Harry Belafonte talks Trump, women’s march, peaceful protest

HONORARY CO-CHAIR—Gloria Steinem, center right, greets protesters before speaking at the Women’s March on Washington during the first full day of Donald Trump’s presidency, Saturday, Jan. 21. (AP Photo/John Minchillo)
HONORARY CO-CHAIR—Gloria Steinem, center right, greets protesters before speaking at the Women’s March on Washington during the first full day of Donald Trump’s presidency, Saturday, Jan. 21. (AP Photo/John Minchillo)

“I’m playing a role that I feel equipped and I feel knowledgeable about,’’ Belafonte said. “I’m going to be 90 years old in a couple of weeks, and I think that to be of mind and capacity to be able to still contribute to helping to make our union a better place, to help our country become a better place is a joyous task…
“We’ve discussed content, we’ve discussed speeches. We’ve tried to discuss long-term sustainable efforts on the part of issues that genuinely affect women, but affect all of us.’’
He said he’s not a voice for the women’s movement, but “supports all feminist issues and will be willing to volunteer and otherwise on any causes that support the liberation of women.’’ A dynamic group of young activists are leading the women’s march effort, he said.
“I’m just the plumber,’’ he laughed. “I come in to fix the pipes.’’
He hopes the Women’s March on Washington, which has inspired hundreds of “sister marches’’ across the country, will be a reminder of the power of nonviolent protest.
“If it accomplishes nothing more than to say that the rest of the nation is maybe stuck in a place of ambivalence, that may be not quite sure what all this is about, people who do not traditionally come from a protest culture, all those things are going to be demonstrated tomorrow,’’ he said. “That it is not only desired, but required. And that when it is done, it can yield very positive results.’’
For those concerned about President Donald Trump’s leadership, Belafonte urged, “Do not despair.’’
“There are many reasons why Black people in the past could have despaired,’’ he said. “When Dr. King stepped into the breach and said, `Let us stop being victims and let us focus on the victimizer,’ that made everything OK. When black people stopped being the victim, they went out and got the vote. They went out and got all sorts of things done through the electoral process and through the social process that would never have been done had we not marched on Washington and marched on Selma and done all of the things the nonviolent protest movement is endowed to do.’’
(Follow AP Entertainment Writer Sandy Cohen at www.twitter.com/APSandy.)
 
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