HUNTINGTON, N.Y.-- Several hundred
runners and walkers of all ages participated in a recent 5K
road race with a twofold purpose:
Provide humanitarian aid to Darfurians and send a message to the
world that the genocide in Darfur, Sudan, must end.
“I could feel a lot of emotional and physical energy from those
who came out for the road race,” said UUSC President Charlie
Clements, after running the 3.1-mile course and presenting
trophies and medals to the race winners. “This was the first in
what we hope will be a series of events that brings much greater
worldwide visibility to the humanitarian crisis in Darfur.”
All proceeds from the Sunday, October 21,
2007 road race are going
to UUSC’s
Darfur Relief Program. Through its
Drumbeat for Darfur campaign, UUSC works to mobilize social
activists to help end the genocide.
 In
photo at left, two medal winners in a special road race
for Darfur bow their heads in a symbolic gesture as part
of the Olympic Dream for Darfur campaign. At right, U.S.
Olympians Tommie Smith and John Carlos are shown on the
medal stand at the 1968 Olympics in Mexico City. |
The “message” from the road race was
directed primarily at China, which is Sudan’s largest trading
partner and its biggest supplier of military weapons. China is
hosting the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing
During the medal presentations, the
recipients were asked to make a symbolic gesture of support for
the Darfurians, a gesture that also will send a message to the
Chinese government as it prepares for the 2008 Olympics. UUSC, a
member of the
Olympic Dream for Darfur coalition, is campaigning
vigorously to urge China to use its influence to help end the
genocide in Darfur.
“It is important to keep reminding China
that their Olympic moment in the sun might be marred by protests
if they do not use their influence with the Sudanese government
to stop the genocide,” said Clements. He also delivered the
sermon at the regular Sunday morning service at the
Unitarian Universalist Fellowship of Huntington, NY, which
sponsored the event. Many of the runners attended the service,
even though they may have had no previous connection with the
church.
Remembering Mexico City Olympics
Clements noted the action of two African
American athlete-activists
Tommie Smith and John Carlos, who in the 1968 Olympics in
Mexico City made gestures from the medal stand. With their heads
bowed and their raised fists covered with a black glove, the
U.S. Olympians made a powerful symbolic protest of racism in
America at the height of the civil rights movement of the 1960s.
Clements pointed out that the Chinese
government already is nervous about the connection that
anti-genocide activists are making between the 2008 summer
Olympics and China’s connection to the ongoing nightmare in
Darfur. He noted that Chinese spy agencies, their counterpart to
the U.S. CIA,
have begun to gather information about foreign organizations and
individuals that may try to organize demonstrations either
before or during the Olympics. He encouraged like-minded,
anti-genocide organizations to stage a symbolic “medal ceremony”
at all Darfur-related events, as well as at athletic contests.
“Let’s get athletes to begin using this
gesture, so that the Chinese intelligence service will blow a
circuit thinking every Olympic team in the world has a
conscience and will be prepared to make a statement themselves
atop the medal stand,” he said. “Tell China we will only call
off the gestures if it is clear they are genuinely involved in
finding a negotiated settlement to the Darfur Crisis.”
Read a news story about the road race in
New York Newsday.
For more information about UUSC’s Drumbeat
for Darfur campaign, click
here. Also, please visit our colleague organizations
Olympic Dream for Darfur,
Fidelity Out of Sudan,
Save Darfur, and
Genocide Intervention Network.
Posted October 24, 2007