Hart Plaza in Detroit was the site of a massive rally on Monday, March 26 in support of Trayvon Martin, a 17-year-old black teenager who was shot and killed by a neighborhood watch volunteer in Sanford, Florida. The rally was part of several held that included thousands of people at cities from coast-to-coast.
In Detroit, hundreds showed up, many of
them in hooded sweatshirts and some carrying Skittles and bottles of
iced tea to signify the items Martin had when he was shot, while
later chanting, “No justice, no peace” in reference to his case.
Martin was killed on Feb. 26 when he was heading for his father’s
fiance’s house and was shot despite being unarmed, although the
details of the case are still being sorted out.
On Monday, the
Orlando Sentinel reported that George Zimmerman, the man who shot and killed Martin, said the 17-year-old had earlier
punched him and
slammed his head into the sidewalk. Zimmerman
hasn’t been charged yet; he’s claiming it was self defense.
Recently released 911 calls undermine
Zimmerman’s self defense argument, the Martin family attorney says. In the calls,
they note that Martin can be heard chatting on a cell phone with his
girlfriend when he was confronted and killed by Zimmerman. Zimmerman
also reportedly spoke with a police dispatcher earlier who told him
not to get out of his car or to follow Martin.
The U.S. Department of Justice has
opened a civil rights investigation into the shooting and Florida
Gov. Rick Scott appointed a special prosecutor to the case.
Abayomi Azikiwe from the Michigan
Emergency Committee Against War and Injustice was among those who
attended to hear various speakers on the evening.
“This is typical of the type of
racial profiling we see in America; it’s a travesty,” he said.
“Unfortunately we will see more of this as the economy worsens,
racial tensions will escalate.”
Azikiwe said that in such cases, the
perpetrators need to be held accountable in order for society and
tensions to heal, and stressed the importance of education in order
to improve race relations.
He also spoke about Shaima Alawadi, a
32-year-old Iraqi American Muslim and a hijab-wearing mother of five
from California by way of Michigan who was beaten and killed in her
Southern California home recently with a note left calling her a
“terrorist” and telling her to go back to her home country.
“It seems like a clear hate
crime…it seems that people of color’s lives mean less and
less…people of color need to unite to combat racism,” he said.
At the rally, speakers included NAACP
Detroit President and Arab American Civil Rights League board member
Rev. Wendell Anthony as well as Detroit Police Chief Ralph Godbee,
UAW Region 1A Director Rory Gamble, Wayne County Clerk Kathy Garrett
and others. The ACRL stood in unity with the movement according to its founder Nabih Ayad, and executive director Rashid Baydoun was also welcomed on stage among other area leaders.
“Discrimination any race or creed is
discrimination against any community regardless of background, creed or
religion,” Ayad said the day after the rally by phone.
Many speakers repeated the mantra “I
am Trayvon Martin” or stressed that their children could
potentially be mistaken for a threat and become targets considering
the way they dress is often similar to Martin, for example.
Godbee said perceptions are part of a
larger problem including the media’s “If it bleeds it leads”
focus, stressing that he wants to see more positive stories
highlighted about men of color specifically.
Anthony again called for justice and
for a solidarity movement. “One cannot look at Florida and not be
concerned about justice, it is as if Lady Justice somehow lifted her
blindfold (in this case).”He and many others spoke out against
violence at home as well. Anthony noted the many marches against
violence in Detroit communities, saying that some perceptions that
African Americans in particular are only rallying for the Martin case
and not against violence in all its forms are false.
He said that all people of conscience
and various organizations including the ACRL, Rainbow PUSH coalition
of Jesse Jackson, the Detroit 300 neighborhood organization and more
should stand together for justice.
“We need to rally for Trayvon, and
the best thing we can do now is to rally to fix Detroit, because the
cavalry isn’t coming from Capitol Hill, it’s coming from right here.”
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