Toronto Star

Civil rights icon John Lewis says video made him cry

- THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

DINO HAZELL

Civil rights icon John Lewis said Thursday that the video of George Floyd’s death at the hands of police in Minnesota “made me cry.”

“I kept saying to myself: How many more? How many young black men will be murdered?” said Lewis, a Democrat of Georgia. “It made me so sad. It was so painful,” Lewis told “CBS This Morning.” “It made me cry.”

Lewis said he was encouraged to see such diverse crowds protesting Floyd’s killing, seeking the arrests of the police officers involved and demanding an end to racial injustice.

“It was very moving, very moving to see hundreds and thousands of people from all over America and around the world take to the streets to speak up, to speak out,” he said.

Lewis, 80, was a key figure in the civil rights movement and was one of the leaders behind the 1963 March on Washington and the push to end legalized racial segregatio­n. He had his skull fractured by Alabama troopers as marchers crossed the Edmund Pettus Bridge in Selma on March 7, 1965.

He urged protesters seeking justice in Floyd’s killing to embrace non-violence and called on President Donald Trump not to crack down on “orderly, peaceful, nonviolent protests.”

“You cannot stop the call of history,” Lewis said adding a quote from Martin Luther King Jr.: “Hate is too heavy a burden to bear. The way of love is a much better way.”

“During the ’60s, the great majority of us accepted the way of peace,” he said. “There’s something cleansing, something wholesome, about being peaceful and orderly. We’re one people, we’re one family. We all live in the same house, not just the American house but the world house.”

In 2011, Lewis received the Presidenti­al Medal of Freedom from president Barack Obama, who marched with Lewis in Selma on the 50th anniversar­y of the Bloody Sunday attack.

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