The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Atlanta march evokes nonviolenc­e in Charlottes­ville’s wake

- By Michael E. Kanell mkanell@ajc.com

A diverse group of protesters decried racism, sexism and tolerance of injustice before taking to the streets of Atlanta Saturday night in a rally organized in response to last week’s violence in Charlottes­ville, Virginia.

The interracia­l crowd — numbering about 2,000 — marched to the tomb of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. Similar rallies were taking place in other cities on Saturday. Thousands of people crammed into the Boston Common to demonstrat­e against a “free speech” rally some feared would attract white supremacis­ts and spark additional violence.

In Atlanta, many demonstrat­ors held aloft signs that ranged from “Make Racism Wrong Again” to “Reclaiming My Time Against neo-Nazis.” There were also periodic references to the controvers­y over Confederat­e monuments that was the trigger to last week’s violence. Georgia must remove the sym-

bols that justified segregatio­n and glorified a war to defend slavery, state Sen. Vincent Fort, a Democrat who is running for mayor of Atlanta, told the crowd. “We must call on the City Council to change every Confederat­e named street in this city. The Confederat­e memorial in Piedmont Park has to be pulled up by the roots.”

And while mentioned only now and then, President Donald Trump was vehemently denounced for tolerating or even encouragin­g white supremacis­ts.

“We need to make a point, after Charlottes­ville,” said Jenny Howard, 66, of Decatur, standing at the back of the crowd. “Will a couple thousand people marching in Atlanta topple the Trump presidency? No. But it is part of something bigger. It takes a lot of little things to build to a larger momentum.”

Her mother fled Nazi Germany as a child and her father served in the Navy in World War II, she said. “So it’s also personal.”

Sarah Miller, 26, of Atlanta, said she has taken part in many marches and doesn’t expect any one action to make a dramatic difference. “But this is about expanding the crowd, to get people who thought that it’s not that bad to see how bad it is.”

Change is daunting, but it is necessary and it can be a kind of privilege to work for change, said Sarah Walton, 58, of Atlanta, who also said she is a veteran of many marches. “It feels like a blessing to be alive at this time. We have an opportunit­y to be God’s hands and feet.”

There were chants: “Self-defense is our culture! Survival is our duty!”

There was enthusiast­ic call and response: “Show me what democracy looks like!” “This is what democracy looks like.”

Later in the evening, a separate event was planned for Decatur, another local aftershock from last week’s events in Charlottes­ville.

The event in downtown Atlanta was organized by the Georgia Alliance for Social Justice, a coalition that includes Black Lives Matter, the American Friends Service Committee and Georgia NAACP, as well as others. The Georgia Alliance was created in the aftermath of the women’s march in January.

The Atlanta march and rally were meant as nonviolent resistance to hate, said Janel Green, co-founder of the Georgia Alliance. “This is about bringing people together.”

The event was hastily organized after last week’s dramatic events in Virginia, when marches by white supremacis­ts led to counterdem­onstration­s, violent clashes and ultimately the death of a woman who was run down by a car.

Speakers included Rabbi David Spinrad of The Temple and Edward Ahmed Mitchell, executive director of the Council on American-Islamic Relations in Georgia.

“There is only one good reason to transgress the Sabbath and that is ... to save a life, and that is why I am here,” Spinrad said.

Mitchell told of a call from a man who said it was time to kill all Muslims. “I kept talking to him. Because I am not afraid.”

And while the organizers share a criticism of Confederat­e monuments, their views differ as to dealing with those icons.

“There is a diversity of opinion,” Green said. “Some people just want the monuments gone. Others are open to creative ways to remove symbols of hate while being honest about our history.”

The route of the march was not announced in advance, for security reasons, she said. However, the path was chosen “intentiona­lly to go by some monuments that do represent diversity and civil rights.”

After the speeches, the crowd marched along a circuitous route to Auburn Avenue and King’s tomb. Saturday’s events in Boston, where a crowd of counter-demonstrat­ors vastly outnumbere­d white nationalis­ts, spurred organizers here to invoke local pride.

“The streets of Boston are full! Let’s make sure the home of the Civil Rights Movement has an even bigger presence!” the organizers wrote on Facebook.

In Decatur on Saturday evening, an obelisk in the square near the old DeKalb Courthouse was both the location and the subject of discussion, said Hannah Hill.

Roughly 2,000 names are on a petition calling for the removal of the 30-foot tall monument, but the idea Saturday was to invite a wide range of opinions about a response to the obelisk, said Hill, who is a local minister. “It is a discussion, not a rally. We want to hear all points of view.”

In fact, there is at least one online effort to protect the monument, a website that says it has 250 supporters.

Hill said she welcomes those who want the monument to stand unchanged. “That it not what I want, but that doesn’t mean I shouldn’t listen to those people.”

Although the monument makes reference to the Civil War, it was erected in the early years of the 20th century when former Confederat­e states were passing Jim Crow laws that effectivel­y made blacks second-class citizens, Hill said.

The monument and its position was clearly meant to underscore that status, she said. “It is a stone, phallic object in front of the place where African-American people were going to be tried for violating those laws. So it was a statement.”

 ?? HYOSUB SHIN / AJC ?? Janel Green (center), co-founder of Georgia Alliance for Social Justice, and others lead protesters as they march to the Martin Luther King National Historic Site during the Take Down White Supremacy March at Centennial Olympic Park on Saturday.
HYOSUB SHIN / AJC Janel Green (center), co-founder of Georgia Alliance for Social Justice, and others lead protesters as they march to the Martin Luther King National Historic Site during the Take Down White Supremacy March at Centennial Olympic Park on Saturday.
 ??  ?? About 2,000 people took part in the march in downtown Atlanta on Saturday for a display of resistance against hate and white supremacy in the state. Speakers included people of different religious faiths.
About 2,000 people took part in the march in downtown Atlanta on Saturday for a display of resistance against hate and white supremacy in the state. Speakers included people of different religious faiths.
 ??  ?? The Georgia Alliance for Social Justice gathered diverse groups at Centennial Olympic Park and peacefully marched to the Martin Luther King National Historic Site, a path chosen “to go by some monuments that do represent diversity and civil rights.”
The Georgia Alliance for Social Justice gathered diverse groups at Centennial Olympic Park and peacefully marched to the Martin Luther King National Historic Site, a path chosen “to go by some monuments that do represent diversity and civil rights.”
 ?? HYOSUB SHIN PHOTOS / HSHIN@AJC.COM ?? Mitzi Mills (center) holds a sign along with other protesters as they gather at Centennial Olympic Park before the Take Down White Supremacy March on Saturday.
HYOSUB SHIN PHOTOS / HSHIN@AJC.COM Mitzi Mills (center) holds a sign along with other protesters as they gather at Centennial Olympic Park before the Take Down White Supremacy March on Saturday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States