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Tens of thousands of people marched to
the Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial and down the
National Mall on Saturday, commemorating the 50th anniversary ofKing's famous speech and pledging that his dream includes equalityfor gays, Latinos, the poor and the disabled。
The event was an homage to a generation of activists that enduredfire hoses, police abuse and indignities to demand equality forAfrican Americans. But there was a strong theme of unfinishedbusiness。
"This is not the time for nostalgic commemoration," said MartinLuther King III, the oldest son of the slain civil rights leader."Nor is this the time for self-congratulatory celebration. The taskis not done. The journey is not complete. We can and we must domore."
Eric Holder, the nation's first black attorney general, said hewould not be in office, nor would Barack Obama be president,without those who marched。
"They marched in spite of animosity, oppression and brutalitybecause they believed in the greatness of what this nation couldbecome and despaired of the founding promises not kept," Holdersaid。
Holder mentioned gays and Latinos, women and the disabled asthose who had yet to fully realize the Rev. Martin Luther KingJr.'s dream. Others in the crowd advocated organized labor, votingrights, revamping immigration policies and access to local postoffices。
Rep. John Lewis, D-Ga., the only surviving speaker from the 1963March on Washington, railed against a recent Supreme Court decisionthat effectively erased a key anti-discrimination provision of theVoting Rights Act. Lewis was a leader of a 1965 march, where policebeat and gassed marchers who demanded access to votingbooths。
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