SELMA, Ala. — Georgia Congressman John Lewis strolled to the middle of the Edmund Pettus Bridge on Sunday and remembered the incident 45 years ago when he and other marchers were beaten on the day known as “Bloody Sunday.”
Lewis spoke about the beating he and other marchers received during the 1965 march. He then joined about 10,000 in a recreation of the 1965 march. Marchers included Civil Rights foot soldiers and civil rights leaders including the Rev. Jesse Jackson.
Also Sunday in Washington, President Barack Obama marked the 45th anniversary of “Bloody Sunday” by praising “these heroes” who marched into history and endured beatings by Alabama state troopers at the start of their landmark voting rights trek.
The nation’s first black president said that despite all the progress since “that terrible day in Selma,” more still needs to be done.
Marchers were a few blocks into their Selma-to-Montgomery march on March 7, 1965, when they were beaten by troopers on the bridge.
The march was later completed under federal protection, with Martin Luther King Jr. leading it. It led to passage of the Voting Rights Act, which opened Southern polling places to blacks and ended all-white government.
Also Sunday, Winnie Madikizela-Mandela, ex-wife of former South African President Nelson Mandela, was the keynote speaker at the Martin and Coretta Scott King Unity Breakfast in Selma. Madikizela-Mandela told the 500-plus audience at Wallace Community College in Selma that no American place in the civil rights struggle was more important than Selma.
Daily Updates
March 8, 2010
Lewis remembers ’Bloody Sunday’ march, beatings
- Daily Updates
-
-
What next for Romney? Undercut Obama, raise money
What’s next for Mitt Romney?
Continued ... - LA vote could spell end for bag of a thousand uses
- SpaceX Dragon leaves space station for trip home
- Shootings leave 6 dead in already jittery Seattle
- US sales of foreclosure homes rose in 1Q
- May 30, 2012
- Gas prices expected to fall further heading into summer
- Obama honors Medal of Freedom recipients as heroes
- Government rests case in Clemens perjury trial
- 10 Things to Know for Wednesday
- US futures tumble as outlook in Europe dims
- Guitar picking master Doc Watson dies in NC at 89
- May 29, 2012
- Tool-wielding robots crawl in bodies for surgery
- Dairies pamper cows with massages, waterbeds
- Man falls to death from crane in Dallas standoff
- Romney ready to claim GOP nomination after Texas
-
What next for Romney? Undercut Obama, raise money


