3828849817?profile=originalPress Conference in The Murrow Room of The National Press Club at 1:00pm on Wednesday, August 17th


 The following is being released by Julius Garvey:

One of the most prominent leaders of the civil rights movements in the first half of the 20th century-and recognized as such by luminaries such as Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. and Malcolm X as well as by the government of Jamaica, which posthumously named him its first National Hero-Marcus Garvey was wrongfully convicted by a U.S. court of mail fraud, a conviction that stalled his movement for racial justice, social progress and economic independence for all peoples of the African diaspora.

In an effort to redress this grievous, decades-old wrong, a request for a posthumous presidential pardon has been filed by the descendants of Marcus Garvey with the U.S. Department of Justice and the White House Counsel's Office.  This pardon request urges consideration of Garvey's unjust arrest, trial and incarceration in 1923; President Calvin Coolidge's commutation of his sentence; and Garvey's crusade, embodied in the Universal Negro Improvement Association, to improve the lives of African-Americans as well as of people of African descent worldwide.

Posthumous presidential pardons are rare occurrences-only two have been granted to date.  However, the fact that his conviction was:

  • motivated by a desire on the part of the federal government to discredit, disrupt and destroy Garvey's civil rights movement;
  • executed through covert surveillance and deception, with under-cover agents posing as Garvey supporters: and
  • aided by judicial proceedings that have been condemned as factually unsound and politically and racially motivated speaks to the extent and gravity of the injustice perpetrated against Garvey.

Though President Coolidge commuted Garvey's sentence in 1927, almost 90 years later, his descendants and supporters believe that the time has come for President Barack Obama to clear, finally and entirely, the name of this pioneering civil rights figure who sought to uplift all peoples of African descent.

"(Garvey) was the first man on a mass scale and level to give millions of Negroes a sense of dignity and destiny; and make the Negro feel that he was somebody.Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.,

All press are invited to attend.   

SOURCE Julius Garvey
http://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/a-presidential-pardon-for-civil-rights-pioneer-marcus-garvey---the-time-has-come-300312468.html

WASHINGTONAug. 11, 2016 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ --

You need to be a member of TheBlackList Pub to add comments!

Join TheBlackList Pub

Email me when people reply –

Replies

  • Marcus Garvey is due APOLOGY, not PARDON. Apology goes to one who is wronged. Pardon absolves one of wrong they've done, ~KA 


    Kwasi Akyeampong (TheBlackList) (@theblacklist) | Twitter
    The latest Tweets from Kwasi Akyeampong (TheBlackList) (@theblacklist). For the Concerns and Fields View of Africa & Diaspora in service of #Africans…
    • DMV

      Marcus Garvey was a great man, but he was NOT a civil rights pioneer.  He was a pioneer of the Black Power Movement.  A number of people are trying to attribute all African American freedom struggles to the civil rights movement.  Don't fall into that trap.  He is not a civil rights icon just like Mohammed Ali is not a civil rights icon.  They both embraced the Black Power Movement. Let's be vigilant in insisting on the truth.

      Marcus Garvey does deserve an apology.  He was one of the first victims of COINTEL-PRO.

      Peace

This reply was deleted.
https://theblacklist.net/