Action Alerts
- Subject: Denis Halliday in SF area
Date: Wed, 6 Sep 2000 13:17:56 EDT
Denis Halliday, former Oil for Food coordinator in Iraq who resigned in
public protest of the relentless suffering and deaths of the people of Iraq
will be in the SF Bay Area the weekend of Sept 15 - 17. Enclosed is the
schedule of events as confirmed so far. I will send out updated schedule
next week.
Carolyn
==============
Events at which Denis Halliday will be heard on Sept. 15 - 17:
•Two showings of documentary Paying the Price
Friday, Sept 15, 9:00 p.m. Fine Arts Cinema, Berkeley
Saturday, Sept 16, 1:30 p.m., Towne Theater, San Jose
Offered by the Arab Film Festival. For more information call 415-564-1100 or
visit www.aff.org
•Interfaith Witness of Concern, Saturday, Sept 16, 7:30 - 9 p.m., St. Mary's
Cathedral, Gough & Geary, San Francisco.
•Interfaith Brunch & Community Gathering, Friday, Sept 15, 10:00 a.m.,
Berkeley Friends Church, Sacramento & Cedar.
•Easter Hill United Methodist Church adult class, Sunday, Sept 17, 9:00
a.m., 3911 Cutting Blvd., Richmond.
•KPFA, 94.1 FM Friday, Sept 15, 8:00 a.m. Morning Show; Friday, Sept 15, 5:00
p.m. Flashpoints
•Interview, Cable TV with studio audience. You are invited. Saturday, Sept
16, 10:30 a.m. - noon Channel 6 Studios, 3210 Park Blvd, Palo Alto.
Contact Peninsula Peace & Justice Center, (650) 851-8284.
For schedule updates call AFSC 415-565-0201 or EPI 510-548-4141.
- Subject: ACTION ALERT: Selma's Unfinished March
Date: Wed, 6 Sep 2000 00:36:59 EDT
ELECTION MONITORS NEEDED
Notorious Racist Mayor Challenged: Selma's Unfinished March to Freedom
By Makani Themba, special to ColorLines and www.colorlines.com
The man who referred to Martin Luther King Jr. as "Martin Luther Coon" on
national television in 1965 is still the mayor of Selma, Alabama. But on
September 12, Mayor Joe Smitherman will face the most serious challenge of
his 37-year reign.
In the initial election on August 22, Mayor Smitherman received 4,345 votes
while his principal opponent, James Perkins Jr., a black businessman and
lifelong Selma resident, garnered 4,065 votes. Another black challenger,
Yusef Salaam, got 1,019 votes.
Leaders of the "Joe Gotta Go" campaign charge Smitherman with years of
voter fraud and are calling for independent observers to monitor the
upcoming September 12 runoff election.
Selma on my Mind
In 1965, activists made history with the now famous march from Selma to
Montgomery. The goal of the more than 50-mile trek was to bring attention
to the discriminatory policies that kept blacks from voting. Led by Mayor
Smitherman, racists managed to halt the march twice before a federal court
order forced Alabama state troopers to allow protesters to reach
Montgomery, the state capitol.
Televised images of the first march attempt, known as "Bloody Sunday,"
burned in America's living rooms: peaceful marchers beaten bloody by
troopers entrusted to protect them -- for the "crime" of demanding the
vote. As current mayoral challenger Perkins states, "The Voting Rights Act
of 1965 was written on the streets of Selma."
On that "Bloody Sunday" Mayor Smitherman became famous, starring in the
march drama as the leading unrepentant racist. He not only acted boldly to
prevent blacks from voting, he even encouraged violent retaliation against
blacks who pushed the issue.
Change of Heart?
Thirty-five years later, Smitherman, who declined to be interviewed for
this article, proclaims a "change of heart." He boasts about the number
of black appointments he's made and calls black congressman and former SNCC
activist John Lewis his friend.
One impetus for Smitherman's attempted image makeover is that the number of
blacks registered to vote has increased from less than 100 in 1965 to about
9,000 today. Black voters in Selma now outnumber whites by 3,000.
Years of grassroots organizing and voter registration have led to the
current "Joe Gotta Go" campaign to unseat Smitherman. Thanks to these
efforts, black voter registration and turnout are up since Perkins' narrow
loss to Smitherman four years ago by 325 votes. Perkins is confident he
will soon become Selma's first black mayor.
"I'll win because people are finally fed up enough to act and vote
differently. There are people here who act like Joe Smitherman is doing
them a favor just by doing his job, and there are always people who are
afraid of change. Better the oppression you know then taking a chance on
change. But change is what I represent, and I believe the majority of Selma
voters want change."
Commenting on facing his first runoff ever, Smitherman told the Montgomery
Advertiser, "The black support just wasn't there this time." Some
question whether Smitherman ever got much black support, as allegations of
voter fraud have hovered over his camp for more than a decade.
Fraud in the Air
Opponents say that Smitherman supporters actively work to prevent blacks
from voting. Rose Sanders, a civil rights lawyer and leading proponent of
the "Joe Gotta Go" campaign, was met by six police officers when she tried
to vote in the August 22 election. A voting inspector reported that at
least 37 blacks had been turned away from that site alone. A witness with
a video camera was reportedly pushed out of the room by a second voting
inspector during the fracas over Sanders' voting.
"Smitherman has used all kinds of tricks and ruses to keep the people of
Selma from realizing the promises of the Voting Rights Act," says
Sanders. "It's outrageous that the U.S. Department of Justice will not
investigate the fact that he got 1,000 absentee votes on August 22. Yet,
they came here to harass and intimidate black politicians who Smitherman
accused of voter fraud."
A November 15, 1999 investigative report by Ron Nixon in The Nation
confirms Sanders' allegations. An examination of federal and state records
found that only one white person in this century has been indicted and
prosecuted in Alabama for voter fraud -- and she was helping a black voter.
Smitherman was also accused of misusing absentee ballots in 1992, when
numerous people swore in affidavits that the Mayor's office either forged
their signatures or bribed them for votes. A man named Henry Kirk said in
a sworn statement that a worker for Smitherman offered him "a half gallon
of Thunderbird wine, a half case of Milwaukee's Best Beer and two packs of
Newport cigarettes" in exchange for his vote. Both state and federal
officials have refused to investigate complaints against Smitherman.
Renowned Selma lawyer and activist J. L. Chestnut told Nixon, "We've said
for years that [he] was operating like this, buying votes. This is the one
time he got caught, and even then the government did nothing. Is this
selective prosecution? You tell me."
Sanders agrees, "There should be a national outcry from politicians,
lawyers, and religious people demanding an investigation into yesterday's
vote. And it needs to happen now, before Smitherman can steal the election
on September 12th."
Sanders and other community organizers are issuing an international call
for a "Return to Selma" to take the next step on the march begun 35 years
ago. For them, Smitherman is still standing in the door of the courthouse
blocking blacks from the polls -- and must be stopped.
"We need monitors and international observers here as soon as possible,"
says Sanders. "Selma is unfinished business for the civil rights movement,
for this country. That's why people come here. That's why people care what
happens here. We wanted racial justice activists to come in the sixties to
help the people here overcome their fears and get a sense of their own
power and the national support they had. We need that again now."
Makani Themba works on issues of race, media and policy at the Applied
Research Center. Her latest book is Making Policy Making Change.
For more information or to provide support to the "Joe Gotta Go" effort,
contact Rose Sanders at (334) 875-9264, Sam Walker at (334) 872-6327 or
Susan Starr at sstarr@arc.org. The campaign is offering room and board for
those who will come to Selma and help in their final push.
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