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The Best Article of MintPress for Mother’s Day

 Hi all,

a wonderful article about the protests on Mother’s Day for black lives.

Thank you for reading and sharing.
It was published by Mint Press yesterday.

Have a wonderful week, and fight against racism with us!!
Because: black life matters, in the USA, in Europa, in Israel…
everywhere there is still Apartheid!!

Thank you

Dr. phil. Milena Rampoldi – ProMosaik e.V.

‘Our Kids Are Being Killed’: On Mother’s Day Weekend, Moms Are Rising Up For Black Lives


Nation-wide protests and vigils highlight growing movement for racial justice. 

Mothers whose children have been killed by police gather in Washington, D.C. on Saturday. (Photo courtesy of Code Pink) 
Mothers whose children have been killed by police gather in Washington, D.C. on Saturday. (Photo courtesy of Code Pink)

This Mother’s Day weekend, moms across the United States are leading
protests, vigils, and marches to demand justice for children slain by
police and vigilante violence—and to send the message to parents and
young people alike that Black Lives Matter.

From Chicago to Washington, D.C., many of those organizing
mobilizations on Saturday and Sunday are mothers who have lost their own
children.

“What better way to spend my Mother’s Day than to be fighting for my child,” said Panzy Edwards, whose 15-year-old son Dakota Bright
was shot in the head and killed by a Chicago police officer in November
2012. “I’m marching to honor my son’s life that was taken by the
Chicago police department,” Edwards told Common Dreams. “I’m marching to honor lives taken by police everywhere.”

Panzy Edwards is not alone in her loss. According to a report
released in April 2013 by the Malcom X Grassroots Movement, in 2012 an
average of one black person was killed every 28 hours through
extrajudicial means—by police, security guard, or vigilante violence.
Beyond killings, studies show that black communities are also
disproportionately criminalized by law enforcement: a report released last November by USA Today
found that, in all of the 3,538 police departments investigated, black
people are more likely to be arrested than non-black racial groups for
every type of criminal charge.

“My purpose is to shed light on the fact our kids are being killed in
the south side of Chicago,” said Edwards. “I don’t think people really
understand how hurtful, how painful, how much agony comes with what
they’re doing to us. The city says ‘we feel your pain,’ but they’re not
giving us anything. We’re fed up. Iam fighting every day so that my
son’s voice can be heard. I’m fighting for other mothers alongside me.”

On Saturday afternoon, protesters will gather at the location where Dakota Bright was shot, in a city still reeling from the recent “not guilty” charge for the police officer who shot and killed black woman Rekia Boyd.

(Image courtesy of Panzy Edwards) 
(Image courtesy of Panzy Edwards)

They will be joined by people taking similar action across the country, in step with growing nation-wide movements for racial justice—what many are calling Black Spring.
This includes hundreds participating in the Millions Mom March that kicked off Saturday afternoon in Washington, DC.
“This Mother’s Day, let’s come together to demand an end to this
cycle of violence, this society of institutionalized racism and police
militarization,” wrote Valerie Bell, ahead of the march. The mother of Sean Elijah Bell,
who was killed by New York plainclothes police officers on his wedding
day in November 2006 at the age of 23, Valerie Bell added, “We are
healers, teachers, caretakers, givers of life, and so much more. Mothers
are powerful; if we come together, we can be unstoppable.”

Bell is joined in the capital by mothers across the country, who will
march to the Department of Justice, where they will “present their
demands for justice and racial equality, in the names of their slain
children,” according to a statement from Mothers United for Justice, whose members have traveled from Milwaukee, Wisconsin.

Organizers emphasize that, while it’s important to make visible the
role of mothers in the movement for racial justice, their leadership is
nothing new.

Audrey Stewart is organizing a Mother’s Day Gathering for Black Lives in
New Orleans on Sunday as part of the informal collective Mothers With a
Vision, mostly comprised of mothers with black children. In an
interview with Common Dreams, Stewart said that “for
generations in this country, it has been mothers picking up the pieces
of state violence against communities of color and leading the charge to
defend their families and children.”

“We have concerned about the way that women and transgender women’s
experiences haven’t always been centered in the coverage of police
killings,” Stewart added. “We felt it was an important time to speak to
women’s experiences and how black women and black transgender people are
affected.”
According to report entitled We Deserve Better, published in 2014 by the the youth of color-led LGBTQ organization BreakOUT!,
84 percent of transgender people say they have been profiled by police
on the bases of gender identity or sexual orientation in New Orleans,
and 42 percent of LGBTQ people of color say they have been arrested
after calling the police for help.

In 2015 alone, numerous transgender women of color across the United
States have been murdered, including: Penny Proud, Goddess Edwards,
Michelle (Yazmin) Vash Payne, Ty Underwood, Lamia Beard, Taja Gabrielle
De Jesus. In addition, one gender non-conforming person of color, Lamar
Edwards, was killed this year.

“As mothers, we have problems with what is going on around the
country,” said Stewart. “What everyone is talking about right now in
Ferguson and Baltimore—the police killing of black men and women—is
nothing new, but we are seeing increased attention to issue.”

“As mothers of black children, we want to see a world where our
children are safe and valued and grow up knowing their lives matter,”
Stewart added. “It is an important time for us to come together and
envision the world we want to create.”

Takema (one of the Mothers with a Vision organizers) and Baby August at a Black spring gathering earlier this month. (Photo courtesy of Audrey Stewart) 
Takema
(one of the Mothers with a Vision organizers) and Baby August at a
Black spring gathering earlier this month. (Photo courtesy of Audrey
Stewart)