Activists marking 100th anniversary of NAACP's silent parade see scary parallels
Organizer says unlike 1917 march against Woodrow Wilsons civil rights failures, this had no demands but adds: I dont know that were in such a different space
Jamiles Lartey in New York
@JamilesLartey
Saturday 29 July 2017 11.15 EDT
On a July day in 1917, in the face of a presidential administration seen as taking regressive steps on civil rights, nearly 10,000 black Americans walked down Fifth Avenue in New York. Wearing uniform clothing and carrying signs, demanding federal action over the lynchings of black men, they marched in total silence.
A century later, also clad in white, a much smaller group assembled outside Bryant Park on Friday. They were there to commemorate the occasion in a world, attendees said, that did not feel altogether changed.
It just seems like weve gone in a circle, said Sacha Dent, an educator from the city. And its the same thing with not just things that are like lynchings and close to lynchings but just the hate
everywhere.
The attendees held portraits of well-known victims of police and vigilante violence Philando Castile, Trayvon Martin, Tamir Rice and of people who lost their lives after traumatic encounters with the criminal justice system, such as Sandra Bland and Kalief Browder.
More:
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2017/jul/29/naacp-silent-parade-100th-anniversary-march-new-york-city