March on Washington anniversary draws crowds to make ‘Dream’ reality

By Mark Pattison
Catholic News Service

WASHINGTON (CNS) — By the thousands they came to the National Mall in Washington, people of all ages, races and religions, to stand in the shadow of the Lincoln Memorial Aug. 24, just as hundreds of thousands had done 50 years earlier.

In 1963, those at the March on Washington were galvanized by the words of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr., whose "I Have a Dream" speech electrified a nation and pushed it, sometimes against its will, to guarantee civil rights to all Americans.

In 2013, participants in the commemoration took note of how far America has come in the past half-century, but also acknowledged how far America has to go.

While the original march had as its tagline "For Jobs and Freedom," the Aug. 24 anniversary event’s informal tagline was "jobs, justice and freedom."

The program in 1963 had 15 speakers, including three prayers — one of them an invocation by then-Archbishop Patrick O’Boyle of Washington. In contrast, the Aug. 24 event had more than four hours of speakers, most of them limited to two minutes before the music swelled and the microphone was cut.

That allowed for a broader palette of issues to be raised, including immigration reform, women’s rights, gay rights and "Trayvon’s Law," an effort to reverse "stand your ground" laws in states. The effort is named for Trayvon Martin, the teen whose killer was acquitted in July by a jury instructed on Florida’s stand-your-ground law.

"Both Martins — King and Trayvon — were unjustly profiled," said Michael Eric Dyson, a sociology professor at Georgetown University and one of the march’s first speakers.

Clayola Brown, the first woman president of the A. Philip Randolph Institute, said the 2013 march was about "jobs, justice and freedom, the same topics as they were then." The institute is named for the man who first conceived of a march on Washington in 1941 to pressure President Franklin Roosevelt to end hiring discrimination by the federal government and headed the 1963 march.

Rep. Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., a Catholic who is House minority leader, said of King, "He would want us to honor him by realizing his dream." She added that Congress needed to amend the 1964 Voting Rights Act, considered by many to be the capstone of the civil rights movement. A key portion of the act was struck down in June by the Supreme Court.

Pelosi reminded the crowd of King’s warning against "the drug of gradualism" and how it needed to be replaced by "the fierce urgency of now."

The Rev. Joseph Lowery, a United Methodist minister who worked in the civil rights struggles of the 1950s and 1960s and who followed King as head of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, spoke near the program’s end, seated in a wheelchair.

Noting that there are African Americans serving as president and as attorney general, Rev. Lowery, 91, said, "Everything has changed, and nothing and changed. That’s how it is in America."

"We go back home to complete the unfinished task. … We’ve come a long way, but we’ve got a long, long way to go." He then led the crowd in a chant: "We come up here to commemorate, but we go back home to agitate."


Copyright ?2013 Catholic News Service/USCCB. All rights reserved. This article may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or otherwise distributed.
CNS ? 3211 Fourth St NE ? Washington DC 20017 ? 202.541.3250


Copyright © 2023 Catholic News Service, Inc. All rights reserved. Linking is encouraged, but republishing or redistributing, including by framing or similar means, without the publisher's prior written permission is prohibited.

No, Thanks


eNewsletter