Miami Commissioner Fighting to Exonerate Marcus Garvey
Tuesday, August 17, 2004 at 03:20AM
TheSpook
From the pages of history books to murals honoring black heroes, Marcus
Garvey's message of racial pride and self-sufficiency still resonates.
Now, 64 years after his death, some in South Florida are joining the
decades-long struggle to clear the name of one of black America's most
influential and controversial social philosophers, best known for his
back-to-Africa movement. "Marcus Garvey led a movement to uplift
humanity," said Dale Holness, a Jamaican-American and Lauderhill city
commissioner who recently launched a local effort to have Garvey
exonerated by the United States government. "He was about creating
self-sufficiency among African people for them to lift themselves up
and be proud." Last month, Holness, a newly elected commissioner,
sponsored a resolution at the Lauderhill City Commission supporting
Garvey's exoneration. The measure passed and Holness is now working on
getting other cities and elected officials onboard. If he succeeds,
South Floridians will be joining others in Washington, D.C., and
Connecticut who are also fighting to remove the stigma associated with
Garvey following his 1923 U.S. conviction on mail fraud. [more ]
Article originally appeared on (http://brownwatch.com/).
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