Mother to make statement in Charlottesville on Friday
For Immediate Release: August 30, 2007
WHAT: Statement by Mary Hanna
WHEN: 10:00 a.m. ET, Friday, August 31, 2007
WHERE: 308 Parkwood Place in Woodbrook (Take 29 N to Woodbrook Drive [Lowes and Kohr Bros]. Turn east on Woodbrook. Go to the stop sign. Turn left on Brookmere. Go to the next stop sign. Turn right on Idlewood. Go two blocks. Turn left on Parkwood. It’s the second house on the right.)
Evan Knappenberger of Charlottesville, Va., a graduate of Albemarle High School and a veteran of the Iraq War, has appeared on national television news shows and in numerous national and international media outlets this week.
On Wednesday, the Washington Post published a lengthy profile that included these lines:
Evan Knappenberger is like many young post-Sept. 11 Army enlistees who went from high school into the military for patriotic reasons. He wanted to spread democracy, to topple Saddam Hussein, ‘to do something to affect the world in a good way,’ the freckled 22-year-old says. Today, Knappenberger is a disillusioned Iraq War veteran, four months out of the military and on a one-man mission as a peace activist campaigning against Defense Department policies that he believes unethically support the continuation of the war. He is not so much protesting as standing guard against the Pentagon’s so-called ‘stop-loss’ and ‘inactive reserve’ policies, both designed to maintain troop strength in light of failed recruitment goals. His platform is a makeshift six-foot-tall guard tower that he erected Sunday next to the Washington Monument. There, outfitted in his battle dress uniform, Knappenberger is holding a vigil for seven nights and eight days. The policies have, in effect, created conscripted service in an ostensibly voluntary military, he said. ‘How do you tell a 17-year-old or a 55-year-old grandpa that [he’s] part of a voluntary military and yet he’s being involuntarily extended?’ Knappenberger asked.
The scaffolding Knappenberger used to set up his guard tower on the National Mall in Washington, he hauled there from Charlottesville in a U-Haul from his mother’s house.
Knappenberger’s mother, Mary Hanna, has never spoken in public before, but her family has been deeply impacted by the policy her son is protesting, and she is extremely proud of what he is doing. She will make a statement and take questions from the media at her home at 10 a.m. on Friday.
Additional photos, videos, reports, Knappenberger’s blog, and his statement of purpose can be found at http://www.towerguard.org
Hanna can provide a photo of her son leaving Charlottesville with the materials to build his tower.
Contact: David Swanson 202-329-7847, Mary Hanna 434-249-5954