Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Trump praises civil rights leaders

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Mr. Trump’s remarks steered clear of addressing the anger that his participat­ion had sparked leading up to the dedication.

In a deliberate voice and rarely diverting from his prepared words, the president sought to honor the famous and the anonymous for their efforts on behalf of freedom for all.

“The civil rights museum records the oppression, cruelty and injustice inflicted on the African-American community, the fight to bring down Jim Crow and end segregatio­n, to gain the right to vote and to achieve the sacred birthright of equality. And it’s big stuff. That’s big stuff,” he said.

“Those are very big phrases, very big words. Here we memorializ­e the brave men and women who struggled to sacrifice and sacrifice so much so that others might live in freedom,” he said.

The national president of the NAACP and the mayor of Mississipp­i’s capital city said they kept their distance from Mr. Trump because of his “pompous disregard” for the values embodied by the civil rights movement.

Derrick Johnson, head of the nation’s oldest civil rights organizati­on, and Mayor Chokwe Lumumba said at a news conference that they looked forward to a “grander opening” of the museum that they can attend.

Mr. Johnson, a Mississipp­ian, charged that Mr. Trump opposes labor rights, education, health care and voting rights for all Americans.

“We will never cede the stage to an individual who will fight against us,” Mr. Johnson said. “We will not allow the history of those who sacrificed to be tarnished for political expediency.”

Mr. Johnson and Mr. Lumumba spoke to about 100 supporters, including some who participat­ed in the civil rights demonstrat­ions of the 1960s, at Smith Robertson Museum and Cultural Center.

Once the first public school built for African-Americans in Jackson, it’s now a museum to black history and culture.

Mr. Lumumba called Mr. Trump to task for “his pompous disregard for all of those factors that will not enable us to stand with him today.”

The state’s attorney general, Jim Hood, criticized Republican Gov. Phil Bryant for inviting Mr. Trump. “It threw cold water in the face of people who fought the battles for civil rights,” Mr. Hood said.

Mr. Bryant, who introduced Mr. Trump, spoke of “the emotion that comes over you in waves as you see the past, the struggle, the conflict. I’m so very proud today that the president of the United States was here to see and witness it.”

Mr. Trump reflected on the past and hoped for a bright future, drawing on the achievemen­ts of civil rights veterans:

“Today we strive to be worthy of their sacrifice. We pray for inspiratio­n from their example. We want our country to be a place where every child from every background can grow up free from fear, innocent of hatred and surrounded by love, opportunit­y and hope. Today we pay solemn tribute to our heroes of the past and dedicate ourselves to building a future of freedom, equality, justice and peace.”

He called the museums “labors of love — love for Mississipp­i, love for your nation, love for God-given dignity written into every human soul. These buildings embody the hope that has lived in the hearts of every American for generation­s, the hope in a future that is more just and more free.”

Singled out by the president was Medgar Evers, the Mississipp­i NAACP leader who was shot to death outside his home in 1963.

His widow, Myrlie, was in the audience for Mr. Trump’s speech and drew a standing ovation when he acknowledg­ed her.

Mr. Trump said Medgar Evers “knew it was long past time for his nation to fulfill its founding promise to treat every citizen as an equal child of God.”

Evers, Mr. Trump said, now rests in Arlington National Cemetery “beside men and women of all races, background­s and walks of life who’ve served and sacrificed for our country. Their headstones do not mark the color of their skin but immortaliz­e the courage of their deeds.”

Myrlie Evers did not mention Mr. Trump in her remarks a short time later at the public ceremony outside the museum. “Regardless of race, creed or color, we are all Americans. ... If Mississipp­i can rise to the occasion, then the rest of the country should be able to do the same thing,” she said.

 ??  ?? Jackson. Mr. Trump’s presence generated boycotts from some civil rights leaders and protests by activists. President Donald Trump tours the Mississipp­i Civil Rights Museum on Saturday in
Jackson. Mr. Trump’s presence generated boycotts from some civil rights leaders and protests by activists. President Donald Trump tours the Mississipp­i Civil Rights Museum on Saturday in

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