RACIAL AND ECONOMIC JUSTICE Aug 17 2002
Thousands Rally for Black Reparations
Today on the National Mall, thousands of African-Americans and others of African descent, as well as those in solidarity with their cause rallied for reparations. Referencing history, they tied the issue of American slavery to the plight of inner-city and rural minorities, primarily blacks, and to the global issue of third world debt. Filling one end of the Mall with cries of "Black Power", "No Peace, No Justice", and prayer, these Africans (few used the nationalized suffix) brought their children and and picnic lunches for a peaceful demonstration to demand meaningful suffrage. What was supposed to be a Million person march, with Al Sharpton's organization rumored to claim 50,000 bus riders, turned out to be much less than that. By late morning many reported hundreds and went home, by early afternoon at least several thousand filled a fifth of the Mall. Whatever their numbers, they were loud.
Comments In Prev. Feature On The Rally
Legal Case for Reparations

Notes From The Mall

Images from the Rally

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CRIMES AGAINST HUMANITY Aug 16 2002
The Case For Reparations
A year ago, the historic World Conference Against Racism in Durban, (boycotted by the US), issued this statement re Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade and Reparations for African People in the Diaspora: "The designation of African people's historical suffering as a 'Crime against Humanity' is an indisputable fact. It is an affirmation of one's recognition of African humanity. Only pure and simple racism can explain the reasoning of anyone who has the gall to question whether the Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade, Slavery and Colonialism (T,S,C) are crimes against humanity. We need not look for any other 'historical precedents,' such as the victims of the Nazi Holocaust, to defend our claim. The cold-blooded brutality, cynicism, mass homicide, rape, kidnapping and genocide which were at the heart of the T,S,C are unprecedented in human history. And this trade, this slavery, this colonization, this "noble venture" were carried out to bring "civilization" to the heathens and untold riches to Europe and its settler-colonists. The demand for reparations for African people is a just one and a simple one. It is simply the attempt to 'repair,' to 'make whole' the descendants of the victims of a crime against humanity. Crimes against humanity have no statute of limitations." Full Text Since this declaration, lawsuits have been filed in New York and New Jersey targeting corporations that profited from the slave trade. One lawsuit estimates that the wealth in the United States created by the unpaid wages of slave labor is today worth $1.5 trillion. On August 17, Reparations advocates will be gathering on the Mall in Washington DC, on the symbolic 115 birthday of Marcus Garvey. wbix.org Radio and C-SPAN TV will have LIVE broadcasts. Comment St.Louis IMC on NCOBRA
From Mumia
Chronology of Slavery in N. America