Selma: The 50th Anniversary of Bloody Sunday

SELMA, AL - MARCH 3: George Thames holds his 6-month-old granddaughter, Kilee-Ann Thames, at Cuts & Curls by Tracy on Tuesday, March 3, 2015, in Selma, AL. This coming weekend marks the 50th anniversary of Bloody Sunday, the gruesome attack by Alabama law enforcement on non-violent protestors marching from Selma to Montgomery. George Thames said, "People around here get along fine. We have outside agitators, both black and white, that want to keep everything stirred up. They're making money off of it. And in the meanwhile, people are suffering, both black, white and whoever....I want to see businesses come back to Selma. I want to see people get off the welfare rolls or whatever rolls they're on and go back to work. We need help down here...My grandbaby, I want her to be here too. So many of our talented young people have all left because there's no opportunity here. And you can't fault them. I want a good school system, good training programs, and let's get back on course because Selma's a beautiful city with some beautiful people." He added that his granddaughter looks so much like him "because of the Native American in me and the African American in her." (photo by jahi chikwendiu/The Washington Post via Getty Images)
SELMA, AL - MARCH 3: George Thames holds his 6-month-old granddaughter, Kilee-Ann Thames, at Cuts & Curls by Tracy on Tuesday, March 3, 2015, in Selma, AL. This coming weekend marks the 50th anniversary of Bloody Sunday, the gruesome attack by Alabama law enforcement on non-violent protestors marching from Selma to Montgomery. George Thames said, "People around here get along fine. We have outside agitators, both black and white, that want to keep everything stirred up. They're making money off of it. And in the meanwhile, people are suffering, both black, white and whoever....I want to see businesses come back to Selma. I want to see people get off the welfare rolls or whatever rolls they're on and go back to work. We need help down here...My grandbaby, I want her to be here too. So many of our talented young people have all left because there's no opportunity here. And you can't fault them. I want a good school system, good training programs, and let's get back on course because Selma's a beautiful city with some beautiful people." He added that his granddaughter looks so much like him "because of the Native American in me and the African American in her." (photo by jahi chikwendiu/The Washington Post via Getty Images)
Selma: The 50th Anniversary of Bloody Sunday
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Crédito:
The Washington Post / Colaborador
Editorial #:
465456992
Coleção:
The Washington Post
Data da criação:
03 de março de 2015
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Fonte:
The Washington Post
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NA-SELMA
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3000 x 1999 px (25,40 x 16,92 cm) - 300 dpi - 2 MB