Longest Walk 2 participants head to Washington, D.C.
After five months and more than 8,000 miles, participants
in the
Longest Walk 2 are finally near their final
destination.
Led by
American Indian Movement co-founder Dennis Banks,
more than 100 walkers left San Francisco on February 11.
After crossing the southern and northern parts of the United
States, the group is headed to the nation's capitol for a
series of events this week.
"We come from all corners of America and some from around the world,"
Banks said. "We are converging on Washington, D.C., starting on July 11th to deliver a message to the U.S. Congress
and the world about the fate of the United States, all our relations and Mother Earth."
Banks organized the first Longest Walk in 1978 to call attention
to harsh conditions in Indian Country. Thirty years later, he is
working to raise awareness of global warming, sacred sites and cultural
survival.
To build his message, Banks and the walkers visited Indian communities
across the county to hear about their environmental struggles.
Among other locations,
they stopped in New Mexico to hear from members of the
Navajo
Nation who
oppose a power plant; in
Lawrence, Kansas, to learn about a campaign to protect
the wetlands near
Haskell Indian
Nations University; and in
Louisiana to find out about the lingering effects of Hurricane Katrina on
the
Houma Nation.
With most of their journey complete, the walkers are now in
Greenbelt, Maryland, just outside DC. Starting today and running
through Thursday, they are participating
in a cultural survival summit.
At 10am on Thursday, Banks and other Indian leaders will hold a press
conference on the
National Mall to discuss their efforts.
On Friday, walkers will meet at the Meridian Hill/Malcolm X Park in northwest
DC to make their way to the White House and then to the U.S. Capitol,
where they plan to present a "Manifesto to Change" to
Rep. John Conyers (D-Michigan).
After the presentation, the walk moves to the Vietnam Memorial on the Mall
for a speech. A tribute to the late
Floyd Red Crow Westerman,
who died last December, and
Vernon Bellecourt, another AIM founder
who died last October,
will take place at the National Sylvan Theater at the
Washington Monument on the Mall.
The events will wrap up on Saturday and Sunday with a powwow
on the Mall, near the
National Museum of the American Indian.
The powwow is set to end Sunday evening at 6pm.
A full schedule of events can be found at the
Longest Walk 2 website.
Related Stories:
Longest Walk 2 in final stretch of 8,300-mile
journey (7/2)
Longest Walk 2 moves closer
to final destination (6/30)
Longest Walk
2 makes way through Kansas (4/30)
Longest
Walk 2 about halfway to Washington, DC (4/29)
Walk from Alcatraz to DC begins February 11
(2/5)