Out of Diversity, a Unanimous Demand
Reminders of Holocaust, Civil Rights Struggle Help Rouse Activism Against Violence
The Foote and Eisner families, members of Beth Shalom Congregation in Westminster, Md., hoisted signs during the rally. From left are Pamela Eisner, 9; her mother, Susan Eisner; Steven Foote, 8; his father, Gary Foote; Mira Foote; Nathaniel Foote, 10, and his other siblings Isaac, 7, and Elizabeth, 13.
(Photos By Hamil R. Harris -- The Washington Post)
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Monday, May 1, 2006
Thousands of people poured into Washington on trains, in buses and in cars from across the country yesterday. Evangelicals joined Hollywood entertainers, black civil rights leaders joined conservatives, and politicians from both parties spoke in unison on the same stage.
But among the largest contingents at yesterday's "Rally to Stop Genocide" on the Mall were Jewish Americans, who said they were appalled by the violence in Sudan.
Vladimir Vishnevskiy, of the Jewish Community House of Bensonhurst in Brooklyn, came to Washington with two busloads of Holocaust survivors, World War II veterans and youths.
"This is extremely important," he said. "We are Russian Jews, people who know firsthand what hate and the Holocaust and genocide is about."
It is unclear how many Jewish Americans were among those at the rally, but they were among the most visible, wearing shirts or clutching signs that read, "Not On Our Watch" and "Dare to Interfere in Darfur" and "Never Again," the latter a reference to the Holocaust. They came as part of Jewish youth groups, community centers or religious groups; they were teenagers, parents and grandparents.
Fourteen-year-old Sabrina Kestenbaum donned the same bright-yellow T-shirt -- bearing a bull's-eye on a map of Africa and the words "Darfur 'Never Again' " -- as classmates from the Abraham Joshua Heschel School in Manhattan.
She said she was overwhelmed by the crowds and surprised by how many people she knew.
"We see a lot of Jewish kids that we recognize from other schools," she said.
"Or from camp," added her friend, Susan Moskovits.
Gary and Mira Foote came with members of Beth Shalom Congregation in Westminster, Md. As the Footes headed to the Metro station for the two-hour trip home, an African American woman going to the rally spotted one of the "Never Again" signs their children were carrying and stopped them.
"Can I borrow that?" the woman asked.
The rally included people from a broad spectrum of racial, ethnic and religious groups -- many of whom have different interests and agendas. It had been a long time since an issue has brought ordinary blacks and Jews together, said Mira Foote, a public school teacher.








