Wednesday, March 4, 2015

You're Invited: Saint Paul to Selma

With sunshine and warmer weather on the way, several Twin Cities organizations are hosting events to bring issues of justice into the light and outdoors. It's not too late to buy tickets to tonight's "Honoring an American Revolutionary: A Celebration and Fundraiser for Grace Lee Boggs" at the Penumbra Theater or consider organizing your friends and family to join the Crossing Bridges: Selma to Minnesota commemorative march this Sunday. Learn more below and join in on the journey!

St. Paul March Planned to Honor the Historic Selma March

crossingFrom Crossing Bridges MN:
The public is invited to participate in a march to commemorate the 50th anniversary of the historic and bloody Selma marches of 1965, catalytic events that led to the passage of the U.S. Voting Rights Act.
Cheryl Chatman, Executive Vice President and Dean of Diversity at Concordia University-St. Paul, one of the organizers, said that many local religious, academic, and civil rights institutions have come together to plan the march. “We feel it is critically important to remember this major turning point in the U.S. Civil Rights struggle—and to underscore the Civil Rights work that still needs to be done,” she said.
People interested in joining the march are asked to arrive at the Minnesota State Capitol at 2 p.m. Sunday, March 8, for a brief introductory program. The half-mile route will cross the Cedar Street Bridge over I-94, recalling the Selma marchers who crossed the Edmund Pettus Bridge en route to protest laws and practices that denied black people the right to vote. The St. Paul march will end at Central Presbyterian, 500 Cedar Street, followed by a program at the church beginning approximately 3 p.m. Information on the event also is available on our Crossing Bridges MN website: http://crossingbridgesmn.com/
As recounted in the recent film Selma, there were three Selma Marches in the spring of 1965. The first one, March 7 (Bloody Sunday) ended when local law enforcement brutally attacked 600 nonviolent marchers after they crossed the Pettus Bridge. The second march happened two days later. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. invited faith leaders from across the country to join. While this march reached several thousand participants, King turned the marchers back at the bridge rather than risk another attack. The third march, the Selma-to-Montgomery March, started on March 21, bolstered by a federal court ruling affirming the marchers’ right to protest. On March 24, 25,000 people entered Alabama’s Capitol city in support of African American voting rights.
Our event is but one of many marches planned across the country, including those in Selma, one of which will be attended by a large group from the Twin Cities at the same time as the St. Paul event. These many efforts acknowledge the fact that we are stronger together in bringing justice to this broken and hurting world. Our march will be a moment to pause and celebrate the work of Martin Luther King Jr. and countless others who have fought for desegregation, voting rights, and civil liberties. It is also a moment to pause and reflect on all the work that still needs to be done. Now is the time for us to inspire each other to new levels of action and solidarity for justice, specifically related to addressing racial disparities in everything from incarceration rates and voting rights, to education, employment, and economic well-being.
Those helping to organize and/or fund the event to date include: Luther Seminary; Concordia University-Saint Paul; United Theological Seminary; Saint Paul NAACP; Jewish Community Relations Council of Minnesota and the Dakotas; Greater Minneapolis Council of Churches; Unity Church-Unitarian; Central Presbyterian Church; Minneapolis Area Synod/ELCA; Catholic Charities of Minneapolis and Saint Paul; Bethel University; Saint Paul Area Synod/ELCA; Hamline University, Episcopal Church in Minnesota, Augsburg College, Edina Community Lutheran Church, Cherokee Park United Church, Saint Paul Interfaith Network(SPIN); Islamic Resource Group; AARP-Sabathani Chapter; Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Park Legacy Committee; Saint Paul Area Council of Churches; and the Council on American Islamic Relations.

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