Las Vegas Review-Journal

Fighting hate with signs of unity

North Las Vegas vigil offers reply to displays of bigotry

- By Sandy Lopez Las Vegas Review-journal

In the wake of the violent protests in Charlottes­ville, Virginia, Jolie Brislin’s 10-year-old daughter had an important question for her mother, the regional director of the Anti-defamation League.

“What are you going to do about it?” “She’s 10 years old and she nailed it,” Brislin told an audience of approximat­ely 700 people gathered for a vigil Sunday afternoon at the First African Methodist Episcopal Church in North Las Vegas. “This is what we should all be asking. What are we going to be doing about this?” Las Vegas is, and will always be, no place for hate. We cannot combat one form of hatred without combating all forms of bigotry.

The standing-room-only vigil Sunday called for peace and unity after white supremacis­t protesters were

heard spewing bigotry and hatred last weekend.

In response, Las Vegans stood shoulder-to-shoulder in pews denouncing anti-semitism, racism and bigotry.

“When I saw what happened in Charlottes­ville, it took me back to the 1960s, when I was a kid watching what took place during the civil rights

VIGIL

movement,” said First AME Church Pastor Ralph Williamson. “It is a fresh reminder that racism is not dead. It’s alive and well in our nation. We need to do something that will drasticall­y change this. I never want to see that happen again.”

Despite a broken air conditione­r, people flapped fans and passionate­ly sang spirituals and songs of love.

“I was thinking the air conditione­r was broken today because we should not be comfortabl­e — not comfortabl­e and not complacent,” said U.S. Rep. Jacky Rosen, D-nev. “When they lit those torches in Charlottes­ville, what they did was ignite a blaze that is burning across our nation and bringing us together in the name of equality, justice, tolerance and, yes, in shared faith.”

The National Associatio­n for the Advancemen­t of Colored People, the Anti-defamation League, the Interfaith Council of Southern Nevada, the Jewish Federation and multiple religious faith groups sponsored the vigil.

“Las Vegas is, and will always be, no place for hate,” Brislin said. “We cannot combat one form of hatred without combating all forms of bigotry.”

Prayers were said asking for good for all people.

One man disrupted the vigil shouting that he was disappoint­ed in everyone, although it was unclear why. He was escorted out soon after. Speakers talked of how people are not born hating, but that hate is learned and can be unlearned. Another speaker shouted, “All lives matter.”

State Senate Majority Leader Aaron Ford, D-las Vegas, focused his speech on his son who at age 5 was told by other boys at his day care center that he could not sit with them because he is black.

“At 5 years old, I had to have a discussion with my son about race,” Ford said. “That discussion ended with him saying, ‘But, Daddy, why won’t my friends let me sit with them?’ I was reminded that hatred is learned. I don’t blame those young boys. I blame their parents.”

Terry Walker came to the event in hopes that people would act.

“We have freedom of speech, but when it deals with violence and hate, we need legislatio­n to happen,” Walker said. “This won’t be solving any problems. We need a solution. I’m sick and tired of this violence.”

During the vigil, many lit candles and sang a song of hope, and others hugged and smiled, in the spirit of unity.

D.J. Sinai, of Temple Beth Sholom, attended the vigil with the hope that peace can bring togetherne­ss.

“‘Zechor’ means remember,” Sinai said. “We need to remember these kinds of horrible events, so they don’t happen again. What happened in Charlottes­ville showed that we didn’t learn from each other in the past.”

“Las Vegas needs to be the stepping ground, be the example and show that hate will always lose.”

Contact Sandy Lopez at slopez@ reviewjour­nal.com or 702-383-4686. Follow @Journalism­sandy on Twitter.

 ?? Elizabeth Brumley ?? Las Vegas Review-journal Las Vegans observe a moment of silence Sunday during a vigil at the First African Methodist Episcopal Church in North Las Vegas to denounce anti-semitism, racism and bigotry.
Elizabeth Brumley Las Vegas Review-journal Las Vegans observe a moment of silence Sunday during a vigil at the First African Methodist Episcopal Church in North Las Vegas to denounce anti-semitism, racism and bigotry.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States