The Results Are In
In Ferguson, a wound bleeds.
For 108 days, we have been in a state of prolonged and
protracted grief. In that time, we
have found community with one another, bonding together as family around the simple
notion that our love for our community compels us to fight for our
community. We have had no choice
but to cling together in hope, faith, love, and indomitable determination to
capture that ever-escaping reality of justice.
After 108 days, that bleeding wound has been reopened, salt
poured in, insult added to the deepest of injury. On August 9th, we found ourselves pushed into
unknown territory, learning day by day, minute by minute, to lead and support a
movement bigger than ourselves, the most important of our lifetime. We were indeed unprepared to begin
with, and even in our maturation through these 108 days, we find ourselves
reinjured, continually heartbroken, and robbed of even the remote possibility
of judicial resolution. A life has
been violently taken before it could barely begin. In this moment, we know, beyond any doubt, that no one will
be held accountable within the confines of a system to which we were taught to
pledge allegiance. The very hands
with which we pledged that allegiance were not enough to save Mike in
surrender.
Once again, in our community, in our country, that pledge
has returned to us void.
For 108 days, we have continuously been admonished that we
should “let the system work,” and wait to see what the results are.
The results are in.
And we still don’t have justice.
This fight for the dignity of our people, for the importance
of our lives, for the protection of our children, is one that did not begin
Michael’s murder and will not end with this announcement. The ‘system’ you have told us to rely
on has kept us on the margins of society.
This system has housed us in her worst homes, educated our children in
her worst schools, locked up our men at disproportionate rates and shamed our
women for receiving the support they need to be our mothers. This system you
have admonished us to believe in has consistently, unfailingly, and unabashedly
let us down and kicked us out, time and time again.
This same system in which you’ve told us to trust--this same
system meant to serve and protect citizens-- has once again killed two more of
our unarmed brothers: Walking up a
staircase and shot down in cold blood, we fight for Akai Gurley; Playing with a
toy after police had been warned that he held a bb gun and not a real gun at only
twelve years old, we fight for Tamir
Rice.
So you will likely ask yourself, now that the announcement
has been made, why we will still take to the streets? Why we will still raise our voices to protect our community?
Why will still cry tears of heartbreak and sing songs of determination?
We will continue to struggle because without struggle, there
is no progress.
We will continue to disrupt life, because without disruption
we fear for our lives.
We will continue because Assata reminds us daily that “it is
our duty to fight for freedom. It
is our duty to win. We must love
and support one another. We have
nothing to lose but our chains.”
Those chains have bound us-all of us- up for too long. And do not be mistaken- if one of us is
bound, we all are. We are,
altogether, bound up in a system that continues to treat some men better than
others. A system that preserves
some and disregards others. A
system that protects the rights of some and does not guard the rights of all.
And until this system is dismantled, until the status quo
that deems us less valuable than others is no longer acceptable or profitable,
we will struggle. We will
fight. We will protest.
Grief, even in its most righteous state, cannot last
forever. No community can sustain
itself this way.
So we still continue to stand for progress, and stand
alongside anyone who will make a personal investment in ending our grief and
will take a personal stake in achieving justice.
We march on with purpose. The work continues. This is not a moment but a movement.
The movement lives.
This letter was written
and signed by numerous protestors and supporters, too many to list. Permission
is granted in advance for reproduction by all outlets.
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