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Marking Garvey’s Birth, Black Americans Gather to Demand Reparations

Blacks demonstrating for reparations

WASHINGTON, August 18 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) - Thousands of black Americans gathered on Washington's National Mall Saturday to mark the 115th anniversary of Marcus Garvey's birth, in a rally of support for reparation payments to blacks whose ancestors were slaves and suffered segregation in the United States, news agencies reported.

"We are a few thousand. We are here to ask for reparations now!" declared Stephanie Middler, one of the event's organizers, nonetheless noting that she had hoped for a better turnout, reported Agence France-Presse (AFP).

"It's difficult to get white people to admit," added Middler, clad in a T-shirt emblazoned with the word "UHUNU," or "liberty" in Swahili and shielding herself from the August sun with a wide-brimmed hat.

The rally near the Capitol building assembled various organizations tied to the black community, including the National Coalition of Blacks for Reparations in America (N'COBRA), the Nation of Islam, led by Louis Farrakhan and the New Black Panther Party.

"No justice, no peace," the demonstrators chanted from behind a security cordon. "Agitate, educate, organize, resist," the crowd added, pumping their fists at the sky.

A small group of white Americans joined in the rally. "Solidarity is the word," shouted Ferrell Winfree, who traveled from Atlanta, Georgia, for the event, said AFP.

Members of the Black Panthers, sporting black berets, displayed photographs of lynching, showing slaves hanged from tree branches or with their backs lacerated from whip lashings.

"This is the work of the devil. And the devil is the white man," declared one of the demonstrators.

Garvey, a Jamaican-born black nationalist leader in the United States, founded the Universal Negro Improvement Association. His newspaper, Negro World, advocated an independent black economy within the framework of white capitalism.

Last March, black Americans filed the first legal challenge against businesses they said benefited from slavery. Plaintiffs are asking for an independent panel of historians and seeking reimbursement and damages.

The suit estimated the worth of uncompensated labor at 1.4 trillion dollars, in the first of what could be a barrage of lawsuits targeting insurance giant Aetna, railroad CSX and financial services firm FleetBoston, in a class action lawsuit.

Plaintiffs' lawyers include Edward Fagan, who helped Holocaust survivors bring highly-publicized suits against Swiss banks and German companies that used forced and slave labor in World War II, said their case heralded the start of a wave of lawsuits.

Garvey, a Jamaican-born black nationalist leader in the U.S., founded the Universal Negro Improvement Association in 1914

Similar legal actions brought against the U.S. federal government in the past have been unsuccessful.

One of the groups behind the case is 'N'COBRA', which has been rallying African- Americans to take action particularly in the southern parts of the United States. The group says it may file the suit next year while another organization – the Reparations Assessment Group (RAG) – has spent 18 months preparing a class action suit.

According to RAG plans, taxpayers and corporations could face "possible multi-billion dollar settlements." The group includes Harvard Professor Charles Ogletree, who has reportedly said: "We want full recognition and a remedy of how slavery stigmatized, raped, murdered, and exploited millions of Africans through no fault of their own."

"We want a change in America,” he told journalists.

Reparations campaigners say that whites today profit from slavery, while blacks suffer from it as they are still rotating in a cycle of poverty. It is often said that America was "built on the backs of slaves."

Although there have been no “slaves: or “slaveholders” in America since 1865, many African Americans complain that they are still not being fairly treated by “White” Americans and are still seen as inferior to them.

On July 17, A white U.S. policeman, caught on video beating a handcuffed African American teenager in an incident that caused fury in racially-charged Los Angeles, is to be tried for assault, his lawyer said.

Officer Jeremy Morse, who was seen in the amateur film slamming the 16-year-old suspect down on a police car and punching him in the face during a July 6 arrest, was indicted for trial by a grand jury, the attorney said.

The first African slaves arrived in what is now the United States in 1619, and the practice broadened quickly, chiefly in the south, where the topography favored plantation agriculture. Some eight million African slaves were brought to the territory before slavery was abolished in 1865.

While the institution of slavery tended in North America to reinforce feelings of racial superiority on the part of the whites, some writers have argued that the treatment of slaves there was more humane than it was in the Catholic or Latin countries.

In the late 20th century, the idea of compensating American blacks for their enslavement through some form of reparations won widespread support from African-American organizations and greater notice, although little support, from the broader society.

 

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