James Selvitella and Declan Haley run a peace-themed lemonade stand Saturday in front of the Cambridge Main Library. (Photos: Haley family)

As up to 40,000 Bay Staters made ready to descend Saturday on the Boston Common to protest a โ€œFree Speech Rallyโ€ linked to white supremacists, many parents โ€“ fearful of the same type of fatal violence that broke out at a Charlottesville, Va., white supremacy march the previous weekend โ€“ struggled with whether to bring their children. Even though the organizers of the rally insisted they were not affiliated with Charlottesville rally organizers, the slate boasted some of the same speakers with ties to hate groups, and the City of Boston and Boston Police Department were on high alert.

Children make art at the lemonade stand Saturday โ€“ an alternative to marching in potential danger in Boston.

For one Cambridge family that wanted to spread the word of peace and inclusion โ€“ and be part of the movement without risking getting caught in the fray โ€“ the reasonable option took the form of a lemonade stand outside the Cambridge Main Library, with the proceeds going to Black Lives Matter Cambridge and the recently vandalized New England Holocaust Memorial.

Elizabeth Haley, a resident of Inman Square, didn’t feel comfortable taking her 8-year-old son to the rally, and sought other ways to engage the community and support the movement. โ€œIt was my son, Declan, who came up with the idea,โ€ Haley said. The stand, prominent on Broadway with the banner โ€œLemonade for Peace,โ€ wasnโ€™t your typical impromptu corner stand; the Haleys had come wth a large folding table, colorful signs and art supplies to engage thirsty passers-by.

The art angle was the brainchild of Haleyโ€™s friend, Julie Selvitella, a Cambridge resident who teaches art in Andover, and her son James, who felt a communal art project would enrich the effort and bring unity. People getting drinks or just stopping by could write a message of acceptance and hope on a heart, with those hearts then hung on pinwheel structures hanging from the great willow tree sheltering the stand.

Hearts with messages left by lemonade buyers became decorations for the kids’ stand.

โ€œThe day worked out so well because it was so last-minute and we didn’t complicate things by overthinking it,โ€ Haley said. โ€œWe met a lot of people who were on their way to the rally. Also,. there were many families with small children who felt the same way we did, so they were happy to make a donation and work on the art installation.โ€

The stand raised a few hundred dollars in just three hours, Haley said.


The homepage image used with this story is by Tom Meek.

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Tom Meek is a writer living in Cambridge. His reviews, essays, short stories and articles have appeared in The Boston Phoenix, The Rumpus, Thieves Jargon, Film Threat and Open Windows. Tom is a member...