Written by Fahima Haque
African-American clergy and civil rights leaders will announce their decision to join the Occupy movement, starting a subproject called "Occupy the Dream" on Wednesday.
As Occupy D.C. flourishes, more participants join the cause. Jamal Bryant and Benjamin F. Chavis Jr. will join the clergy in their efforts with the "Occupy the Dream" project.
Bryant, known as the millennium minister, also worked for the NAACP and founded the Empowerment Temple Church in Baltimore. Chavis has a history working in the civil rights movement.
In the 1960s, Chavis was the NC State Youth Coordinator for the Southern Christian Leadership Conference under the leadership of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. He has been helping Russell Simmons in the Occupy Wall Street movement.
The Occupy movement was started by white organizers and largely made up of whites. But some African Americans have lent their support. In late October, Talib Karim, a graduate of Howard Law School, inititated protests in the Howard community as part of Occupy D.C. and said African Americans are definitely part of the "99 percent."
Read the rest of this article at the Washington Post.