For the 110 members of New York City’s Riverside Church who traveled to the 50th anniversary celebration of the March on Washington, the day began with coffee and croissants at 3:30 am. The hour didn’t stop congregants from singing songs from the civil rights marches of the 1960s or telling stories, and as two lines formed to board two buses, Colia Liddell Lafayette Clark, 73, led everyone in chants and spirituals.
At the march, they joined thousands of other activists in commemorating a pivotal protest in the civil rights movement that culminated in Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.’s landmark “I Have a Dream” speech.
Clark is intimately familiar with what those songs and the speech meant to the civil rights movement—she started working to end segregation as a college student in Mississippi in 1959. By 1961, she was working for Medgar Evers, the Mississippi field secretary for the NAACP who was killed by a white supremacist in 1963. Clark missed the original March on Washington because she was traveling back from speaking to human rights groups in New York.
While the United States may not look like the same country as when she protested in Birmingham and got beaten by police, Clark said that growing income inequality and unemployment are still critical issues.
“The form may change, the appearance may change, but the substance, appears to have worsened,” she said.
Even so, Clark still believes that change can come, movements like Occupy Wall Street and groups like the Dream Defenders “remind me of when I was young,” she said.
Saturday’s trip was organized by Carlene Pinto, 25, who has spent the past two years as the coordinator of mission and social justice for the church, itself a stronghold of activism in New York City. Joining her were a number of former summer interns who came to Riverside through the New York City’s Summer Youth Employment Program. Pinto treated the six weeks she had with the 14 teenagers as a social justice training camp, teaching them about the history of the civil rights movement and black history, as well as getting them involved in marches for Trayvon Martin and slain NYC teen Ramarley Graham.
“Segregation is not far from where we are standing,” Pinto said. When her interns started at the beginning of the summer, “none of them knew who Emmett Till was.” Today, half a dozen of them came back to volunteer and help the trip run smoothly.
Handing out t-shirts to congregants before the bus left Saturday, 18-year-old Tajzhane Green said she wanted to make it clear that social justice work and activism is not a thing of the past.
“It’s important to show that it’s not just elderly people, that it’s young people too,” Green said.
As the congregation traveled through Maryland, Clark picked up the microphone at the front of the bus to give a history lesson on the state’s connection to slavery, slave rebellions, and the 1947 push to desegregate buses between New York City and Washington DC. Activists, she said, paid a very high price when they attempted the same thing south of the Mason Dixon line in the 1961 Freedom Rides.









