012
U.S. soldiers in Germany now have a GI coffeehouse. The Clearing Barrel
Bar and Café opened Saturday, March 24, in Kaiserslautern, Germany,
home to Ramstein Air Base and Landstuhl Regional Medical Center, among a
constellation of U.S. bases, with 50,000 U.S. military and civilian
personnel living in the area.
The grand opening was a big success,
with over 60 people in attendance. Well-wishers enjoyed good food and
drink, and marveled at the large beautifully remodeled space, with
couches, tables, chairs, a bar and barstools, his and hers bathrooms,
and a full kitchen.
Beautifully
printed posters from the “War Is Trauma” art exhibit were displayed on
spacious white walls. “War Is Trauma,”a collaboration between Just
Seeds, an art collective from Brooklyn, New York, and Iraq Veterans
Against the War (IVAW), is about “Operation Recovery”, a campaign to
stop the deployment of traumatized troops and to focus public attention
towards Post Traumatic Stress Disorder, Traumatic Brain Injury and
Military Sexual Trauma.
Neighbors,
friends, and activists convened from far and near, including Germans
and U.S. citizens living in Germany. Nathan Peld, an IVAW member,
arrived after a long train ride from Vienna, Austria, where he is
working with the United Nation’s International Atomic Energy Agency
(IAEA).
Young German women and men mixed easily with
Vietnam-era friends. Political discussions were lively and interesting.
Live music was provided by two young men, one German and one American,
who sang and played guitars and were joined by guests in a sing-along.
Chris Capps-Schubert, an Iraq veteran and war resister, and his German
wife Meike, an organizer-extraordinaire and member of Military Families
Speak Out, have been working very hard for the past two years to make
their dream of opening a GI coffeehouse in Germany a reality. Their
efforts have been supported by the Military Counseling Network,
Connection-EV, the Center on Conscience and War, the German Mennonite
Peace Committee, members of IVAW and Veterans For Peace, and many other
German and American friends and activists.
Meike and Chris are
both counselors with the Military Counseling Network, the European
branch of the GI Rights Hotline. Chris has been a member of IVAW for
several years and went on a speaking tour around Germany to gain support
for The Clearing Barrel project. Chris and Meike and other counselors
will be available to help soldiers who are seeking to be discharged
from the military, facing other difficulties with the military, or
seeking help dealing with military trauma.
Meike said, “Having
this space available allows us to bring together in one place what we do
personally, socially, culturally, and politically. I am very grateful
for all of the help and support that we have received from the peace
community and we hope that they will continue to support us.”
Helen Jaccard and Gerry Condon representing Veterans For Peace spoke of
the importance of supporting alleged Wikileaks whistleblower Bradley
Manning, and GI resisters like André Shepherd, an Iraq veteran who
refused to redeploy to Iraq and is seeking political asylum in Germany.
Dave Blalock, a Vietnam-era GI organizer who lives in Heidelberg,
Germany, said “This is the beginning of resistance.”
GI
coffeehouses were a mainstay of GI resistance in the Vietnam era,
providing safe, alternative spaces for soldiers to socialize, learn
about their rights in the military, receive counseling, engage one
another in political discussions, and organize themselves to resist
illegal wars and occupations. The coffeehouse movement grew throughout
the 60sand 70s. Today’s veterans have revived the coffeehouse tradition
in order to build community and resistance. There are two successful
GI coffeehouses in the U.S., Coffee Strong just outside the gates of
Joint Base Lewis McCord in Washington State, and Under the Hood at Fort
Hood, Texas.
You can find out more about The Clearing Barrel on their Facebook page, GI Café Germany, and on their website, www.GICafeGermany.com.
Donations are still very much needed, so it’s not too late to
contribute to this important new resource for our GIs in Germany