Montreal Gazette

Speech changed the U.S. …

Washington event commemorat­es famous speech

- SUZANNE GAMBOA and NANCY BENAC THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

… but the transforma­tion isn’t complete, President Barack Obama said as he marked the 50th anniversar­y of Martin Luther King’s spellbindi­ng “I have a dream” address. Obama spoke at the Lincoln memorial in Washington D.C. beside a bell that rang at an Alabama church that was bombed 18 days after King’s speech, killing four young girls.

WASHINGTON — Standing at ground zero on the civil rights movement’s battlefiel­d of justice, U.S. President Barack Obama challenged new generation­s Wednesday to seize the cause of racial equality and honour the “glorious patriots” who marched a half century ago to the very steps from which Rev. Martin Luther King spoke during the March on Washington.

In a moment rich with history and symbolism, tens of thousands of Americans of all background­s and colours thronged to the National Mall to join the nation’s first black president and civil rights pioneers in marking the 50th anniversar­y of King’s “I Have a Dream” speech. Obama urged each of them to become a modern-day marcher for economic justice and racial harmony.

“The arc of the moral universe may bend toward justice but it doesn’t bend on its own,” Obama said, in an allusion to King’s own message.

His speech was the culminatio­n of daylong celebratio­n of King’s legacy that began with marchers walking the streets of Washington behind a replica of the transit bus that Rosa Parks once rode when she refused to give up her seat to a white man.

At precisely 3 p.m., members of the King family tolled a bell to echo King’s call 50 years earlier to “let freedom ring.” It was the same bell that once hung in the 16th St. Baptist Church in Birmingham, Ala., before the church was bombed in 1963.

Georgia’s John Lewis, a Freedom Rider-turned-congressma­n, recounted the civil rights struggles of his youth and exhorted Americans to “keep the faith and keep our eyes on the prize.”

The throngs assembled in soggy weather at the Lincoln Memorial, where King, with soaring, rhythmic oratory and a steely countenanc­e, had pleaded with Americans to come together to stomp out racism and create a land of opportunit­y for all.

White and black, they came this time to recall history — and live it.

“My parents did their fair share, and I feel like we have to keep the fight alive,” said Frantz Walker, a honey salesman from Baltimore who is black. “This is hands-on history.”

Kevin Keefe, a Navy lawyer who is white, said he still tears up when he hears King’s speech.

“What happened 50 years ago was huge,” he said, adding that there’s still progress to be made on economic inequality and other problems.

Two former presidents, Bill Clinton and Jimmy Carter, spoke of King’s legacy — and of problems still to overcome.

“This march, and that speech, changed America,” Clinton declared, rememberin­g the impact on the world and himself as a young man. “They opened minds, they melted hearts and they moved millions — including a 17-year-old boy watching alone in his home in Arkansas.”

Carter said King’s efforts had helped not just black Americans, but “in truth, he helped to free all people.”

Still, Carter listed a string of current events that he said would have spurred King to action in this day, including the proliferat­ion of guns and stand-your-ground laws, a Supreme Court ruling striking down parts of the Voting Rights Act and high rates of joblessnes­s among blacks.

Oprah Winfrey, leading the celebrity contingent, recalled watching the march as a nineyear-old girl and wishing she could be there to see a young man who “was able to force an entire country to wake up, to look at itself and to eventually change.”

Obama used his address to pay tribute to the marchers of 1963 and that era — the maids, labourers, students and more who came from ordinary ranks to engage “on the battlefiel­d of justice” — and he implored Americans not to dismiss what they accomplish­ed.

“To dismiss the magnitude of this progress, to suggest — as some sometimes do — that little has changed, that dishonours the courage, the sacrifice of those who paid the price to march in those years,” Obama said.

“But we would dishonour those heroes as well to suggest that the work of this nation is somehow complete.”

Setting an energetic tone for the day, civil rights veteran Andrew Young, a former UN ambassador and congressma­n, sang an anthem of the civil rights movement and urged the crowd to join in as he belted out: “I woke up this morning with my mind stayed on freedom.” He ended his remarks by urging the crowd to “fight on.”

Civil rights activist Myrlie Evers-Williams, whose hus- band Medgar Evers was murdered in 1963, said that while the country “has certainly taken a turn backwards” on civil rights, she was energized to move ahead and exhorted others to step forward as well.)

King’s eldest son, Martin Luther King III, just 5 when his father spoke at the Mall, spoke of a dream “not yet realized” in full.

“We’ve got a lot of work to do but none of us should be any ways tired,” he said. “Why? Because we’ve come much too far from where we started.”

Organizers of the rally broadened the focus well beyond racial issues, bringing speakers forward to address the environmen­t, gay rights, the challenges facing the disabled and more. The performers, too, were an eclectic crowd, ranging from Maori haka dancers to LeAnn Rimes singing Amazing Grace.

Jamie Foxx tried to fire up a new generation of performers and ordinary “young folks” by drawing on the example of Harry Belafonte, who stood with King 50 years ago.

“It’s time for us to stand up now and renew this dream,” Foxx declared.

Forest Whitaker told the crowd it was their “moment to join those silent heroes of the past.”

“You now have the responsibi­lity to carry the torch.”

NBA legend Bill Russell told the crowd he’d been at the 1963 march as an “interested bystander,” and quipped with a smile, “It’s nice to be anywhere 50 years later.”

Turning serious, he added: “You only register progress by how far you have to go. ... The fight has just begun and we can never accept the status quo until the word ‘progress’ is taken out of our vocabulary.”

Slate grey skies gave way to sunshine briefly peeking from the clouds as the “Let Freedom Ring” commemorat­ion unfolded. After that, a steady rain.

Among faces in the crowd: lawyer Ollie Cantos of Arlington, Va., there with his 14-year-old triplets Leo, Nick and Steven. All four are blind, and they moved through the crowd with their hands on each other’s shoulders, in a makeshift train.

Cantos, who is Filipino, said he brought his sons to help teach them the continuing fight for civil rights.

“The disability rights movement that I’m a part of, that I dedicate my life to, is actually an extension of the original civil rights movement,” said Cantos. “I wanted to do everything I can to school the boys in the ways of the civil rights movement and not just generally but how it effects them personally.”

D.C. plumber Jerome Williams, whose family tree includes North Carolina sharecropp­ers, took the day off work to come with his wife and two kids. “It’s a history lesson that they can take with them for the rest of their lives,” he said.

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 ?? BRENDAN SMIALOWSKI/ AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? U.S. President Barack Obama, right, speaks at the Lincoln Memorial on the National Mall Wednesday in Washington, D.C. Obama and others spoke to commemorat­e the 50th anniversar­y of the U.S. civil rights era March on Washington where Martin Luther King...
BRENDAN SMIALOWSKI/ AFP/GETTY IMAGES U.S. President Barack Obama, right, speaks at the Lincoln Memorial on the National Mall Wednesday in Washington, D.C. Obama and others spoke to commemorat­e the 50th anniversar­y of the U.S. civil rights era March on Washington where Martin Luther King...
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