I am very happy to witness with you today what will go down in history.
The biggest free demonstration in the history of our country.
five
One hundred years ago, a great American, in whose symbolic shadow we stood.
Today, the emancipation proclamation was signed.
Here comes this great decree.
Is a beacon of hope for millions of slaves.
Suffering in the flames of destructive injustice.
This is a happy one.
Dawn ended their long night in captivity. But a hundred years later, black people are still not free.
one hundred
Many years later, the life of black people is still sadly damaged by racial discrimination.
The chains of isolation and discrimination.
one hundred
Many years later, black people live on an island of poverty.
Wang Yang sea with material prosperity.
A hundred years later
Black people are still left out in the corner of American society.
He himself is an exile in his own country.
So we are here today.
Dramatically represent a shameful situation.
Translation:
Today, I am very happy to join you in the largest free demonstration and assembly in the history of our country.
100 years ago, a great American signed the Emancipation Declaration, and today we stand under his symbolic figure. The promulgation of this important law, like a huge lighthouse, brought hope to millions of slaves burnt in the flames of injustice, just like the happy dawn that ended the long night of imprisonment.
However, after 100 years, blacks are still not free. 100 years later, blacks are still tragically hobbled under the shackles of apartheid and racial discrimination. 100 years later, black people still live on an island of poverty in the sea of Wang Yang, where material prosperity exists.
100 years later, blacks are still languishing in the corner of American society and still feel that they are drifting in their native land. Therefore, we are here today to make this appalling situation public.
Extended data:
1963 Martin? Lu Se? King met with President Kennedy and asked for a new civil rights law to give blacks equal rights. On August 28th, protest groups organized a rally of 250,000 people in Washington, D.C. to fight for racial equality. Martin Luther King delivered a famous speech "I Have a Dream" on the steps of Lincoln Memorial, which marked the climax of the black civil rights movement in the 20th century.
On August 28th, 20 13, the first black president of the United States, Obama, also gave a speech on the steps in front of the Lincoln Memorial in Washington. In order to commemorate the 50th anniversary of the publication of I Have a Dream, he described the changes that have taken place in the United States in the past half century.