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Candelight vigil will honor lives lost to COVID, violence

To say that 2020 has been a challenging year is an understatement – from the loss of lives to the COVID-19 pandemic to the loss of personal heroes and role models on the national stage.

Hoping to heal those losses, a Community Candlelight Vigil has been planned for Oct. 18 at 5:30 p.m. at the Yeger Drive entrance to Village Park. Attendees are being asked to wear a facial mask and to maintain social distancing.

All are welcome to attend the event, which is being co-sponsored by the Black Solidarity Group, the League of Women Voters of Lawrence Township, the Lawrence Citizen Activists and the Presbyterian Church of Lawrenceville.

Kyla Allen, who is spearheading the Community Candlelight Vigil, said she was moved to organize it as a means to deal with loss.

“I feel like it’s becoming numbing, all of the losses. From family members and loved ones due to COVID-19, to some of our favorite legends and personal heroes,” said Allen, who is a Lawrence High School graduate.

“It’s the right time for a moment of peace and unity,” said Allen, who belongs to the Black Solidarity Group and the League of Women Voters of Lawrence Township.

Everyone who is planning to attend the candlelight vigil should bring their own candle so they can each honor a person who was special to them, she said, adding that “every person is important.”

“We are going to light candles in honor of some of the public losses we have all taken this year, including basketball player Kobe Bryant and his daughter, Gigi, U.S. Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsberg, civil rights leader John Lewis and actor Chadwick Boseman,” Allen said.

The young Black men and women who were killed by police also will be remembered, she said.

And there will be a moment specifically for the loved ones lost due to COVID-19, including a tribute to them by the Black Solidarity Group, Allen said.

There will be speakers, educators and artists. The speakers include Allen herself, who will talk about breast cancer awareness; Kimmie Carlos, the founder of the Urban Health Alliance, who will talk about mental health, trauma and addiction; and Trenton activist Jasi Mikae, who will talk about police and gun violence.

While the focus of the Community Candlelight Vigil is on lives lost and the healing process, the League of Women Voters of Lawrence Township wants to shine a light on the wrongs committed against Blacks – even by the founders of the League of Women Voters, which celebrated its centennial this year.

Even as the League of Women Voters celebrated its founding, many long-time members learned for the first time that the “founding mothers” had tried to distance their cause from that of their African American activist colleagues, said Nicole Plett of the League of Women Voters of Lawrence Township.

“Who knew that Black women, at the very center of the women’s suffrage (voting rights) movement, were required to march at the back of the historic 1913 Washington, D.C. woman suffrage parade? Who knew that White suffragists were reluctant to focus on Black concerns or feature powerful Black women in their public events,” Plett said.

The League of Women Voters wants to build a stronger, more inclusive democracy, and that’s why the Lawrence chapter is proud to have been invited to co-sponsor the Community Candlelight Vigil, Plett said.

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