King speakers ask
for equality in education, justice
By Jennifer
Holland The Associated
Press
COLUMBIA - A Confederate battle flag
snapped in the brisk wind over more than 2,000 people gathered
Monday at the Statehouse for a rally protesting the "divisive
symbol."
"It's made of nylon to fly pretty in the wind to remind the
nation of when we were different," said Dennis Courtland Hayes,
acting head of the National Association for the Advancement of
Colored People. "We come here on behalf of a unified state of all of
its citizens - red, yellow, black, white and brown - because the
NAACP knows that colored people come in all colors."
This year on Martin Luther King Jr. Day, nearly 20 educators,
community, religious and civil rights leaders who spoke also focused
on fighting for justice and equitable funding in education.
"We have come from across this state to say to this state that we
are demanding equity in education. It's not just a black thing. It's
the right thing to do," said the Rev. Charles White Jr., regional
director of the NAACP.
King was honored as many speakers used quotes from the slain
civil rights leader's speeches and writings.
"It's a rough and crooked place when this state is more
interested in spending money incarcerating black men than spending
money educating black boys," White said.
Hayes challenged South Carolinians to mobilize and demand state
leaders address the achievement gap between minorities and their
white peers. He said the NAACP has asked Gov. Mark Sanford to submit
a plan to the group by this summer addressing equal funding in
schools.
Education Superintendent Inez Tenenbaum and former Democratic
Gov. Dick Riley each criticized Sanford's proposal to provide tax
credits for private-school tuition.
"Our beloved state cannot move forward if we move backward in
education," said Riley, former education secretary under former
President Clinton. "We must keep our focus on excellence in public
education."
White criticized President Bush for spending billions of dollars
in Iraq.
"Don't ask us to do for citizens of a foreign country what you
won't do for the citizens of these United States," White said.
He said there is much work to be done in a state "where a
divisive symbol still looms in our presence."
The annual prayer service, march and rally - dubbed King Day at
the Dome - has drawn smaller crowds over the years since the 47,000
who successfully called for the flag to be removed from atop the
Statehouse five years ago.
The Civil War banner was taken down from the dome and raised near
the Confederate Soldier Monument. But the NAACP says it will
continue its economic boycott of the state until the flag is moved
off Statehouse grounds.
Marchers held signs that read: "Economic Justice Now. Don't Visit
SC" and "NAACP says Don't stop, Don't shop Until the flag
drops."
A line of more than 20 State Law Enforcement Division agents
stood as a buffer between the marchers and about 15 people waving
giant Confederate and S.C. flags. A toilet with fake legs sticking
out of the bowl sat on the curb with a sign that read: "Flush the
NAACP."
"We're not protesting Dr. Martin Luther King," said Larry Salley
with the League of the South. "But what we are doing is making the
statement the NAACP has turned away from its course as a legitimate
civil rights organization and has begun to engage in the politics of
division."
Salley said the NAACP should focus on education and health issues
for minorities. "Instead, they choose to focus on a symbol."
The rally's keynote speaker, AME Bishop John Hurst Adams, said he
was delivering the eulogy for the flag, which he called a "sick
symbol" representing slavery and white supremacy.
Earlier in the day, U.S. Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-Seneca, told
members of the Columbia Urban League that racial disparities still
exist.
The solution, he said, is to build economic opportunity in poor
and minority
communities. |