Subject: Eat Disney Sender: jya@pipeline.com (John Young) The New York Times, September 7, 1996, p. 23. Taking a Stand Against Disney And Its World By David Gonzalez Disney's blitz marches on, its beachheads surging into shopping strips, playgrounds and schools filled with kiddie troops wearing the uniforms of Pocahontas and Quasimodo. Some days you have to wonder if we'll all wind up taking orders from the Mouse. Facing this onslaught, Jim Geist took his counteroffensive to Times Square recently, actually giving away copies of a just-finished Disney video. It wasn't a plot to flood the market with bootleg cartoons. His tape was live action, of interviews with the Haitian workers who sew the happy-faced T-shirts and pajamas and other items that contribute to the estimated $1 billion the company earns licensing its characters. The Haitian workers, he said, earn 30 cents an hour. They live on credit. Their children go hungry. They make about $11 a week, less than the retail price of a Pocahontas shirt. First the Gap. Then Kathie Lee Gifford. Et tu, Pluto? The Disney Company is the latest target of a coalition of religious and labor groups that seeks to highlight the working conditions at the overseas factories that churn out lucrative clothing lines. Disney was chosen on purpose, they said, because of its high profile and jealously guarded corporate image of wholesome family entertainment. The coalition wants Disney to increase its hourly wage to 58 cents and allow monitoring of its overseas factories. "Every group I've spoken to, their jaws hit the floor," said Mr. Geist, an assistant at an evangelical Christian church in Elmhurst, Queens. "They say, 'Please don't tell me Walt Disney is doing this.' " The company's response is contained in a one-page statement that says it requires all its overseas licensees to abide by its code of conduct, which stipulates that factories comply with local wage and workplace laws. It does not say how much the Haitian workers earn. A Disney spokeswoman said she would look into the matter. She did not call back. The Rev. David Dyson isn't surprised by that. Fifteen years ago, he founded the National Labor Committee, the group that took on the Gap and Kathie Lee Gifford and produced the Haiti videotape. Now the pastor of Lafayette Avenue Presbyterian Church in Brooklyn, he belongs to People of Faith, a nationwide network whose members rally congregations into speaking out on social and economic issues. "Companies don't like to get attention from churches," he said. "If it were just unions banging at them, they are somewhat impervious. But they don't like it when rabbis and priests unite and ask ethical and moral questions about their practices." Mr. Dyson's congregation in Fort Greene is no stranger to this. In the 1850's, it was a center of Abolitionist ardor whose pulpit was graced by Frederick Douglass and Henry Ward Beecher. A large wooden table, rebuilt years ago, commands the center of the pastor's office. The Emancipation Proclamation was drafted on it. Disney's minimal reaction, he said, echoed that of the Gap, which first tried to play down the criticism by holding up its corporate code of conduct like a shield before agreeing to modify its business practices. The problem, Mr. Dyson said, was that overseas manufacturers flout those codes. And while the companies say they abide by local laws, he said the minimum wage in the third world is often too low to allow workers to buy food and medicine. The question of a living wage becomes a moral issue that is a cornerstone of their public appeal. "Instead of talking about the global economy and the shattered social contract, let's go after the Gap when we hear they're making clothes in El Salvador," he said. "It's impossible to talk about capital flight without talking about what's going on in Haiti." Or without talking about what Disney is doing in New York, where it plans to stage a musical on the life of King David. "He was a biblical figure of justice of enormous purpose," Mr. Dyson said. "For Disney to be making more money off the character of King David at a time when the working poor in Haiti are starving is a perversion of history and theology." The Disneyfication of a classic Bible tale has emboldened Mr. Geist, who plans to continue his protests outside Disney's stores. He admits it is daunting, but he offers a parable for those who doubt they can change part of the global economy. "The majority of people say it's so huge, what can you do about it? " he said. " I say, "How do you eat an elephant? One bite at a time." Dumbo, you're on notice. [End]