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Confederate Flag's Removal Turns Into King Day Celebration
COLUMBIA, S.C. (AP) -- For the first time in 17 years, civil rights
leaders gathered at the South Carolina Statehouse to pay homage to the
Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. without the Confederate flag casting a long
shadow over them.
The
South Carolina Highway Patrol Honor Guard removes the Confederate
Battle Flag from the State House grounds during a ceremony on Friday,
July 10, 2015, in Columbia, S.C. (Tim Dominick/The State/TNS via Getty
Images) S 5D Mark III / TNS via Getty Images
The flag was taken down over the summer after
police said a young white man shot nine black church members to death
during a Bible study in Charleston. Following the massacre at the
Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church, Gov. Nikki Haley reversed
course and made it a priority for lawmakers to pass legislation to
remove the flag.
Bishop James Walker, who presides over the 7th
Episcopal District in Connecticut, praised the National Association for
the Advancement of Colored People for its fight against the flag.
"You forced important power in high places to
recognize that the scared memory of the Emanuel Nine would be parched by
a symbol of injustice flying over the Capitol," he said at a prayer
breakfast.
At the Statehouse, about 1,000 people assembled
under chilly, sunny skies to mark the 30th anniversary of the federal
holiday honoring the slain civil rights leader, who was killed in 1968.
The state NAACP said there is still more work to
do to honor King and the theme of this year's rally is "education
equity," with speakers calling for South Carolina to spend more money to
help students in poorer, more rural school districts, which frequently
have a majority of black students.
COLUMBIA,
SC - JULY 10: A crowd celebrates after a South Carolina honor guard
lowered the Confederate flag from the Statehouse grounds for the last
time on July 10, 2015 in Columbia, South Carolina. Republican Governor
Nikki Haley presided over the event after signing the historic
legislation to remove the flag the day before. (Photo by John
Moore/Getty Images) John Moore / Getty Images
And this year's event will also include
appearances by all three main Democratic presidential candidates -
Hillary Clinton, Bernie Sanders and Martin O'Malley. There was a heavier
security presence compared with previous years because of the
candidates.
After the prayer breakfast, the NAACP then marched five blocks to the Statehouse O'Malley and Sanders up front.
The rally in Columbia is one of many planned. In
the nation's capital, President Barack Obama and first lady Michelle
Obama planned to take part in a community service program in King's
honor. Attorney General Loretta Lynch was to be the keynote speaker at a
National Action Network King Day Awards program and FBI Director James
Comey planned to lead a government wreath-laying service at the Martin
Luther King Jr. memorial in Washington.
Elsewhere, the King Center in Atlanta celebrated
the holiday with a remembrance ceremony at Ebenezer Baptist Church.
That commemoration caps more than a week of events meant to celebrate
the slain civil rights icon's legacy under the theme: "Remember!
Celebrate! Act! King's Legacy of Freedom for Our World."
"What most people around the world want,
whatever nation they live in, is the freedom to participate in
government, the freedom to prosper in life and the freedom to peacefully
coexist," said King's daughter, the Rev. Bernice King.
The theme of freedom is especially meaningful
this year, she said, because it is the 50th anniversary of her father's
trip to Chicago to highlight the need for open and fair housing. King
and the Southern Christian Leadership Conference in January 1966 had
announced plans for the Chicago Freedom Movement. In a nod to that
legacy, Secretary of Housing and Urban Development Julian Castro was set
to speak.
King's legacy will also be celebrated in New
York at the state Capitol complex. A free program at the Empire State
Plaza Convention Center will feature musical and theatrical tributes,
including performances by Grammy-winning gospel singer Dorinda
Clark-Cole and blues guitarist Guy Davis.
And in Minneapolis, activists with the group
Black Lives Matter planned to march onto a Mississippi River bridge that
connects Minneapolis and St. Paul during a Martin Luther King Day
rally.