With Confederate flag gone, King Day rally shifts focus
COLUMBIA, S.C. (AP) -- For the first time in 17 years, civil rights leaders gathered Monday at the South Carolina Statehouse to pay homage to the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. without the Confederate flag casting a long shadow over them.
Cal Murrell, otherwise known as "The Happy Preacher," shouts out during during the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. holiday commemorative service at Ebenezer Baptist Church where King preached, Monday, Jan. 18, 2016, in Atlanta. |
COLUMBIA, S.C. (AP) -- For the first time in 17 years, civil rights leaders gathered Monday at the South Carolina Statehouse to pay homage to the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. without the Confederate flag casting a long shadow over them.
The banner was taken down
over the summer after police said a young white man who had posed for
photos with a rebel flag shot nine black church members to death during a
Bible study in Charleston. After the massacre at the Emanuel African
Methodist Episcopal Church, Republican Gov. Nikki Haley reversed course
and made it a priority for lawmakers to pass legislation to remove the
flag.
"Isn't this a great day? It's so nice to
be standing here and not looking at that flag," said Ezell Pittman, who
attended most of the King Day anti-flag rallies since they started in
2000. "I always had faith it would come down. I hate it took what it
did, but was real happy to see it go."
Across
the country, the 30th anniversary of the holiday to honor the civil
rights leader assassinated in 1968 was remembered in different ways. In
Michigan, people delivered bottled water to residents of Flint amid the
city's drinking water crisis. In Atlanta, an overflow crowd listened as
to the nation's housing secretary talk about the 50th anniversary of
King's visit to Chicago to launch a campaign for fair housing. Rallies
against police brutality in Minnesota and California briefly shut down
traffic on two bridges.
South Carolina NAACP
President Lonnie Randolph said the flag's removal was tangible evidence
the state cares about civil rights when pushed hard enough. But he
warned there would be other fights ahead.
"I
promise you, the people that gather in this building - your building -
will do something this year to cause us to return to ensure freedom,
justice and equality is made possible for all people," Randolph said,
motioning toward the capitol behind him.
Randolph
promised to keep coming to the Statehouse until King's dream comes to
its full meaning in a state with wide gaps in education achievement
between school districts in rich, white communities and poorer, black
ones, and where the governor and Republican-dominated Legislature have
refused to take federal money to expand Medicaid.
About
1,000 people gathered at the Statehouse on a clear, cold day, drawn in
part by appearances by all three main Democratic presidential candidates
- Hillary Clinton, Bernie Sanders and Martin O'Malley.
Sanders
reminded the crowd King was a dynamic leader who wanted to help the
poor. O'Malley said King would be ashamed his county has made it harder
to vote and easier to buy a gun.
Only Clinton
dealt directly with the flag. She credited Haley and the Republicans
with working with the NAACP after the church shooting and choosing
King's legacy over hatred.
"We couldn't celebrate him and the Confederacy. We had to choose," Clinton said. "And South Carolina made the right choice."
In
the nation's capital, President Barack Obama and first lady Michelle
Obama followed the King Day theme of community service by planting
vegetable seeds at a District of Columbia elementary school to honor the
civil rights leader and celebrate Mrs. Obama's anti-childhood obesity
initiative.
They also stuffed bags with books
for needy children along with young people who participate in a White
House mentoring program and volunteers from the AmeriCorps national
service program.
Elsewhere, an overflow crowd
showed up at Ebenezer Baptist Church in Atlanta to celebrate its former
pastor's legacy at an annual commemorative service. It capped more than a
week of events under the theme:
"Remember! Celebrate! Act! King's
Legacy of Freedom for Our World."
While people
have been distracted by TV reality shows and music "that tears down
instead of uplifts," many injustices have occurred and "we're about to
create right here in this civilized society the wild, wild west with
guns," said King's daughter, the Rev. Bernice King.
"Y'all,
we can't keep being distracted, because if you're not careful, we're
about to allow a reality show host to bully himself into becoming
president of the United States of America," she said.
U.S.
Secretary of Housing and Urban Development Secretary Julian Castro told
the church audience that King moved into a Chicago apartment on the
city's west side 50 years ago and described seeing "a daily battle
against depression and hopelessness" as babies were attacked by rats and
children wore clothes too thin to protect against the Midwest winter.
"You see, Dr. King knew that housing was more than about just bricks and mortar," Castro said.
In
Minneapolis, activists braved frigid temperatures as they marched onto a
Mississippi River bridge that connects Minneapolis and St. Paul to
protest the deaths of two black men shot by police last year in the Twin
Cities. A St. Paul officer was placed on leave while the Police
Department investigates allegations that he made a post on Facebook
urging drivers to run over protesters.
In
California, protesters from a Black Lives Matter offshoot group shut
down one side of the San Francisco-Oakland Bay Bridge when they stopped
vehicles in the westbound lanes and chained themselves and the cars
together to form a line across the bridge.