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Confrontation kept under control

Police keep things calm as two groups of marchers on opposite sides of the immigration debate parry in South Los Angeles.

By Deborah Schoch and Jonathan Abrams
Times Staff Writers

June 24, 2007

A group of 100 marchers waving American flags headed south on Crenshaw Boulevard on Saturday to protest illegal immigration and what they called its damaging effects on the black community.

But they never reached the park that was their destination, and the rally turned into two tense hours of confrontation under a hot sun with counter-protesters on the opposite side of the street. Insults and epithets flew across the asphalt as hundreds of Los Angeles Police Department officers kept guard. Although some people expressed concern about another May 1 melee, in the end, police earned praise for their restraint and efforts to calm the crowd.

Police defused the standoff, both sides dispersed and five people, including organizer Ted Hayes, a longtime activist for the homeless, were arrested peacefully.

The marchers, made up of black activists and Minutemen, homeless people and neighborhood residents, held a city permit for an afternoon rally at the historic Leimert Park in the Crenshaw district.

Nearly 500 counter-protesters, mostly black and Latino, some with Mexican flags and others with antiwar placards, swept down the other side of Crenshaw Boulevard. They converged on the park first and blocked the original marchers from entering. Some said they had heard those marchers would include KKK members, and the counter-protesters denounced what they called racist outsiders trying to incite violence.

As the two chanting groups faced off, police kept watch, some on bicycles and some in riot gear, batons held in position. Police negotiators shuttled between the two groups as some protesters heckled them.

The two groups called out contrasting slogans and songs. One marcher bellowed “Lift Ev’ry Voice and Sing,” also known as the Black National Anthem, through a bullhorn. Other marchers followed with “The Battle Hymn of the Republic.” On the other side of the street, some chanted: “The whole world is watching. We remember McArthur Park,” referring to the May 1 melee between police and immigrant-rights marchers.

At times, the gathering felt like a street festival, with mothers with babies in strollers and musicians playing drums. Other times, tensions mounted in the heat as some protesters in the park called the police “pigs.”

Officers finally donned helmets and stood in lines, quietly facing protesters on both sides of the street. The groups finally dispersed peacefully, and some leaders on both sides praised the LAPD for effectively avoiding a violent situation.

“LAPD did a tremendous job in how they handled the protest,” said activist Najee Ali. “It could have been very volatile.”

Some members of the original march, however, criticized counter-protesters for denying them entry to Leimert Park.

The march to the park was led by Hayes, who has organized an African American group opposed to illegal immigration. He was joined Saturday by members of the Minutemen Brigade as well as some black marchers who said that illegal immigrants from Mexico and Central America are taking their jobs and flooding schools and hospitals.

During negotiations, police commanders prevented march organizers from entering the park, saying they were forced to take that step for public safety reasons. The crowd inside the park included many children and families, they explained.

“I realize you have a permit,” incident commander Deputy Chief Charlie Beck told black activists and Minutemen jammed on a sidewalk outside stores across the street from the park.

“I have to deny you access to the park. I do this for public safety,” said Beck, speaking through a megaphone.

Many of the marchers protested loudly, characterizing the counter-protesters as Spanish-speaking “illegal aliens” who already were taking their jobs and now were denying their right to enter the park.

“What country is this!” a woman yelled at Beck.

“Don’t forget to do it again in Spanish,” another called out mockingly.

At one point, a group of women — most of them white and grasping rolled-up American flags — sat on the pavement across from the park, chanting, “We want our park.”

Several said they were members of the California Coalition for Immigration Reform, based in Huntington Beach, and had come to South Los Angeles to stand up for the black community and against illegal immigrants, who they said are taking jobs from African American residents.

They pointed across the street at the waving Mexican flags.

“That is the border,” a man said.

After spirited and sometimes angry talks with Beck and other police, Hayes told his followers that he planned to be arrested and that others could choose to join him, one by one. The energy ebbed among marchers, some of whom had pushed to march past police lines into the park. One of Hayes’ supporters, holding an American flag, waited politely to be handcuffed. Even some of the most outspoken Minutemen members said they would abide by Hayes’ decision.

Across the street in the park, many of the counter-protesters faulted the marchers, saying they were invading the Leimert Park community and trying to incite tensions between blacks and Latinos.

“They are coming in here, not knowing our community,” said activist Bilal Ali. “There are no black and brown problems in this community. These people are too intelligent to fall for that. We see this as a scam.”

Counter-protesters carried signs that said, “In our ghettos, black and brown = one love,” and “Together under one community.”

Said Pedro Reyes, a South L.A. resident, “We are all suffering the same injustices. So there is no need to try and divide us.”

Supporters of full legalization for illegal immigrants plan a march at noon today in Hollywood.


deborah.schoch@latimes.com

jonathan.abrams@latimes.com

Times staff writer Cara Mia DiMassa contributed to this story.

A Real Civil Rights Journey 

Midway through the 20th Century, almost 100 years after President Lincoln wrote and delivered the Emancipation Proclamation, white Americans were awakened to a painful truth; Millions of American men and women, descendents of freed slaves, were being treated like second and third class citizens.  In some parts of this nation, they were treated worse then stray dogs.   

Forced to sit in the back of busses, prevented from eating and drinking in “whites only” restaurants and bars, waiting in line to drink from water fountains designated for “colored” only, black Americans suffered the shame and humiliation associated with bigotry and racism.   

Given a series of events both political and social, Americans finally awoke to this reality and the Civil Rights Movement began.  With leaders like Martin Luther King and courageous political and civil activists, laws were acquired at the local, state and national level that prevented abuses so common in the black community.  

These laws permitted individuals born in the
United States of America–some 4th, 5th and 6th generation Americans-to finally enjoy the basic rights so many citizens took for granted.
 

The Civil Rights Movement was their battle. It was a battle fought in the streets, in the schoolhouses, and in the courts for over a decade.  It was founded on a dream that all men would someday be judged not by the color of their skin but by the content of their character. Because of the sacrifices made by these courageous folks who were willing to put their lives on the line, civil rights exist today for all American citizens no matter what their race, religion, nationality or creed.  

But there are a growing number of people in our country who are claiming that their civil rights are being violated. These men and women are Persons Here Illegally.  They have stolen across the border and claimed this country as their home.  Moreover, they are demanding the rights available to all American citizens with the help of organizations like the ACLU.  According to the ACLU,  

The Immigrants’ Rights Project of the American Civil Liberties Union Foundation was established in 1987 to expand and enforce the civil rights and civil liberties of non-citizens and to combat public and private discrimination against immigrants. 

Rights that took American Blacks decades to acquire are being handed to persons here illegally because they have successfully evaded authority and circumvented the legal process.  

This is a civil rights issue, but the question is “Who’s civil rights are we most obligated to protect?” 

What needs to be done. 

 

There cannot be any discussion of immigration reform that does not include the impact illegal immigration has on the African American community. Those most impacted by the flood of persons here illegally will not be left to fend for themselves. The price of freedom was too great; the sacrifices made for civil rights were too painful.  

The economic challenges faced by those from other countries deserve our compassion and our concern, but they do not equal the price paid in the journey from the auction block to the voting booth, from the plantation to the state assembly, from the back of the bus to the freedom to live, work and worship with every other American citizen. No, the road to citizenship was too painful and too costly to devalue by keeping it out of so-called “compressive reform.”   

Before we can engage in any discussion of rights for migrant workers and those claiming entitlement to civil liberties, we must remember the sacrifices that were made by Americans in the name of liberty.  We cannot keep American blacks out of the discussion.   

When jobs, services, and money for education are diverted away from black communities and given to persons here illegally, we are stealing from the poor to give to the poor.  Some say we are igniting a race war–well let me tell you–the war is here and it has been here for a very long time. 

Politicians no longer get to blame activists for that which they have too long ignored. 

So, I am closing with a challenge to all elected representatives and candidates for President: If you do not stand up for the black community now and include them in your talks of immigration reform, then you are not qualified to represent any American in the future.  

God bless you and God bless the
United States of America.