Quantcast

A quieter Occupy came back to Zuccotti

OTS2

Many dozens of Occupy demonstrators returned to Zuccotti Park July 6. The scene, although sometimes loud, was far from the drama of two years ago when the international Occupy Wall Street movement began in the Lower Manhattan park.

Only about 10 uniform and white-shirted police officers were on hand for the Occupy Town Square event and they mostly observed.

In one instance, police apparently tried to remove pamphlets, but protesters sat down on them and yelled, which ended the confrontation. Demonstrators yelled at police a few other times, but there were no arrests.

Katrina Oaks, 27, of Trinity, said she and her fellow protesters have learned something from 2011.

“When cops came at you, unfortunately when they were cracking you, we had no choice but to push them off your people,” she said. “So this time we’re trying to be more peaceful with them.”

Police on the scene as well as their spokespersons had no comment.

Throughout the event, which was planned to go from noon to 8 p.m., Occupy participants sat in a large circle to discuss issues and sing songs, replenishing themselves with organic food.

With many fewer demonstrators, arrests and confrontations, there was also dramatically less attention at Zuccotti. Saturday’s event drew no celebrities and there did not appear to be any media presence except for a Downtown Express photographer.

— Yoon Seo Nam and Josh Rogers

Downtown Express photos by Yoon Seo Nam There were no arrests at an Occupy Wall Street event earlier in July.
Downtown Express photos by Yoon Seo Nam
There were no arrests at an Occupy Wall Street event earlier in July.