The Phoenix Network:
 
 
About  |  Advertise
 
News Features  |  Talking Politics  |  This Just In
unsexy2011_1000x50b

A casket gets some airtime

Deadly
By ABIGAIL CROCKER  |  December 30, 2009

 TJI_Harlow_main

Bert Harlow, woodworker and founder of the Narrows Center for the Arts in Fall River, Massachusetts, made his own casket a few years ago. But he figured the pine box should get some use before he was nailed into it.

So in 2002, he loaned it out for a Fall River protest against the Iraq War. Members of a local church filled the casket with live peace doves, and then released them in a striking bit of street theater.

"It was a shock factor to some people," said Harlow.

But that was just the first bit of coffin agitprop. Harlow's casket has become a regular feature of lefty protests in southeastern New England.

In November of 2007, Harlow loaned out his bit of woodcraft to Fall River-based environmental activist group Green Futures for a demonstration against a project that has sparked widespread opposition in both Massachusetts and Rhode Island — the liquefied natural-gas (LNG) terminal that Weaver's Cove Energy and Hess LNG have proposed for Mount Hope Bay.

The activists staged a mock funeral. An undertaker dressed in black lead the procession. Protesters waved signs. A few construction workers working for the companies behind the proposal looked on.

"They were somewhat bemused," said Everett Castro, community affairs coordinator for Green Futures.

The funeral was an appropriate bit of stagecraft, Harlow said, given the potential for a deadly LNG explosion. "If you go to war, people die," he said. "If an LNG facility blows up, people die. It's a bearer of message."

A Vietnam War veteran, Harlow strings a large peace sign made out of lights in front of his door. Harlow said he yearns for a time when people made noise over issues of concern.

"People are now afraid of being criticized. There needs to be some civil disobedience," Harlow said.

But Castro said the casket must be used sparingly or risk losing its force. "I think the local papers are sick of seeing the coffin," he said.

For now, the casket sits in Castro's garage, awaiting its next assignment.

"It's sort of like Zorro," he said, "it just shows up."

Related: Questioning the Legality of Straight Marriage, Change? What change?, Photos: Most popular slideshows of 2009, More more >
  Topics: This Just In , Culture and Lifestyle, Hobbies and Pastimes, Iraq War,  More more >
| More

 Friends' Activity   Popular   Most Viewed 
[ 12/09 ]   Dan Blake and Jason Palmer  @ Wally's Café
[ 12/09 ]   Esperanza Spalding + Geri Allen + Toni Lyne Carrington  @ Scullers Jazz Club
[ 12/09 ]   Mos Def  @ Wilbur Theatre
ARTICLES BY ABIGAIL CROCKER
Share this entry with Delicious
  •   SWORDS, CYCLES, SKATES — AND SCROTIE  |  August 31, 2010
    Sporting venues don't have to be limited to large corporate-sponsored stands full of foam fingers. Some of the more unique — and irreverent — sports teams can be found right in Lil' Rhody's backyard.
  •   AT THE CABLE CAR: THE WIND-LASHED AND SEA-WORN  |  May 12, 2010
    On a recent Sunday, the usual grad school crowd at the Cable Car Cinema in Providence gave way to something different — the wind-lashed faces and sea-worn hands of Rhode Island’s oft-ignored surfing community.
  •   A MUSIC PRODUCER EYES A REVIVAL  |  April 14, 2010
    It was 2006 and music producer Jo Jo Gator, a couple of decades removed from the glory days, needed to get back on the radar screen.
  •   AFTER FORT THUNDER, THE ZINE LIVES  |  February 03, 2010
    Last week, friends of the zine Taffy Hips gathered at Ada Books on Westminster Street to celebrate the sixth issue: robot comics, prints of giant tsunami waves, and an interview with Chicago-based cartoonist Anya Davidson.
  •   OF DOCTOR TREMENDANUS AND THE GIANT FURRY JELLYFISH  |  January 06, 2010
    It was New Year’s Eve and in the belly of the Roxy nightclub, away from the teeming Bright Night crowds, there were monsters on the loose: creatures with protruding noses, googly eyes, and spindly legs.

 See all articles by: ABIGAIL CROCKER

MOST POPULAR
RSS Feed of for the most popular articles
 Most Viewed   Most Emailed