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Wednesday, May 21, 2025

Child Watch: Justice Denied

Marian Wright Edelman
Marian Wright Edelman

By Marian Wright Edelman

NNPA Columnist

 Until the killing of Black men, Black mothers’ sons, is as important as  the killing of White mothers’ sons, we who believe in freedom cannot  rest.

– Ella Baker, Leading Mentor of Black Youth, including the Student  Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) in the 1960s

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Trayvon Martin will  forever remain in the annals of history next to Medgar Evers and Emmett Till as  symbols for the fight for equal justice for all. 

– Benjamin Crump,  lawyer for Trayvon Martin’s parents (2013)

 The reaction to the not guilty verdict from George Zimmerman’s jury was swift  and strong. Young people poured onto the streets in peaceful protests in  Chicago, Los Angeles, New York City, and Washington, D.C. By 3 a.m. more than  100,000 people signed an online petition urging the Justice Department to pursue  civil rights violation charges against George Zimmerman.

The outrage over the killing of an unarmed Black teenager who was doing  nothing wrong must continue until some semblance of justice is achieved. People  who want to keep faith in American justice feel uncomfortable, upset and  disheartened. Where is the justice if walking while Black is enough to get you  “stopped and frisked” in New York City and fatally shot in Florida with its  senseless violent “Stand Your Ground” law that allows people to defend  themselves with deadly force anytime and anywhere they imagine they are or say  they feel threatened even if they are the stalker?

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Many decades of struggle and progress to eliminate racial profiling,  arbitrary arrests, unfair sentencing, imprisonment and criminalization of Black  males at younger and younger ages are being reversed by determined special  interests like the gun lobby putting profits before the most basic American  civil rights. The National Rifle Association and their allies, including the  American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC), determined efforts to support and  pass “Stand Your Ground” and other destructive laws to protect guns rather than  children perpetuates the epidemic of gun violence, especially for Black male  teenagers like Trayvon Martin.

Black children and teens were 17 times more likely to die from a gun homicide  than White children and teens in 2010. Since 1963, 59,265 Black children and  teens have been killed by guns — more than 17 times the recorded lynchings of  Black people of all ages in America between 1882 and 1968.

What made a Black male teenager in a hoodie walking home in the rain appear  suspicious and “up to no good” in George Zimmerman’s eyes? Would he have stopped  a White male teenager? Isn’t it long past time that we have a candid  conversation about how we can create a post-racial America for our children and  grandchildren beginning today?

Let us refuse to be silent. If Trayvon Martin’s parents had been silent and  other voices had not joined with them, George Zimmerman never would have been  arrested and never would have been brought to trial. Let us continue to refuse  to be silent until all the George Zimmermans of this world are deterred and held  accountable for vigilante justice against Black males. Let us refuse to be  silent until the killing of Black mothers’ sons is as important as the killing  of White mothers’ sons. Only then will we have a post-racial America.

 Marian Wright Edelman is president of the Children’s Defense Fund.

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