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NEWS FROM THE UNITED STATES
Black Muslim leader says delayed help for New
Orleans was 'criminal neglect?
Photo:
Nation of Islam leader Louis Farrakhan addresses the crowd attending
the Millions More Movement rally gathered on the National Mall in
Washington Saturday.
WASHINGTON, DC- Railing against the
delayed relief for victims of hurricane Katrina, Nation of Islam
leader Louis Farrakhan said Saturday the U.S. government should be
charged with "criminal neglect of the people of New Orleans." "For
five days, the government did not act. Lives were lost," Farrakhan
said at the 10th anniversary of the Million Man March. "We charge
America with criminal neglect." A crowd of thousands cheered as dozens
of prominent speakers - academics, activists, artists and media
pundits - spoke, recited poetry and sang songs in the 12-hour program
on the U.S. National Mall. Pointing to the broad spectrum of
participants, Farrakhan said the march included an "unprecedented"
array of black leaders of organizations "coming together to speak to
America and the world with one voice." "This tells us that a new day
is dawning in America," he said. Ten years ago, Farrakhan urged black
men to improve their families and communities - women, whites and
other minorities had not been invited. On Saturday, all were welcome
at the Millions More Movement, which organizers said would build on
the principles of 1995 and push people to build a movement for change
locally and nationally. Neither Farrakhan, who spoke for 75 minutes,
nor police would offer a crowd estimate. Photos showed the gathering
was significantly smaller than that of 1995, when Boston University
researchers estimated between 600,000 and one million participated.
The Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority said subway
ridership by noon was 152,000. On the day of the march 10 years ago -
a weekday, when regular commuters drove up overall ridership - that
number was just over 804,000, the third-highest ever recorded. Still,
participants said they were inspired by the gathering. Farrakhan "is
the only one who can pull this magnitude of people together," said
Michael Warren, 41, a Washington resident who attended for about five
hours with three youths. "No other leader since Martin (Luther King)
and Malcolm (X) have done this." Many said the day held echoes of
earlier gatherings. Kelly Callahan, 65, of Newark, N.J., said he had
attended the 1995 march and King's 1963 March on Washington. The
movement, he said, is "more universal now." Mouchettee Muhummad, 38,
drove through the night from Detroit with four companions. "We have to
show that the spirit from 10 years ago did not die - it's still
alive," he said. "We have to show that we didn't forget and we're
actually carrying out what we pledged" a decade ago. He added
Farrakhan "is asking us to organize beyond political boundaries,
religious differences, cultural differences." Some speakers paid
tribute to victims of the hurricanes in prayers and pledges of support
and many participants said the storm helped inspire them to come.
Katrina "brought the issues to the surface to some who were asleep,"
said Jason 2X, a Nation of Islam member who attended the march with
several family members from Chicago. During his speech, Farrakhan
announced a Millions More Movement disaster relief fund, urging
participants to give one dollar each week for victims. He did not
repeat his speculation in recent weeks that someone bombed New
Orleans' protective levees, deliberately flooding black neighbourhoods
after Katrina struck. "We want to know what happened to the levees,"
Farrakhan said Saturday. "We don't want to guess about it and we don't
want to be guilty of following rumours." Earlier, Jesse Jackson,
president of the Rainbow/PUSH Coalition, urged people to channel their
frustration about Katrina toward change their communities. He also
told the crowd: "A barge in the canal hit the levee and the waters
came rushing in." But he did not elaborate on whether he believed this
may have been deliberate. Farrakhan's appears to be broadening his
message beyond those of concern specifically to blacks and the poor.
He denounced President George W. Bush, the war in Iraq and Muslims who
kill "innocent life for political purposes." He also called for unity
with Africa, reparations for slavery, inclusion of undocumented
immigrants and a government apology to native Americans. Danny
Bakewell, publisher of the Los Angeles Sentinel, a black newspaper,
said the gathering was "a glaring symbol of the possibilities that are
in front of black people. This is not the end, it's a beginning."
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