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Jonestown Remembered:
30 years later - Cherish the Children Memorial Wall
brings healing

San Francisco NAACP President Amos
Brown, Dr. Jynona Norwood, Activist Dick Gregory
California
Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger, Maya Angelou, U.S. Rep.
Barbara Lee (D. Oakland), Supervisor Yvonne B. Burke
( Los Angeles) U.S. Rep. Maxine Waters (Los Angeles),
Senator Dianne Feinstein (San Francisco), author and
activist Dick Gregory, San Francisco NAACP President
Amos Brown and Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa
are among the dignitaries who are lending their support
to commemorating the Cherishing the Children Jonestown
Healing Memorial Wall to honor the lives of the 305
innocent children who lost their lives in Guyana. Dr.
Jynona Norwood, the executive director of The Cherishing
the Children Jonestown Memorial Services and Wall whose
family lost the most (27) loved ones as well the youngest
child (three months old) at Jonestown now remains committed
after 30 years of bringing healing to families and the
world through pursuit of the Cherishing the Children
Jonestown Healing Memorial Wall at Evergreen Cemetery
in Oakland, California where the children are buried.
Dick Gregory expresses his gratitude that children are
remembered. "Everybody remembers the tragedy but
they forget about the children," says Gregory.
"The wisdom of the parents have been questioned
but the children did not have anything to do with that.
I thank and praise Dr. Norwood for remembering and honoring
the children."
In a letter of support for the Memorial, Governor Arnold
Schwarzenegger wrote, "My special gratitude goes
to Dr. Jynona Norwood for her remarkable compassion
and determination to gather funds and resources needed
for your memorial. Her work will serve as a loving reminder
of hundreds of Bay Area residents who will not be forgotten
by their families or their community."
Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa's letter noted
his support, "I commend Cherishing the Children
Memorial for their continuous efforts to erect a memorial
wall on behalf of the innocent victims who perished
during the Jonestown Massacre. By memorializing these
tragic events, Cherishing the Children Memorial is building
awareness and honoring the sanctity of innocent lives
so similar tragic events will be averted in the future.
Congresswoman Barbara Lee, who has acknowledged the
efforts taken to create the memorial, said. "I
support your efforts, I applaud your perseverance, and
I humbly acknowledge your loss. Again, thank you for
all of the work you are doing to create this memorial
and work on behalf of those in our community most in
need. I salute you."
The 30th Annual Anniversary to commemorate the innocent
children lost and to celebrate the unveiling of a portion
of the long-awaited wall in their memory will take place
on November 18 in Oakland. "The 18th marks the
30th anniversary of one of the nation's most horrific
mass deaths in American history involving some 918 people,
305 children, 40 infants, mostly African-Americans who
perished in Guyana," notes Dr. Jynona Norwood.
San Francisco NAACP President and Housing Commissioner
Dr.Amos Brown, Dr. Jynona Norwood, San Francisco Police
Officer Yulanda Williams who survived Jonestown, Charles
Krause, who was wounded on the Port Kaituma air strip,
will speak along with other leaders at the Memorial.
On November 18, 2008 at 11 am, a special tribute of
poetry and praise dance will be performed by youth in
honor of the children who died to commemorate their
short lives.
Dr. Amos Brown, San Francisco NAACP President and pastor
of Third Baptist Church in San Francisco for some 33
years said, "It is very significant that Dr. Norwood
is still carrying on the struggle of educating people
about what abusive and toxic religion can do to the
human family. I have always supported her efforts. Brown
who studied religion under the tutelage of Martin Luther
King while at Morehouse added, When I met Jim Jones
in 1979, I detected that he was using religion to express
his inner anguish. I didn't hear anything righteous
in his rhetoric."
"We will never forget," Dr. Jynona Norwood
repeats as clearly today as she remembers getting news
of the murders of Jonestown - her family, her friends
- and feeling the peril of an innocent people and the
sacred lives of children who had been plagued by terror.
"While I am thankful that I rescued my son from
the clutches of Jim Jones and the People's Temple, there
is still the lingering feeling that I had wished that
I could have done more."
Since 1979 Norwood has organized the Jonestown Memorial
Services to memorialize the victims, raise public awareness
and honor the innocent lives of the 305 children. Now,
some 30 years later, the death of almost 1,000 people
still stirs her soul. "Due to the lack of dental
records, they were never able to be identified and thus
were buried together," she notes. "What hurts
today, even more than before is that families have been
forever destroyed due to the sting of shame of being
linked to Jim Jones -- the man at the center of the
storm and the orchestrator of the death, destruction
and the psychological dismemberment of innocent people."
"Today, it is up to the living to speak for the
dead and a more substantive memorial is being placed
at the burial site," she adds. "Forty 3 ½
foot caskets of infants lay at Evergreen and it is in
the spirit of the children that we say never forget,
never again. Each child represents a painful link to
a grieving mother, father, sister, brother or family
member that memorializes their existence. They deserve
to be remembered."
"Again, some thirty years later, it still brings
tears to my heart to know that the very people who began
the journey to seek freedom, justice and peace in life
would, in the end, only find freedom in death,"
says Norwood. "Jones lured innocent pastors, worshippers,
dignitaries and the press with his promise of a utopian
society and at the same time courted the waves of political
handshakes that would later prove to mask the ugly masquerade
that was about to unfold."
"Three decades into this long journey, we must
not forget that the banner of love and humanitarianism
that remained in the hearts of the innocent at Jonestown
actually revealed that the church was used unjustly
for murder and deceit," she notes. "Unfortunately,
we see deceit in every community and area of life today.
One of the well known hidden facts of People's Temple,
is that Jim Jones used to tell his followers that his
father was a wizard in the Ku Klux Klan and whatever
you do, never ever commit suicide! In the name of all
innocent lives who died or suffered at the hand of someone
who took advantage of them we are making healing our
priority for going forward, step by step."
"Now," she asserts, We must begin the journey
to healing and lift the veil of shame by honoring them
as we unveil and dedicate a part of the Cherishing the
Children Jonestown Healing Wall at the gravesite in
Oakland's Evergreen Cemetery where 406 victims are buried.
We must raise the lives of these children who perished
by guise of a demon's Flavor-Aid that was fed to them
in 100 degree weather and those old enough cried and
screamed into the silence of the night. Our wall is
in the spirit of others whose lives were lost due to
hate or ignorance, such as in the Jewish Holocaust,
the African slave trade, the Columbine shootings, the
Vietnam War, 9/11 and most recently the tragedy at Virginia
Tech. This memorial wall will honor the children and
others, who were victimized by Jim Jones, including
Congressman Leo Ryan and the UPI news crew."
"With the Wall, we will honor their lives and pay
tribute to their dreams as well as their promise to
live out their God-given destiny, if only, they had
lived," she says noting that "their names
will be a life-long reminder that life is too precious
to be put in harm's way. Our hope is that this Wall
will vindicate their hearts at a resting place with
a fitting memorial where they are forever acknowledged
by the world and cherished by the loving people who
mourn them."
"With this Wall," she says, "the great
gift of today is that the era of fear, the legacy of
hatred and the control of Jim Jones is broken - crushed
by the wall of healing, justice, peace and hope for
these children. The wall will erase the shame of families,
friends and survivors to make way for the rise of a
new day of remembering the reason why we all still hurt,
still care, and still seek help and love as we did years
ago."
"It is no secret that Jonestown disproportionately
affected Black Americans who were the majority of the
victims," reflects Norwood, who shares that like
some 30 years ago, the Black community has been deeply
affected by the racism, discrimination and poverty that
have plagued this country. Later, the issues of gang
violence, imprisonment and lack of education have also
affected our communities. And yes, Jonestown was the
attraction for getting the best elder care, medical
care, education and jobs as well as the opportunity
to build their own community. Sadly, they were deceived
just as many well-known dignitaries, community leaders
and ministers who supported Jones. They fell into the
clutches of an evil man who ordered that the doors be
guarded, triggers be pulled, and the lethal cocktails
be mixed. He had no intention of doing what was right,
but creating a world caught between the image of utopia
and the reality of abuse."
And after 30 years, many questions still linger, such
as why did over 900 people senselessly die with one
whom they trusted as their friend? The answer is still
the same -manipulation, deceit, betrayal and control.
And, don't forget, perhaps this was never a journey
that Jim Jones ever expected them to live through -
and it was also an experience for many African Americans
and others that their hearts and minds were never equipped
to handle with the waking of each day.
Today, we must not forget the pain of Jonestown, but
clear our minds and pledge to never let this happen
again anywhere in the world by honoring and remembering
the sacred 305 children's silent screams. Help us finish
the Cherishing the Children Healing Memorial Wall by
going to our website: www.jones-town.org and make a
donation of $30 for the 30th Anniversary in honor of
the 305 innocent children, send an e-mail to: Cherishtc@aol.com
or call us at 310-419-3930.
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