WATERVILLE — When Mindy Bergeron-Lawrence along with a few other women decided to organize a rally and march in the Waterville area after the recent political turmoil, they decided to invite as many different organizations as possible.

The result was about 35 people gathered in front of Post Office Square on Saturday in 20-degree weather who represented not only a wide geographical range but also a wide range of organizations and interests.

There were people from Lewiston, Bangor, Portland, Vassalboro and Winslow. There were people representing Planned Parenthood, where Bergeron-Lawrence does volunteer work, the Mid Coast Queer Collective, the Bangor Racial and Economic Justice Coalition, Hardy Girls Healthy Women and the Unitarian Universalist Church.

Cecil Brooks, facing, waves to a fellow Forward Together marcher at Post Office Square in Waterville on Saturday.

Cecil Brooks, facing, waves to a fellow Forward Together marcher at Post Office Square in Waterville on Saturday. Michael G. Seamans/Waterville Sentinel

One attendee, Alianne Harper, director and co-founder the Mid Coast Queer Collective, spoke about how unique the rally was. Harper said it’s not often that people provide a variety of organizations a platform to come speak, network and share their information with others.

“More than ever, now is a time for accomplices,” Harper said. “This is the time for coalition building. This is the time to look to our neighbors.”

Bergeron-Lawrence dubbed the group, which will continue to organize after this first official demonstration, “Forward Together.”

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The rally and march was a “peaceful coming together” after an election that left many people “feeling shrouded in a little darkness,” said Aubrey Trout, director of communications for Forward Together. Dec. 10 is known an International Human Rights Day.

Bergeron-Lawrence said she was inspired by Wendy Davis, a former democratic Texas senator who attracted national attention when she held a more than 10-hour long filibuster on the state senate floor in 2013 to block a bill that would have further restricted abortion regulations in Texas.

When she saw Davis filibustering for hours, Bergeron-Lawrence said it made her ask herself what she was doing, and it also gave her hope.

“We can fight,” Bergeron-Lawrence said. “We must fight. And we can win.”

Rita Moran clutches on to a sign during a Forward Together march outside Post Office Square on Maine Street in Waterville on Saturday.

Rita Moran clutches on to a sign during a Forward Together march outside Post Office Square on Maine Street in Waterville on Saturday. Michael G. Seamans/Waterville Sentinel

The rally and march was a “peaceful coming together” after an election that left many people “feeling shrouded in a little darkness,” said Aubrey Trout, director of communications for Forward Together. The rally stood in solidarity with a wide range of causes, Trout said, including LGBTQ rights, the Black Lives Matter movement, gun control, environmental issues and Planned Parenthood.

After the rally, the group marched down the sidewalk on Elm Street, around and then back up Main Street, chanting things like, “What do we want? Equal rights! When do we want it? Now!” and “This is what democracy looks like.”

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Emily Magner, who works for Planned Parenthood in Portland, spoke about human rights and how that related to the issues at hand today.

“Sixty-eight years ago on this day, the United Nations General Assembly adopted the Universal Declaration of Human Rights,” Magner said. Now, Dec. 10 is known an International Human Rights Day.

“In central Maine, we respect the rights of women,” she said. “Here in Waterville and across Maine, we know that black lives matter.”

Rita Moran, chairwoman of the Kennebec County Democrats, also spoke to the group.

“We didn’t lose to the Republicans,” she said. “We were defeated by the DNC.”

However, Moran pointed out that on a state a local level, democrats have been winning. “We took a senate seat that has been red for 10 years,” she said.

She encouraged people to pay attention to the local elections, too, emphasizing that who gets elected to those positions “really matters.”

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