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Toledo, Ohio: Neo-Nazi march sparks riot
By Kate Randall
17 October 2005
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A riot broke out in Toledo, Ohio on Saturday, provoked by the
plans of a group of neo-Nazis to march through the predominantly
black neighborhood. Police used pepper spray, mace and wooden
bullets against the crowd and arrested at least 60 anti-Nazi protesters.
City authorities had granted a march permit to the National
Socialist Movement, which brought a dozen members from out of
town. The group calls itself Americas Nazi Party.
A spokesman for the group said it had come to the city because
of black criminal behavior.
News of the planned demonstration provoked widespread anger
among North Toledo residents, and front lawns throughout the area
were peppered with Erase the Hate signs in anticipation
of the march. According to the Toledo Blade, at about 11
a.m. the group of uniformed neo-Nazis gathered on the east side
of Woodward High School, shouting racist slogans and carrying
signs reading White People Unite! Fight for Your Race!
Toledo police, some on horseback, were stationed nearby to
protect the neo-Nazis. Some 20 minutes later a cordon of 40 more
police officers surrounded the marchers to protect them in preparation
for the march. Some of the cops began to arm themselves with plastic
shields.
Meanwhile, a crowd of counter-demonstrators had gathered across
the street, chanting slogans such as Nazi Hate Has Got to
Go, Black and White Unite, and No Racists
in Toledo. At about 11:35 a.m., according to the Blade,
protesters began throwing rocks at the neo-Nazis and the police,
and police made their first arrest.
Several minutes later, the neo-Nazis marched to nearby Woodrow
Wilson Park. Just before noon, Toledo police began firing the
first of many canisters of teargas at local residents gathering
to protest the march. The crowd, numbering now in the hundreds,
began throwing bricks and rocks at buildings and passing vehicles,
according to the Blade.
Around noontime, police made a decision to cancel the march.
Shouting censorshipand giving the Nazi salutethe
neo-Nazis eventually agreed to leave the area and drove away by
car.
The standoff between police and rioters, however, intensified.
A pitched battle ensued in the area over the next several hours,
with 30 or more vehicles pelted with rocks, including police and
emergency services vehicles. The crowd numbered from 300 to as
many as 600.
An estimated 400 Toledo cops, or about 60 percent of the city
force, were on the scene. Police fired on the crowds with pepper
spray, mace and wooden knee-knocker pellets. At about
2:15 p.m., Toledo Mayor Jack Ford, First Chief Mike Bell and a
member of the local clergy arrived on the scene. Ford and Bell
addressed the crowd by megaphone, trying unsuccessfully to disperse
the anti-Nazi demonstrators and calm the violence.
The Blade reports that some in the crowd looted several
local businesses, including a convenience store and a bar, which
was set afire. Bricks, stones and shattered glass littered the
streets. Initial estimates of damage were in the tens of thousands
of dollars.
Police began a mass sweep and made about 60 arrestsincluding
43 adults and 17 juveniles, charged primarily with aggravated
rioting, assault and vandalism. Mayor Ford told the press that
gang members were among those arrested. By 4 p.m. the crowd had
largely dispersed.
The decision of city authorities to grant the neo-Nazis permission
to march in North Toledo was a clear provocation. In a previous
interview with the Toledo Blade, Bill White, a landlord
from Roanoke, Virginia, who serves as a spokesman for the group,
commented that it did not want to kill minoritiesWe
just want them to be removed from our country.
The white supremacists claimed they came to North Toledo to
support white resident John Szych, who had been feuding with a
black neighbor and gang members in the area. Szych acknowledges
that these tensions exist, but strenuously denies that he invited
or encouraged the neo-Nazis to come. I dont need them
to defend my rights, he told the Blade.
The social tensions that came to a head in North Toledo on
Saturday have been exacerbated by growing unemployment and poverty.
Toledo, once a bustling center of auto production, has seen the
loss of thousands of jobs over the past several decades.
Overall, more than 8,000 manufacturing jobs have moved out
of the city since 2000. Young residents of North Toledo seeking
to enter the workforce today stand no chance of finding a decent-paying
job in an auto factory. The unemployment rate for blacks stands
at 14.2 percent in Lucas County, where Toledo is located.
Jeep, which once employed tens of thousands of workers, is
a shell of its former self. The Toledo North Plant, adjacent to
the North Toledo neighborhood, began operations in 2001 as part
of DaimlerChrysler. With about 2,800 workers, it employs 1,400
fewer workers than the old Jeep facility on Jeep Parkway.
Poverty figures released in August by the US Census Bureau
show Toledo ranked 40th last year among the nations 70 poorest
cities, dropping somewhat from 20th poorest the previous year.
A total of 16.5 percent of all Toledoans lived in poverty in 2004.
In Lucas County, 32.4 percent of all African Americans, and
44.6 percent of black children are poor. These figures grossly
underestimate the real level of poverty, since they are based
on the federal poverty line of $18,850 for a family of fouran
absurdly low cut-off point.
The explosion this weekend in Toledo is an expression of the
social and class tensions that simmer just below the surface of
society, not only in Toledo, but in cities across the US. These
tensions have been fueled by worsening economic conditions for
broad sections of the working class, and aggravated by distrust
and hatred for politiciansboth Democratic and Republicanat
the local and federal level. The election of Jack Ford, a black
Democrat, as Toledo mayor in 2001 has done nothing to alleviate
the conditions of Toledo workers, either black or white.
The devastation in North Toledo is typical of conditions that
exist in city after city across America. The anger over these
conditions has been exacerbated in the recent period by the Bush
administrations response to the Hurricane Katrina disaster.
Incidents such as the unprovoked beating of a 64-year-old black
resident, a former schoolteacher, by New Orleans police last weekendwhich
was videotaped and televised nationwideadd fuel to this
fire. (See Videotaped police beating
in New Orleans)
A new NBC News/Wall Street Journal poll shows Bushs overall
approval rating has plummeted to 39 percent, the lowest of his
presidency. The same poll reported that a mere 2 percent of African-Americans
approve of Bushs performance.
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