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Jena Six Anniversary: How Things Have Changed

Posted Sep 18th 2008 6:00AM by Carmen Dixon
Filed under: BlackSpin, Jena Six, Black History 365, News

Jena Six Case

    Rallies in support of the Jena Six were held in Jena and elsewhere in the United States on September 20, 2007 the date when Mychal Bell was scheduled for sentencing.

    AP

    The Rev. Al Sharpton speaks to a standing-room only congregation at Trout Creek Baptist Church in Jena, La., Sunday, Aug. 5, 2007. Sharpton criticized officials in this racially tense Louisiana town, saying the attempted murder charges leveled against six black teens show "one rule for white kids and one for black kids." Seated with Sharpton are Marcus Jones, left, and Melissa Bell, parents of Mychal Bell. Behind Sharpton are several of the other accused students. (AP Photo/Richard Alan Hannon)

    AP

    A man holds a newspaper before the start of a civil rights march on September 19, 2007 in Jena, Louisiana.

    Getty

    A girl here listens to Rev. Al Sharpton speak before a civil rights march on September 20, 2007 in Jena, Louisiana. Thousands of protesters have gathered for a march on the Louisiana town of Jena in protest of the criminal trial of six black teens charged in an alleged attack on a white classmate. The fight was sparked between the youths after several nooses were hung from a tree at a high school.

    Getty

    Radio host Michael Baisden(2nd L), Rev. Al Sharpton (2nd R) and Melissa Bell (R), mother of Mychal Bell, march towards Jena High school during f a civil rights march on September 20, 2007 in Jena, Louisiana.

    AP

    An estimated 15,000 to 20,000 demonstrators attended the rally that day, severely overtaxing the facilities of the small town of 3,000 residents. Because of the congestion on the roads leading to Jena, many protesters left their vehicles and walked into town on foot.

    Getty

    JENA, LA - SEPTEMBER 20: Bryant Purvis, one of the 'Jena Six' listens to the Rev. Al Sharpton before the start of a civil rights march on September 20, 2007 in Jena, Louisiana. Thousands of protesters have gathered for a march on the Louisiana town of Jena in protest of the criminal trial of six black teens charged in an alleged attack on a white classmate. The fight was sparked between the youths after several nooses were hung from a tree at a high school. (Photo by Chris Graythen/Getty Images)

    Protesters march towards Jena High School on September 20, 2007 in Jena, Louisiana.

    Getty

    JENA, LA - SEPTEMBER 20: A protester holds two paintings ouside of Jena High School during a civil rights march on September 20, 2007 in Jena, Louisiana. Thousands of protesters have gathered for a march on the Louisiana town of Jena in protest of the criminal trial of six black teens charged in an alleged attack on a white classmate. The fight was sparked between the youths after several nooses were hung from a tree at a high school. (Photo by Chris Graythen/Getty Images)

    Getty

    JENA, LA - SEPTEMBER 20: Brandon Citizen, a student at Prarie View A&M University holds a sign to support the 'Jena Six' during a civil rights march September 20, 2007 in Jena, Louisiana. Thousands of protesters have gathered for a march on the Louisiana town of Jena in protest of the criminal trial of six black teens charged in an alleged attack on a white classmate. The fight was sparked between the youths after several nooses were hung from a tree at a high school. (Photo by Chris Graythen/Getty Images)

    Getty



Last year, on September 20, 2007, the small town of Jena, which sits 220 miles north of New Orleans, became the setting for one of the largest civil rights demonstrations since the Million Man March.

Although the estimates of exactly how many marched in the town of 3,000, police estimate 20,000 college students, religious leaders, civil rights activists, their allies, and national and international media made their way to Jena to protest "selective justice."

More Coverage:
The Jena 6 - Where Are They Now?

From Howard Witt, Special Correspondent to The Chicago Tribune:
JENA, La. - There is no single leader. There is no agreed schedule. Organizers aren't even certain where everyone is supposed to gather, let alone use the restroom. The only thing that is known for sure is that thousands of protesters are boarding buses at churches, colleges and community centers across the country this week, headed for this tiny dot on the map of central Louisiana.

Continue reading Jena Six Anniversary: How Things Have Changed
Comments [48]

The Jena Six - Where Are They Now?

Posted Sep 17th 2008 11:24PM by Carmen Dixon
Filed under: BlackSpin, Jena Six, News

I don't know if there is any overarching lesson to be learned from what's going on today in the lives of the young men once known as the 'Jena Six' or from the lives of the judge and prosecutor determined to lock them up or even from the life of assault victim Justin Barker.

It was an intense time last fall. Many Americans had never even heard of the 'Jena Six' until the wall-to-wall media coverage of the march on Jena a year ago brought the story into the nation's living rooms.

One has excelled. One has really messed up. But most have just gone on living pretty ordinary lives with extraordinary moments tucked into them. Here's what's going on with the key figures ...

Continue reading The Jena Six - Where Are They Now?
Comments [15]

Jena 6 Inspires Magazine to Rise Up, Face Race

Posted Jun 23rd 2008 11:00AM by Jeff Douglas
Filed under: BlackSpin, Jena Six

A new magazine about race and ethnicity issues launched this week and the magazine's creator says the Jena Six case inspired her to create the publication.

RiseUp, based in Kansas City, Mo., is expected to reach 4.3 million people, getting inserted in the Washington Post, New York Daily News, St. Louis Post-Dispatch and eight other Sunday newspapers each week.

"I started RiseUp because I wanted to provide a readily accessible tool to help us solve some of the problems we face as a society when it comes to race relations," founder Janice Ellis said. ...

Continue reading Jena 6 Inspires Magazine to Rise Up, Face Race
Comments [20]

Jena 6 Update, Judge Could Get Bounced

Posted May 29th 2008 9:00AM by Faye Anderson
Filed under: BlackSpin, Jena Six

Seven months ago, tens of thousands of kinfolk converged on Jena, La., in support of six black teenagers who were charged with second degree attempted murder for a school fight that should have been handled by the school system.

For months, black talk radio hosts and bloggers raised awareness of disparities in the juvenile justice system. But then Barack Obama captured everyone's imagination and attention.

Now a motion has been made on behalf of the Jena 6 to remove a bias judge from their cases. ...

Jena Six Case

    Rallies in support of the Jena Six were held in Jena and elsewhere in the United States on September 20, 2007 the date when Mychal Bell was scheduled for sentencing. A girl here listens to Rev. Al Sharpton speak before a civil rights march on September 20, 2007 in Jena, Louisiana. Thousands of protesters have gathered for a march on the Louisiana town of Jena in protest of the criminal trial of six black teens charged in an alleged attack on a white classmate. The fight was sparked between the youths after several nooses were hung from a tree at a high school.

    Getty

    The Rev. Al Sharpton speaks to a standing-room only congregation at Trout Creek Baptist Church in Jena, La., Sunday, Aug. 5, 2007. Sharpton criticized officials in this racially tense Louisiana town, saying the attempted murder charges leveled against six black teens show "one rule for white kids and one for black kids." Seated with Sharpton are Marcus Jones, left, and Melissa Bell, parents of Mychal Bell. Behind Sharpton are several of the other accused students. (AP Photo/Richard Alan Hannon)

    A man holds a newspaper before the start of a civil rights march on September 19, 2007 in Jena, Louisiana.

    Getty

    Radio host Michael Baisden(2nd L), Rev. Al Sharpton (2nd R) and Melissa Bell (R), mother of Mychal Bell, march towards Jena High school during f a civil rights march on September 20, 2007 in Jena, Louisiana.

    An estimated 15,000 to 20,000 demonstrators attended the rally that day, severely overtaxing the facilities of the small town of 3,000 residents. Because of the congestion on the roads leading to Jena, many protesters left their vehicles and walked into town on foot.

    Getty

    JENA, LA - SEPTEMBER 20: Bryant Purvis, one of the 'Jena Six' listens to the Rev. Al Sharpton before the start of a civil rights march on September 20, 2007 in Jena, Louisiana. Thousands of protesters have gathered for a march on the Louisiana town of Jena in protest of the criminal trial of six black teens charged in an alleged attack on a white classmate. The fight was sparked between the youths after several nooses were hung from a tree at a high school. (Photo by Chris Graythen/Getty Images)

    Protesters march towards Jena High School on September 20, 2007 in Jena, Louisiana.

    Getty

    JENA, LA - SEPTEMBER 20: A protester holds two paintings ouside of Jena High School during a civil rights march on September 20, 2007 in Jena, Louisiana. Thousands of protesters have gathered for a march on the Louisiana town of Jena in protest of the criminal trial of six black teens charged in an alleged attack on a white classmate. The fight was sparked between the youths after several nooses were hung from a tree at a high school. (Photo by Chris Graythen/Getty Images)

    Getty

    JENA, LA - SEPTEMBER 20: Brandon Citizen, a student at Prarie View A&M University holds a sign to support the 'Jena Six' during a civil rights march September 20, 2007 in Jena, Louisiana. Thousands of protesters have gathered for a march on the Louisiana town of Jena in protest of the criminal trial of six black teens charged in an alleged attack on a white classmate. The fight was sparked between the youths after several nooses were hung from a tree at a high school. (Photo by Chris Graythen/Getty Images)

    Getty

    WASHINGTON - OCTOBER 16: National Action Network President the Rev. Al Sharpton listens during a hearing before the House Judiciary Committee October 16, 2007 on Capitol Hill in Washington, DC. The hearing was to focus on "Jena Six," the six black high school students in Jena, Louisiana who were arrested for a school fight in which a white student was beaten and charged with attempted murder. (Photo by Alex Wong/Getty Images)


Continue reading Jena 6 Update, Judge Could Get Bounced
Comments [51]

Jena 6 Teen Did Not Need This

Posted Feb 10th 2008 3:00PM by Madison J. Gray
Filed under: BlackSpin, Jena Six

From the 'Bruh, Calm Your Nerves' file:

Reports have come out that Bryant Purvis, one of six black male teenagers implicated in the infamous Jena 6 case is in trouble again. This time, the 19-year-old allegedly yoked up a dude that was accused of flattening the tires on his car. Purvis was subsequently arrested after the incident at Hebron High School in Carollton, Tex., where he has gone to live with his uncle Jason Hatcher, a Dallas Cowboys defensive lineman. He was later released on bail.

Accordnig to reports, the whole incident started over hearsay, and doesn't look like it had to go this far. Honestly, this is the type stuff that happens in high schools every day. But Purvis' case is special. He's not just the guy who gets into it with another cat over his car. He's the guy who gets into it with another cat over his car, and also happens to be implicated in one of the hot button issues of 2007.

Continue reading Jena 6 Teen Did Not Need This
Comments [62]

Jena: Thank God for Civil Rights ... and Civil Fights

Posted Jan 22nd 2008 11:10AM by Madison J. Gray
Filed under: BlackSpin, Jena Six

... And the winner for this week's People Who Suck Award goes to members of the Nationalist Movement who showed up in Jena, La., to make asses of themselves on MLK Day.

This group, which The Associated Press estimated at about 50, had the nerve to truck themselves down to the small town that made headlines last fall to moan about the Jena Six and to protest the national King holiday.


Continue reading Jena: Thank God for Civil Rights ... and Civil Fights
Comments [50]

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