“You can’t fight for civil rights for anyone, unless you fight for it for everyone,” Rev. Al Sharpton told a crowd Friday evening in Oxford, England.
The reverend addressed a packed hall at The Oxford Union Society, Britain’s second oldest university union. Every year, Oxford Union attracts esteemed international figures to address its members. Past speakers include U.S. Presidents Jimmy Carter and Ronald Reagan, U.K. Prime Minister Winston Churchill, the Dalai Lama and Mother Teresa.
Rev. Sharpton used this opportunity to detail similarities between Britain and America in the fight for equal treatment under the law. He highlighted the cases of Eric Garner and Michael Brown and their subsequent protests as examples.
“The challenge, I think, that we face now is that you’ve got to deal with questioning the law enforcement, but at the same time deal with supporting what is appropriate to protect all of us — particularly in the communities where we have a disproportionate amount of crime,” Sharpton said.
Before taking questions, Rev. Sharpton pointed out that he’s definitely witnessed progress in community relations in the U.K. More than two decades ago he led a march there for Roland Adams, a young man who was killed by a self-described white supremacist mob. During that march, he met the boy’s mother and aunt.









