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STF na Mídia - MyClipp

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Tania Richardson brought her four daughters. "I<br />

wanted to show my kids it could be one of them," she<br />

said. "I would want people to come out and support me<br />

in a time of need."<br />

Ruth Jeannoe, 26, a Haitian American youth counselor<br />

who came with her sister and 3-year-old daughter,<br />

Jazzy. "It's not a black and white thing. It's a justice<br />

thing," she said. "I have this girl and I want her raised<br />

in a just and fair society."<br />

She added that middle school students she counsels<br />

"talk about Trayvon a lot. They are scared. They didn't<br />

know this law exists," she added referring to Florida's<br />

"Stand Your Ground" self-defense law.<br />

"Am I Dangerous Too?" 11-year-old Cazemba<br />

Reuters General/ - Article, Dom, 01 de Abril de 2012<br />

CLIPPING INTERNACIONAL (Civil Rights)<br />

Ramirez, painted on a poster. "Trayvon was just<br />

minding his own business. So does that mean I am<br />

dangerous too because of my color?" he asked.<br />

Betty Wright, a Grammy Award-winning R&B artist and<br />

Miami <strong>na</strong>tive treated the crowd to a rendition of a song,<br />

"Dry Well," written to honor her 21-year-old son,<br />

Patrick Parker, who was fatally shot in 2005. She<br />

dedicated the song to "all the Trayvons, and all the<br />

parents of slain black boys."<br />

Turning to Martin's parents, she sang: "When you kill<br />

someone's one, it leaves a dry well ... We ain't going to<br />

let you suffer. We're going to get you justice."<br />

(Reporting by David Adams; Editing by Stacey Joyce)<br />

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