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Wednesday, October 18, 2006
Giant T-shirt protest for Pollard - Danville, VA

A HEART-WARMING STORY ABOUT A T-SHIRT

Justice4JP Release - October 19, 2006

"I want to help Jonathan, but what can an ordinary citizen like myself do?"
is a question that we at J4JP hear all the time.

A man named Barry Koplen in Danville, Virginia wrote to tell us what he is
doing. His letter proves that everyone can find something effective to do to
help Jonathan if they really want to.

Here is the text of Barry's letter to us ( reprinted with his permission).
We hope that it will be as inspiring to our readers as it was heart-warming
for us!

I purchased a huge T-shirt (five feet tall and almost seven feet wide) and
had the words FREE JONATHAN POLLARD embroidered on it. I mounted the giant
shirt on wooden posts then planted it, like a most unique sign, on a piece
of property that our store owns. The property and the sign face the end of
one of the more prominent bridges in our town.

For almost a week, the Pollard sign stood proudly. Then someone stole the
sign. I reported the theft to the police and called the newspaper. The paper
wrote a front page story about it. Everyone in our town (Danville, VA, less
than three hours from Jonathan's prison) read about the shirt and the
Pollard story.

Next week, in the same paper, we will advertise a REWARD for the return of
the shirt while continuing to explain Jonathan's plight. To that end, I have
used the editorial you have posted below. [Release Jonathan Pollard - Jlem
Post Editorial www.jonathanpollard.org/2006/100906a.htm ]

"If the T-shirt is not returned, we will erect another and will get
television coverage while it is being erected.

Just wanted to let you know that, in our own small way, we are doing our
part to help secure Jonathan's release.

Thanks, as always, for your good work.

Barry Koplen

====

Stolen: One really giant T-shirt
By SUSAN ELZEY
Register & Bee staff writer
September 30, 2006
www.registerbee.com/servlet/Satellite?pagename=DRB%2FMGArticle%2FDRB_BasicArticle&c=MGArticle&cid=1149190905001&path=!news

DANVILLE - Barry Koplen, vice president of Abe Koplen Clothing, chose his
familiar world of clothing as a way to advertise a cause he strongly
supports, but then someone else chose to steal his message.

Koplen has long been concerned about the complicated case of Jonathan
Pollard, a former American naval intelligence analyst who has been
imprisoned for 22 years for spying for Israel. Koplen agrees with thousands
who believe that Pollard has been held far too long.

"He's a cause celebre in Israel," Koplen said.

After receiving no response from letters to congressmen and senators, Koplen
decided in his own way to bring public attention to the matter of political
prisoners being held unjustly in America.

"I went to a big and tall men's clothing show where I'm always looking for
clothing that is hard to find, like pants size 76, and clothing I can
display," Koplen said. "I saw a big T-shirt, so I decided I'd make the world's
biggest Abe's T-shirt."

Lacking the space inside his store to hang the giant shirt, he decided to
hang it on the outside of his store.

That's when Koplen got the idea to merge the giant T-shirt display with his
feelings about Pollard, so he had a second giant T-shirt embroidered with
"Free Jonathan Pollard."

"I wanted to do something to bring it to everyone's attention and get the
representatives of this area to do something," Koplen said.

Mounting and displaying the shirt - about a size 200 - on his store proved
to be more complicated and expensive than he expected. Then, about the same
time, he noticed that candidates for the upcoming elections had displayed
signs on property the store owns on Memorial Drive across from Robertson
Bridge.

"I realized that people could put signs up without permission," he said,
"and I realized if I displayed the shirt that people would know that this is
something we are interested in."

So Koplen had his giant T-shirt mounted on the property's hill, which, he
said, brought the cost of the project to more than $350.

It stayed there a week before Koplen noticed on Monday that it had been
stolen. A police report was filed and Koplen said that his father, Abe
Koplen, has plans to offer a reward for its return.

In the meantime, Barry Koplen said he feels good about his effort to make
people aware of the injustice he feels Pollard has suffered.

"My feeling is that there are things we have strong feelings about and if we
don't do anything, we are part of the problem," he said. "At least if
nothing comes of it, I've tried.

"I'm involved because it's time to set the record straight that America ...
is not living up to the standard they want the rest of the world to live by.
We can be an example in setting Pollard free."

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