Former SNCC leader speaks on revolution
DETROIT
Published Jan 27, 2011 10:01 PM

Detroit held its 8th Annual MLK Day Rally & March, which began at
Central United Methodist Church on Jan. 17 under the theme of renewing
the fight for “Jobs, Peace and Justice.” The keynote speaker was Willie
“Mukasa” Ricks, a former field secretary for the Student Nonviolent
Coordinating Committee. Ricks was a civil rights worker in Alabama and
Tennessee during the 1960s.

Willie Mukasa Ricks

Ricks raised the slogan “Black Power” in Mississippi in June 1966.

Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. described Ricks as the fieriest orator in
SNCC. Ricks played a significant role in the Selma to Montgomery march
in March 1965, when he organized students at Alabama State to defy the
state troopers who were under the command of then Gov. George Wallace.

Later Ricks would be one of the early members of the Black Panther Party
in Alabama in 1965-66, which influenced Huey P. Newton and Bobby Seale
to form the Black Panther Party for Self-Defense in Oakland, Calif.

Ricks was also a founding member and leader of the All-African People’s
Revolutionary Party along with Kwame Ture.

At the Jan. 17 rally, Mukasa said that he did not want to be viewed as a
revolutionary from the 1960s but “someone who is still committed to
revolution today.” After a rousing speech to a standing-room-only crowd
inside the church, where Dr. King delivered annual sermons for 10
consecutive years, Muskasa led the march through downtown, passing the
Detroit Auto Show at Cobo Conference Center, and through the city’s
financial district.

The march in Detroit was initiated by the Michigan Emergency Committee
Against War & Injustice in 2004 in order to reclaim the anti-war and
social justice legacy of Dr. King. MECAWI immediately expanded
participation in the event by establishing the Detroit MLK Committee,
which plans the event every year. Co-sponsors and endorsers of the rally
and march included the Moratorium NOW! Coalition and Mosaic Design
Group, the Justice for Cuba Coalition, the Palestine Office, among
others.

Two Detroit MLK Spirit of Detroit awards were given to Warriors on
Wheels, the people-living-with-disabilities rights organization, and the
Detroit Local Organizing Committee for the 2010 U.S. Social Forum held
in Detroit.

A special tribute to the late Rev. Dr. Lucius Walker, the founder of the
Interreligious Foundation for Community Organizations, featured City
Council member JoAnn Watson and Ellen Bernstein, Acting Co-Director of
IFCO and Pastors for Peace.

Both women also spoke Jan. 18 at the University of Michigan about the
program established by IFCO, the Congressional Black Caucus and the
Cuban government that provides scholarships to students from oppressed
communities interested in studying medicine at the Latin American School
of Medicine in Cuba. Ricks also spoke about his son, who is a student
there.

— Report & photo by Abayomi Azikiwe

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