'Million Family March' Addresses Unity
In an atmosphere of joyous fellowship, thousands of men and women and their children gathered amid the nation's monuments Monday to celebrate racial and religious unity and the central role of the family in American life.
Called by the Reverend Louis Farrakhan, leader of the Nation of Islam on the fifth anniversary of his Million Man March, people of all races and religions spread out on blankets and lawn chairs in the National Mall and laughed, clapped and shouted as speakers urged them to improve their family lives.
CBS News Correspondent Jennifer Jones says Farrakhan addressed a sea of hundreds of thousands of families on the historic Washington mall, focusing on reconciliation, responsibility and repentance within the family.
"The family is the basic unit of civilization so everything must be done to take care of the family unit," Farrakhan said during his speech of more than two hours.
Farrakhan energized a crowd made up of African-Americans, Native Americans, Hispanics, Asians and whites. Speaking on unity, Farrakhan even brought together new unions.
He, along with rabbis and ministers of other faiths, then presided over a mass "sacred marriage blessing" reminiscent of the mass weddings conducted by the Rev. Sun Myung Moon, whose Unification Church was a major sponsor of the march.
"There will be many trials, many tribulations but you must never think to back out of the word you give to God and to each other," Farrakhan told the already married couples lined up on the U.S. Capitol stage and at the Lincoln Memorial.
The assemblage appeared to be considerably smaller than the Million Man March, but it was expected to be the largest gathering of black people since that 1995 event. The National Park Service said the Million Man March brought an estimated 400,000 people to Washington, but Farrakhan insisted it drew more than 1 million.
The park service stopped making crowd estimates after the 1995 event and the controversy over its size. But several speakers Monday said they thought there were at least a million people spread out midday between the Capitol, the Ellipse behind the White House, the Lincoln Memorial and the Washington Monument. Large television screens were scattered throughout the area so participants could see the speeches.
"We stand here a million strong," said Ben Muhammad, the Million Family March's national director.
Farrakhan, controversial for his anti-white and anti-Semitic proclamations, avoided that language and softened his Afrocentric message. In a wide-ranging speech that touched on everything from the Middle East strife to the presidential race to poverty and sexism, the Nation of Islam leader continually came back to promoting unity between the races and religions.
"It's the mutual respect between people and the mutual love between people that will save humanity," Farrakhan said.
Nevertheless, the crowd was largely black. Some Asian-Aerican and white families could be seen here and there, many carrying symbols of the Unification Church.
Greg Odlin, a white minister, brought his wife and four children on a bus from Portland, Maine. "I came to show America how important the family is to God and how important God is to family happiness," said the 45-year-old Odlin, whose church is affiliated with the Unification Church. "I came down to fellowship with my brothers and show there's a lot of Americans serious about the family."
"I'm a white brother," said the Rev. Michael Jenkins of the Family Federation for World Peace and Unification. "We must repent for what we did to our African-American brothers. In the name of God, I repent. We must repent for what we did to our Native American brothers. I repent."
Darryl Prince brought his family to Washington from Chicago.
"It's a coming together," Prince said. "It's honoring the family and honoring our own people."
The overarching purpose of Monday's event was to demonstrate that "people of God can come together, despite our diversity, for the noblest of causes, the family," said Minister Rashul Muhammad, son of Nation of Islam founder Elijah Muhammad.
Many speakers hit their usual themes.
"If you love your family, you protect your family," said the Rev. Al Sharpton, who has criticized the New York City police for the shooting death of African immigrant Amadou Diallo. "Protecting your family is not letting one unarmed member get shot 41 times and walking away without saying anything." The unarmed Diallo was hit by 19 of the shots.
Others spoke on improving family life. Comedian-activist Dick Gregory urged parents to live cleaner, healthier lives so their children would have a positive example to follow. "I'm so sick of people saying, 'What's wrong with the youth of today?"' he said. "What's wrong with the children? It's you old folks."
Ayanna Muhammad, 11, spoke for the preservation of families. "Broken homes make children sad," she said. ^
Organizers also collected money to pay off the mortgage for the National Council of Negro Women building on Pennsylvania Avenue, which the Rev. Willie Wilson of the Union Temple Baptist Church called the only black-owned building in the nation's "corridor of power."
"Take out some money so we can pay for our building," said Wilson, who said the building will be named after 88-year-old council president-emeritus Dorothy Height after it's paid for.
©2000 CBS Worldwide Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report