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King's 'I have a dream' speech celebrated

( 2003-08-24 15:16) (AP)

Forty years after Martin Luther King Jr. eloquently captured the struggle of black Americans for equality, civil rights activists called Saturday for his dream to finally be realized.

His vision of a land where little black boys and girls in the South would one day hold hands with little white boys and girls was remembered by thousands of people who gathered on a warm summer day to celebrate King's "I Have a Dream" speech.

"Despite the progress we've made during the last four decades, people of color are still being denied a fair share of employment and educational opportunities in our society," said his son, Martin Luther King III.

Speaking to a few thousand people gathered on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial, King said it was a day to honor the hard work of all those behind the 1963 march. It also represented, he said, a moment of realization that much work lies ahead.

To mark the coming 40th anniversary of the March on Washington, King's widow, Coretta Scott King, urged the crowd to follow the peaceful path that her husband preached.

We must make our hearts instruments of peace and nonviolence because when the heart is right, the mind and the body will follow," she said.

Mrs. King stood on the memorial's granite steps, looking out over the Reflecting Pool, in the same spot where her husband delivered his powerful appeal so many years ago to a throng estimated at 250,000.

Another activist with vivid memories of that August day in 1963 was Rep. John Lewis (news, bio, voting record), D-Ga., who helped organize the march.

"I was here 40 years ago, 23 years old, a few pounds lighter, with all of my hair," he said, as he asked young and old alike to do more. "Too many of us are too complacent, too satisfied. We need to make a little noise."

Other speakers spoke against racial profiling, the death penalty and the Iraq war.

Before the speeches, participants took shelter from the bright sun under about a half dozen white tents set up for a series of teach-ins.

The panel discussions varied from education, economic justice and jobs to voter education and empowerment ¡ª which was one of the central themes of the weekend remembrance.

The coalition of about 100 diverse groups who organized the rally used the event to kick off a 15-month voter mobilization campaign.

Saturday's teach-ins and speeches culminated a two-day celebration of the march in which King issued his famous demand for justice for all, delivered on Aug. 28, 1963.

"I have a dream that one day this nation will rise up and live out the true meaning of its creed: 'We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal,'" he said.

"I have a dream that my four little children will one day live in a nation where they will not be judged by the color of their skin but by the content of their character."

Organizers reached out this year to the younger generation of 20- to 30-year-olds, and many of them turned out.

Rev. Markel Hutchins, national president and CEO of National Youth Connection was one of a number of young speakers.

"We come to this place to place the forces of evil and oppression on notice that our movement may have slowed but it has not stopped, and the hip hop generation is poised and ready to take over where our parents and predecessors are leaving off," said Hutchins.

Jimmy Prude, 20, a senior at Howard University, said he came to the rally to understand a little more about economic empowerment. "I just want to see people be able to help better themselves."

 
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