Protest Set For Racial Beating Case
Thousands Expected In Small La. Town; Black Teens Accused Of Beating White Student
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A protester flashes the number six to represent the Jena 6, at a rally in Atlanta, Tuesday, Sept. 18, 2007. (AP)
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(CBS)
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Play CBS Video Video Racial Storm In Louisiana Town
A Louisiana town struggles to make sense of dramatic racial tension. What began with teen taunting has grown into a national civil rights fight. Harold Dow reports.
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Thursday's march was expected to draw thousands, perhaps tens of thousands of people, dwarfing Jena's population of about 3,500. Black participants said they hoped to rekindle the spirit of the civil rights movement.
"This is the first time I've done anything like this, on this magnitude at least," said Nathaniel Ford, 47, a computer technician who traveled from Richmond, Va.
Ford said he remembers his parents' stories of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and the struggles of the 1950s and 1960s. "I hope this is the beginning and not a one-time situation."
Students from schools across the country - including historically black colleges like Morehouse College, Spelman College and Clark Atlanta University, Howard University, Hampton University and Southern University - were en route to Jena on Wednesday. The case has resonated with young people, said Jeff Johnson, an activist and organizer who is covering the Jena rally for Black Entertainment Television.
"It does not happen often, where there's something that catches fire and really creates a mass movement of students," Johnson said as he boarded a Louisiana-bound plane in Atlanta.
The Rev. Jesse Jackson likened the gathering protest to historic events in Montgomery and Selma, Ala., and Little Rock, Ark.
But for many residents of this predominantly white town, Thursday's march is a bitter pill - the result, they said, of overblown and unfair media coverage. Most wouldn't comment and those who did were visibly irritated or angry.
"This isn't a racist town. It never has been. We didn't even have fist fights when the schools were integrated," said a white man who refused to give his name or comment further.
"Not no, but hell no," another man said angrily when asked to comment.
Still, town and state officials said this week they wanted the demonstrators to be welcome and comfortable and the resistance demonstrators met in the '50s and '60s was nowhere evident. State transportation workers were installing flashing message signs on the town streets that would aid with traffic and state police said portable toilets would be placed along the route.
© MMVII, CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
- I first saw this on TV. However they covered the protest more than the actual trial. After reading this story here on CBS. I''m having trouble seeing what the problem here is. A person was beaten to supposed near death. Witness saw it happen. By law that young African man should be charged according to state law. Being African American should not make you exempt from the law. The charges were reduced on the other 5. So they must have real evidence that the young African American in question is guilty otherwise they wouldn''t pursue it in court. The NAACP should be ashamed for trying to free a guilty man just cause of his skin color. I feel this will only raise racial tensions. If the Jena 6 are set free with no punishment given This will only backfire on the black community. This looks like nothing more than the NAACP using this case to launch African American abuse in the legal court system. I don''t understand why they are using this as catalyst for their movement seeing has how the man is most likely guilty. Come on people the white kid didn''t beat up himself.
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- This is so sad that as a people we let skin colour and hate ruin this nation. Amreica the nation I was taught to love. Her lovely flag and we can''t get a long. American I am. I know we have problems. There is no need to beat any one. After 9/11 We was one America..What happened to that unity..We need to come together as a people and mean it when we say God Bless America. She is our Nation of our birth.
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