40 Years Later, US Still Faces Civil Rights Challenges
| Wednesday May
28, 2003
James Zogby WASHINGTON, 28 May 2003 — Forty years ago, on Aug. 28, 1963,
250,000 Americans convened in Washington, D.C. to demonstrate for the
full civil and political rights of African Americans. The March on
Washington was a transformative event, a watershed moment in the US
civil rights movement. It was at that “March on Washington” that Rev. Martin Luther
King, Jr. delivered his “I Have a Dream” speech. That eloquent
appeal for racial equality was heard by millions and touched the
conscience of the nation. Much of the US was still defined by the legacy of slavery — an
institution that had brought millions of Africans to America as slave
property. Though freed a century earlier by President Abraham
Lincoln’s “Emancipation Proclamation,” African Americans remained
trapped in poverty and a system of laws and customs that denied them
equal rights and opportunities to advance. The civil rights movement that developed in the mid-20th century was
a broadly based effort to challenge the persistence of race-based laws
that had come to define the existence of America’s black citizens.
Whether north or south, most Americans lived with forced segregation in
education, employment and accommodations. Many Americans have forgotten or simply never learned about the
horrible reality of that period. Black Americans were not allowed in
“white only” restaurants, schools, and neighborhoods. In many
states, as a result of unequal laws, African Americans were denied
opportunities to vote. The civil rights movement, the largely non-violent challenge to this
racist reality, had its greatest expression in the 1963 March. The
coalition of African Americans, the organized labor movement and several
major religious communities came together to demand change – and the
change was forthcoming. Among the demands raised by the March on Washington were: • Passage of meaningful civil rights legislation; • Elimination of racial segregation in public schools,
accommodation and employment; and • Enforcement of voting rights for all Americans. Immediately after the March, President John F. Kennedy met with the
movement’s leadership. Following Kennedy’s assassination his
successor President Lyndon Johnson continued to press forward the civil
rights agenda and succeeded in passing the 1964 Civil Rights Act and in
1965 pushed through the Voting Rights Act. Segregation in housing, education and employment were banned and
impediments to voting rights were removed. But change was not immediate, and resistance to full equality
persisted and took new forms. So it was logical and necessary that the
movement for civil rights continue as well. In 1983 and in 1993, marches were organized both to commemorate the
20th and 30th anniversaries of the 1963 March on Washington and to press
forward the unfinished business of the struggle for justice. Although Arab Americans were present in the early civil rights
movement, they were present as individuals, not as an organized
community. By 1983, that had changed. Arab Americans had organized and become a
political force in American life. We were, therefore, invited to
participate as conveners of later marches. Although there was some
resistance to our involvement both Sen. James Abourezk and I
participated, organized Arab Americans to march, and were provided
platforms to address the gatherings. At the 1993 March I used my speech to address the anti-immigrant
sentiment that was threatening recent Arab and other newcomers to the US
I noted: “It is a joy to be part of this great celebration of renewal.
I and Arab Americans across this great nation who march with us today do
so because we share the dream of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. “We too have been the inheritors of its promise and we too will be
the bearers of its torch for future generations... “We are concerned because today there is a dangerous current, an
anti-immigrant, anti-foreign wave borne of economic hardship. It feeds
on ignorance and creates intolerance and leaves us afraid... “Think of those knocking at our door and those hiding in our midst
not yet speaking our language, experiencing the pain of discrimination
and the burden of intolerance. Surely our great coalition must reach out
to embrace them. They too are brothers and sisters... But sweep aside
their fear, sweep aside our prejudice and see their hard work and
commitment and their hopes and their belief in our promise. In every
generation, they have been the spring from which we have drawn new life
and new strength and a renewed sense of the meaning of America... It is
to them that Lady in the Harbor beckons: ‘Give me your tired, your
poor, your huddled masses yearning to breathe free, the wretched refuse
of your teeming shore, send these, the homeless, the tempest tossed, to
me.’ “If we allow a wave of intolerance to turn her promise into hollow
words then, I fear, something special in the soul of America will drown. “Let us, here today, commit ourselves to the promise of Martin
Luther King to all of our brothers and sisters, to stop those who would
close our doors and turn us against ‘tomorrow’s Americans.’ Let us
who are a part of this great March commit ourselves to an America of
tolerance and diversity and freedom for all.” And so with new threats to civil rights targeting especially recent
immigrant Arabs and South Asian Muslims, I was proud to once again
accept the invitation to join as a convener for the 40th anniversary
March on Washington which will take place on Aug. 23, 2003. With widespread use of “profiling” against Arabs and Muslims and
the continued fear of hate crimes and other forms of discrimination it
remains important for the civil rights movement to confront these
challenges to full equality for all in America. Dr. King and the Kennedys have been taken from us, but the spirit
that inspired the civil rights movement remains very much with us. Arab Americans will march in August, together with thousands of
others from all races and faiths in a mutually reinforcing effort to
make Dr. King’s dream a reality in the 21st century. |
Copyright 2014 Q Madp www.OurWarHeroes.org