‘Bloody Sunday’ Commemoration

Bus will travel from Atlanta to Selma, Montgomery, and the Edmund Pettus Bridge with Special tribute to Jimmie Lee Jackson.
ATLANTA (TriceEdneyWire.com) – The
Southern Christian Leadership Conference’s Women’s Organizational
Movement for Equality Now (W.O.M.E.N.), Inc. will take busloads of
people on a two-day tour through the cradle of the Civil Rights Movement
this weekend, March 5-6.
The event commemorates ‘Bloody
Sunday’, the day that civil rights marchers were brutally attacked by
state and local police on the Edmund Pettus Bridge in route from Selma
to Montgomery. The more than 600 marchers were beaten with billy clubs
and assaulted with tear gas.
Started in 1987, the annual Evelyn
Gibson Lowery Civil Rights Heritage Tour visits several historic sites
and meets with people instrumental in the Movement. Students, seniors,
elected officials, dignitaries, and celebrities have joined the tour
over the years.
This year, founder and chair of
SCLC/W.O.M.E.N., Evelyn Gibson Lowery, will honor the family of slain
activist Jimmie Lee Jackson, whose murderer - an Alabama State Trooper -
plead guilty to the 1965 crime in 2010 and was sentenced to six months
in jail.
The tribute will be held directly in
front of the monument that SCLC/W.O.M.E.N erected in Jackson's memory at
the historic Zion Methodist Church, once a meeting place for civil
rights workers.
The tour bus departs from the
organization's headquarters on Auburn Avenue in Atlanta and traces the
paths of history by visiting historical sites in Birmingham, Marion,
Selma, Whitehall, Montgomery, and Tuskegee, Alabama. In addition to
meeting people who made history participating in the movement and
reliving events that forced dramatic change in America, the group will
visit monuments constructed in memory of civil rights warriors Viola
Liuzzo, Rev. Hosea Williams, Earl T. Shinhoster, Coretta Scott King,
Rev. James Orange, Rev. James Reeb, Albert Turner, Sr., Rosa Parks, and
the Freedom Wall. Tour participants will also March across the Edmund
Pettus Bridge reenacting the "Bloody Sunday" march.
On March 7, 1965, 600 peaceful
protestors started a 50-mile march from Selma to Montgomery in response
to Jimmy Lee Jackson's murder and to protest for voter's rights. As they
crossed the Edmund Pettus Bridge, the marchers were violently attacked
by State Troopers with nightsticks and tear gas. The violent incident -
known as "Bloody Sunday" - was broadcast on live television and caused
outrage around the country. Two days later, Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.
led a second march that was turned back by State Troopers. After a
federal judicial review, over 25,000 people were allowed to march
escorted by the National Guard. Soon afterward, Congress passed the
Voting Rights Act of 1965 forcing states to end discriminatory voting
practices.
The Heritage Tour is open to the
public. Travel packages include transportation, lodging, two meals per
day, and snacks. For more information call SCLC/Women's Organizational
Movement for Equality Now at (404) 584-0303 or email
sclcwomeninc@aol.comThis e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it
.
SCLC/Women's Organizational Movement
for Equality Now is an independent 501c(3) nonprofit organization
founded in 1979 by Evelyn Gibson Lowery to champion the rights of women,
children, families, and responding to the problems of the
disenfranchised regardless of ethnicity, gender, age, or religion.
Programs include youth mentoring,
domestic violence education, HIV/AIDS education, and computer training.
Their Heritage Pride program hosts the annual Evelyn Gibson Lowery Civil
Rights Heritage Tour through the cradle of the civil rights movement
and has erected 13 monuments honoring civil rights icons.