Below is AFSC's position on the grand jury decision. For those that are near Atlanta we want to encourage you to join the local effort and gather at 5pm tomorrow(11/25) at Underground near 5 points station. Through this tragedy we hope the local effort to challenge systemic racism continue to build momentum.
Now that the grand jury has decided not to indict police officer
Darren Wilson who killed Michael Brown in Ferguson, Missouri, people across the
country are justifiably seeking answers. The American Friends Service Committee
also is seeking clarity in this case. We remain committed to addressing the
issues of militarization of police, police accountability and systemic racism
revealed by the killing and its aftermath. If we are to prevent future
tragedies, people everywhere should join us in these efforts.
Those who pay the cost of these policies are
disproportionally young people of color – and with alarming frequency that cost
is death at the hands of police. Ominously, local police increasingly rely on
militarized tactics and weapons not only to arrest but to contain people
exercising their right to assemble and peacefully protest such tragedies as the
Mike Brown killing.
Weeks before today’s announcement, Missouri police and
elected officials began stockpiling
riot gear and “less lethal” weapons to respond to public protest. We urge
protesters to resist provocations such as armored trucks, dogs, and blockades
staffed by officers in military garb. We
urge police officials to seek
dialogue with those they swore to protect and serve, to find common ground and
peaceful paths forward. Throughout our decades of work on social justice and
human rights in the U.S. and around the world, we have witnessed the
effectiveness of such dialogue and exchange programs.
We are proud of the young people with whom we work in
Missouri, who are using peaceful means to work for fundamental change in
systems that perpetuate racism and inequality. They deserve both applause and
help for their leadership in healing and organizing their communities. We urge
all people of good will to join us in supporting
peace-building programs for these young people.
Starting just days after the shooting, AFSC has been helping
youth process the killing of one of their peers through our two-year-old Peace Education Program working
in Ferguson and St. Louis. We are standing with teachers and families, with the
community organizations protesting, and with the family of Mike Brown.
Most of all we heed and support their vision of what
democracy looks like: It looks like police accountability. It looks like equal
access. It looks like an end to mass incarceration. It looks like the
dismantling of the school-to-prison pipeline. It looks like the
demilitarization of police.
As a Quaker organization that believes in the worth of every
person, we call on people everywhere to join us in addressing the systemic and
structural racism at the roots of Mike Brown’s death – and that of so many
others nationwide.
We need to challenge policies – at every level, from the
school house to the State House, from Missouri to Washington DC – that disproportionately
incarcerate people of color and
boost profits for corporations running jails, prisons and immigration detention
centers. We also must challenge media when they stigmatize youth of color
instead of acknowledging their humanity.
Our nation will only prosper when we invest in all
our children. Join us as we work to end militarized policing and the systemic
racism that endangers youth of color and thus threatens our common future.
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