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10,000 Marched to Honor Rev.
King and Oppose Wars in Iraq and Afghanistan
For Immediate Release: Thursday, April
4, 2009
Contacts: Judith LeBlanc, Organizing Coordinator, United for Peace
and Justice, Office 212-868-5545, Cell 917-806-8775, jleblanc@unitedforpeace.org
Paul Kawika Martin, Political Director, Peace Action, 301.565.4050
x 316, 617.290.5612 cell, pmartin@peace-action.org
New York, NY -- Saturday, April 4. On the anniversary
of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.’s assassination in Memphis,
TN and the anniversary of his ‘Beyond Vietnam’ speech
at Riverside Church, NYC – one year earlier – United
for Peace and Justice (UFPJ) marched on Wall Street protesting the
wars in Iraq and Afghanistan while demanding more money for domestic
needs. In the historic speech, Dr. King said the “triple evils”
that plagued the nation were “racism, extreme materialism,
and militarism.”
“In the spirit of Dr. King and the movement
of equality and justice of the fifties and sixties, I say if we
want peace to blossom, we must eradicate poverty, racism, sexism,
violence and greed in the U.S. Peace cannot come by crying peace.
Peace can only begin to emerge as we do justice. 90 million working
Americans hover in poverty or with poverty. The greatest impetuous
for peace or stimulus to the economy is that those 90 million receive
wages that would allow them to sustain themselves and their family.
Nothing would be more explosive than that kind of stimulus,”
preached Rev. James Lawson, co-worker with Rev. King, organizer
of Freedom Rides and life long advocate for nonviolence.
“Dr. King once suggested that the ‘church
should not be the servant of the state nor the master of the state,
but conscious of the state.’ So today we gather as faith leaders
and people of good will to send a righteous reminder to our President
and other elected leaders that nonviolence and the concerns of the
least of these must be at the forefront of out national and international
agenda,” said Rev. Dr. Brad R. Braxton Senior Minister of
the Riverside Church.
The esteemed reverends led the march holding a
banner that read “Beyond War, A New Economy Is Possible,”
followed by another large banner “End Wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.”
Organizers claimed that over 10,000 people joined, surrounded the
NY Stock Exchange, and marched past the Federal building and the
famous bull into what they called a “Peace Fair.” The
New York Police department refuses to give crowd estimates.
“We have had enough of war! We need to devote
all of our energy and attention to addressing the global economic
and climate crises, to improving education, housing and health care
in this country, not squandering $12 billion per month on the occupations
of Iraq and Afghanistan,” said Leslie Kielson, Co-Chair of
United for Peace and Justice.
The groups campaign calls for an end to the wars
in Iraq and Afghanistan and for new approaches to resolving the
economic crisis, one that moves towards a green economy. UFPJ linked
their campaign to Dr. King’s Riverside speech where he stated
the need to “rapidly begin the shift from a thing-oriented
society to a person-oriented society.”
“On this anniversary of Reverend Martin
Luther Kings’ speech ‘Beyond Vietnam,’ we march
on Wall Street calling for and end to the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan
and demand the use of tax dollars to meet human needs right here
at home. We stand together to say war is not the solution to our
economic problems,” said George Paz Martin, Co-Chair for UFPJ
and board member of the Peace Action Education Fund.
Kielson thought that people have pinned their
hopes on President Obama and the change he promised. His domestic
agenda, outlined in his budget, takes steps in the right direction,
she thought, but claimed his escalation of the war in Afghanistan,
as well as the ongoing occupation of Iraq, threaten to obliterate
the most progressive aspects of Obama’s domestic agenda, just
as the war in Vietnam ruined the presidency of President Lyndon
Johnson.
“More war is not the answer, and until fundamental
changes are made in U.S. foreign policy -- an end to blank-check
support for Israel, an end to U.S. occupation and military bases
in Arab lands, an end to threats to Iran, an end to the chimera
of the Global War on Terror, an end to hypocrisy on nuclear proliferation,
and concrete steps to address legitimate grievances in the Arab
and Muslim world -- whatever we do in Afghanistan or Pakistan or
Iraq, short of a massive occupation which would be immoral and we
can't afford, is doomed to failure,” stated Kielson.
UFPJ pointed out that King’s words still
ring true across four decades, “A nation that continues year
after year to spend more money on military defense than on programs
of social uplift is approaching spiritual death.”
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United for Peace and Justice (UFPJ) is a coalition
of more than 1400 local and national groups throughout the United
States who formed to protest the immoral and disastrous Iraq War
and oppose our government's policy of permanent warfare and empire-building.
Coalition members include Fellowship of Reconciliation, Iraq Veterans
Against the War, Peace Action and Veterans for Peace
http://www.unitedforpeace.org
Photos Available of the March
Editors Notes:
For links to audio and text of the Rev king
speech, see: http://accuracy.org/newsrelease.php?articleId=1791
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