|
March 25. The Largest Demonstration in the
History of California
Over 1 Million Protest in Los Angeles for
Immigrant Rights!
Flickr photos
[ Back ] [ Next ]
On March 25 in downtown Los
Angeles, over 1 million people demonstrated in support of immigrant
rights. This was the largest demonstration in the history of California.
March organizers
announced from the stage that the crowd was over 1 million. Univision
and other Spanish-language television reported that up to 2 million
people marched. The Los Angeles Times, reflecting police estimates, gave
the march 500,000 - police estimates have been trying to minimize
pro-immigrant rights demonstration for the last few weeks.
Today's
demonstration was the largest of many immigrant rights demonstrations
that have taken place this month. It is an uprising from the people
against the reactionary Sensenbrenner Bill that passed in the House of
Representatives. The bill criminalizes immigrants and those who support
them. The demonstrations began with 50,000 in Washington DC on March 7,
500,000 in Chicago on March 10 (the largest demonstration ever in
Chicago history), and tens of thousands more in the last week in
Milwaukee, Phoenix, Atlanta and other cities. In build up for today's
demonstrations, thousands of high school students walked out of class
and marched yesterday in Los Angeles. Yesterday in Georgia, tens of
thousands of immigrant workers refused to show up at their jobs in a
work stoppage protesting regressive legislation passed by the Georgia
State Legislature. These demonstrations reflect a tremendous upsurge in
the immigrant community.
The A.N.S.W.E.R.
Coalition provided logistical support and mobilized for today's
demonstration in Los Angeles. Thousands of A.N.S.W.E.R.'s yellow and
black placards reading "Amnistía, Full Rights for All Immigrants" were
held throughout the march. A.N.S.W.E.R. also distributed tens of
thousands of leaflets, gathered thousands of signatures on a petition
demanding
"Full Rights for All Immigrants"
and organized a major contingent in the march.
The rally was co-chaired by
Juan José Gutiérrez, Director of Latino Movement USA, a member of the
A.N.S.W.E.R. LA Steering Committee; Javier Rodríguez, a noted immigrant
rights activist; and Jesse Díaz, a UC-Riverside professor who helped
initiate the march. Speakers included Raúl Murillo and Gloria Saucedo of
Hermandad Mexicana Nacional; Arturo Rodríguez, President of the United
Farm Workers; Korean and Haitian community leaders; and Gloria La Riva
and Preston Wood of the A.N.S.W.E.R. Coalition.
At the rally, Juan José
Gutiérrez, Director of Latino Movement USA, said, "We are people of
dignity and we demand respect. This is the beginning of a movement that
is going to call for a national work stoppage."
Gloria La Riva of the
A.N.S.W.E.R. Coalition said, "The racist politicians thought they could
step on us with their racist legislation but they have awakened the
immigrant giant and they will feel our strength when we stop work."
Preston Wood of A.N.S.W.E.R.
LA said, "U.S. corporations are robbing Mexico of its resources and
forcing people to come as immigrants for their survival. U.S. Out of
Iraq! Justice for all workers!"
|

photo. Kelly
Wine |
Critical to the turnout was
the mobilization night and day for over a week of famous Latino radio
announcers from every Spanish-language station, including Piolín el
Cucuy. The organizers announced a national meeting on April 8 in Dallas,
Texas of all the Latino immigrant rights leaders in the country to
strategize for a national work stoppage in late May under the banner "A
Day Without An Immigrant."
The A.N.S.W.E.R.
Coalition believes that the struggle for immigrant rights, workers'
rights and the fight against racism at home must be part and parcel of
the struggle against war and imperialism. In the coming days and weeks,
A.N.S.W.E.R. organizers, volunteers and activists will continue to
participate in all levels of the mass movement in defense of immigrant
rights and the defeat of the Sensenbrenner Bill.
[ Back ] [ Next ]
|