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Mohamed Yahya attended an event to remember the 2009 attack on the US Holocaust Memorial Museum
DC Public Remembers Attack on U.S. Holocaust
Memorial Museum
Responsible for Equality And Liberty (R.E.A.L.)
http://www.realcourage.org/2010/06/dc-remembers/
On a hot and rainy day in Washington DC, on Sunday, June 13, 2010,
volunteers of diverse religions, races, ethnic backgrounds, genders, and
age groups came together to remember the
June 2009 attack on the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum and to
remember the tragic death of museum guard Stephen Tyrone Johns a year
ago on June 10, 2009.

- We
Remember June 10, 2009
Attack on U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum (Photos: Left - AP, Right -
USHMM)
The public remembrance at Washington DC's
Freedom Plaza was organized by Responsible for Equality And
Liberty (R.E.A.L.), a human rights volunteer group that pulls
together coalitions of volunteers from among the public for activism and
public awareness on human rights issues. Among
R.E.A.L.'s core
issues are religious freedom/pluralism and racial equality, which
R.E.A.L. saw the June
10, 2009 attack on the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum as defying
such freedoms, urging "Never Again"
to hate.
Speakers from among the public included R.E.A.L.'s Jeffrey Imm, Elisa
Tetreault, Mrs. N. Washington, and Damanga Executive
Director Mohamed Yahya. Other volunteers came to help organize,
record, and promote the event among the public. Attendees included an
employee of the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum who attended as a private
individual, and who expressed his appreciation for the volunteers'
public remembrance. Media attendees included FOX 5
News and
a contributor to the Washington Jewish Week.
The event began with a brief rain shower, but the location of the
event on the east side of Freedom Plaza provided some natural protection
by nearby trees, and the shower quickly passed. With a breeze that
periodically gusted, volunteers
held signs reading "We Remember June 10 Attack on U.S. Holocaust
Memorial Museum," "We Remember Stephen Johns," "Together for Love and
Tolerance," and "Choose Love, Not Hate, Love Wins."
FOX
5 News Video
R.E.A.L.
YouTube Video of Excerpts of Public Remembrance
Jeffrey Imm spoke of the need to have a public remembrance on the
June 10 attack and the murder of Stephen Tyrone Johns, in addition to
the museum's private remembrance on the morning of June 10. He stated
that the volunteers had gathered to share the grief of Mr. Johns' family
and also to stand united to defy hate and to urge "our fellow human
beings to Choose Love, Not Hate." He also stated that he recognized
that some had told him that they were afraid to come to a public
remembrance, but we should not let fear terrorize us from standing up
for equality, liberty, dignity, and love for our fellow human beings.
He stated that "Some believe that this attack was someone else's
problem. They believe that the attacker James Von Brunn's white
supremacist hate is only a problem for non-whites, and has nothing to do
with the Jewish public. Some believe that his Holocaust Denial is only
a problem for those remember the Holocaust, and this is only a problem
for the Jewish world. But the fact is that terrorist attack on the U.S.
Holocaust Memorial Museum was attack based on hate. No one could
possibly doubt that an attack on the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum was a
attack on all Jews - not just one type of Jew, American Jews, or Jews
in Washington DC - but an attack on all Jewish people everywhere around
the world. Moreover, the attacker's Holocaust Denial is an attack
against the terrible truth of the Holocaust itself. No one could
possibly doubt that this attack by a white supremacist also was hatred
against black Americans."
"But the attack was not just against Jews and black, not just in
Washington DC, and not just Americans. The attack was one motivated by
hate itself. The terrorist Von Brunn himself documented
his philosophy in writing to a Nazi sympathizer in Germany, stating
that hate was 'natural, normal and necessary,' and that 'compassionate
nations' would 'die.' Such an attack of hate was one that speaks to the
violence against all people that have compassion, all people that defy
genocide, all people that seek justice, and yes all people that seek to
love their fellow human beings. The cancer of hate leads to that much
destruction. We stand here today united, not just to remember that
attack on June 10, 2009, but also to reject that hate that motivated
it. We stand here today to remember the awful consequences of allowing
hate to go unchallenged. We stand here today to say 'Never Again' to
such hate, not just in others, but also in ourselves. But in our
challenge to hate, in our unwillingness to be afraid, we don't offer an
upraised fist, but we offer an outstretched hand. We urge those who hate
to drop the burden of hate from their hearts. We urge them to Choose
Love, Not Hate. Love Wins."

- Jeffrey Imm
Speaks on Remembering Attack on U.S.
Holocaust Memorial Museum
Elisa Tetreault that all
"men and women are equal before the law, without discrimination because
of sex, blood, language, social origin, or religion. Equality is not
something that you should practice because it is the law, but something
you should practice because it is right." She urged others "to take a
look at who we are, take a look at who we are standing next to. It can
be men, women, gay, straight, black, white, Latino, Asian, Christian,
Jewish, Muslim. Each of us are fighting for justice in different ways."
She stated that: "On June 10, 2009, Stephen Tyrone Johns was shot to
death by a white supremacist and Holocaust Denier. It is tragic when
anyone loses their life, especially at the hands of hate. It is hard to
believe that the actions of one person can cause so much hurt. The
truth is that all it takes is one person. What I have learned is that
we all make a difference. A wise man once said 'I have a dream that my
four little children will one day live in a nation where they will not
be judged by the color of their skin but by the content of their
character.' This is what we are here for. This is what we are fighting
for. It does not matter your skin color or the religion you practice
or your sexual orientation, we are all equal, we all bleed the same
color. I stand here before you to say that one person can make change.
Act as if what you do makes a difference, because it does. Remember to
Choose Love, Not Hate."

- Elisa
Tetreault Speaks on Remembering Attack on
U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum
Damanga
Executive Director
Mohamed Yahya has great experience in fighting against hate in the
ongoing genocide in Sudan's Darfur. Mr. Yahya spoke of his sympathy and
grief for Stephen Tyrone Johns in his efforts to protect the U.S.
Holocaust Memorial Museum as a real hero and a great, great man. He
spoke of how America is viewed around the world as a nation that prizes
freedom, equality, liberty, and compassion toward others - freedoms and
dignity that is lost in many other parts of the world, including his
war-torn home of Darfur and Sudan. Mohamed
Yahya has been recognized as a leading fighter against genocide by the
U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum.

- Mohamed Yahya
Speaks on Remembering Attack on
U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum
Mrs. Washington spoke
of the importance of remembering the attack on the U.S. Holocaust
Memorial Museum was not a random act of violence, but was a targeted
attempt to attack and terrorize Jewish Americans and to deny the reality
of the Holocaust itself. Mrs. Washington also pointed to the
importance of where this public remembrance was being held - Freedom
Plaza, and the important symbolic nature of this location. The Freedom
Plaza in Washington DC is named in honor of Martin Luther King, Jr., who
worked on his "I Have a
Dream" speech in the nearby Willard Hotel. In 1988, a time capsule
containing a Bible, a robe, and other relics of King’s was planted at
the site.
Mrs. Washington urged the public to stop and take a moment to reflect
on such critical issues for our freedom as the need to stand defiant
against hate and the need to understand that an attack on the human
rights of one of us represented an attack on such rights for all of us.
Mrs. Washington pointed to the need to continue to realize this dream
of equality and liberty, dignity, respect, and love for all of our
fellow Americans and fellow human beings.

- Mrs.
Washington Speaks on Remembering Attack on
U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum
The volunteers stood
together at the Freedom Plaza area to urge others to Choose Love, Not
Hate.

- Volunteers
Urge All to Choose Love, Not Hate
Responsible for
Equality And Liberty (R.E.A.L.) applauds the efforts by the U.S.
Holocaust Memorial Museum to continue to record and share the concerns
and sympathies of the public regarding this terrorist attack, and
urges the
public to also publicly pledge their support against hate.
R.E.A.L. also urges all to make a gift to the USHMM Stephen
Tyrone Johns Summer Youth Leadership Program Endowment Fund.

- Freedom
Plaza - Washington
DC - Open Air Plaza on Pennsylvania Avenue - Between 13 and 14th
Streets NW - Site of June 13, 2010 Public Remembrance of Attack on US
Holocaust Memorial Museum
=========================================================
Love Wins: Volunteers Offer Love, Tolerance to White
Nationalist Heckler at Holocaust Memorial Museum Remembrance
Responsible for Equality And Liberty (R.E.A.L.)
http://www.realcourage.org/2010/06/love-will-win/
On June 13, 2010, volunteers
from the Washington DC area joined together to have a public remembrance
of the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum attack on June 2009 and to
remember the tragic murder of museum guard Stephen Tyrone Johns by white
supremacist, Holocaust Denier James Von Brunn. We also remember that
there were those whose hearts were burdened by hate, who praised
Von Brunn's terrorism, and that the struggle against white
supremacism and anti-Semitism continues.
Near the end of the public remembrance of the U.S. Holocaust Memorial
Musaum attack, two members of a Charlottesville, Virginia-based "white
nationalist," anti-Semitic group, Occidental Dissent, sought to heckle
speakers at the public remembrance. The Occidental Dissent group claims to
seek
"the creation of a Jew-free, racially exclusive White ethnostate in
North America." The group also has a history of seeking
to deny women's rights, and has publicly stated
its goals are to infiltrate political
organizations to promote "white nationalism." The visitors included
the group's leader who calls himself the pseudonym "Hunter Wallace" or
"Prozium" (based on the movie "Equilibrium") and Mike Capatano (who
left after a moment). The group's leader "Hunter Wallace" remained
behind, wearing a yellow Gadsden
Flag shirt.

- White Nationalist from
Anti-Semitic Occidental
Dissent Group Visits Public Remembrance of U.S. Holocaust Memorial
Museum Attack
The group leader briefly heckled Mohamed
Yahya, who is a well-known leader in fighting against genocide who
has been recognized
by the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum. The group
has previously criticized the efforts of Mr. Yahya and others in
struggling against genocide, as well as those
defying racial hatred.
As shown in a video of our
encounter with the visitor, Mohamed Yahya's response was "I love
you... if you hate me, I give you love."

- Mohamed
Yahya Responds to
White Nationalist Heckler: "If you hate me, I love you"

- Volunteers
Stand United in Love and Tolerance -
Urging All to Choose Love, Not Hate
R.E.A.L. founder
Jeffrey Imm quickly reached out to the Occidental Group group leader,
as one of our brothers and sisters in humanity who we must work to
reach, and indicated this demonstrated an important reason why we held
such a public remembrance. The R.E.A.L. founder pointed out that we do
not offer an upraised fist against white supremacism and
anti-Semitism, but we offer an outstretched hand to all to choose love,
not hate. R.E.A.L.'s Jeffrey Imm then in fact extended such an
outstretched hand to the group's leader and urged him to choose love,
not hate.

- Jeffrey Imm, Mohamed Yahya,
and Mrs. Washington
Offer an Outstretched Hand, Not an Upraised Fist - to White Nationalism
and Anti-Semitic Group Leader - We Urge Choose Love, Not Hate
R.E.A.L.
Video
to White Nationalists at Holocaust Memorial Museum Attack Remembrance -
Choose Love, Not Hate
A prayer was later said to call upon us all to remove the burden of
hate from all of our hearts.
Choose
Love, Not Hate. Love Wins.
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