Troy Davis mourned as a martyr by 1,000 in Ga.
SAVANNAH, Ga. (AP) - October 2, 2011
Family, activists and supporters who spent years trying to
persuade judges and Georgia prison officials that Davis was
innocent were unable to prevent his execution Sept. 21. But the
crowd that filled Savannah's Jonesville Baptist Church on Saturday
seemed less interested in pausing in remorse than showing a resolve
to capitalize on the worldwide attention Davis' case brought to
capital punishment in the U.S.
Benjamin Todd Jealous, national president of the NAACP, brought
the crowd to its feet in a chant of "I am Troy Davis" - the
slogan supporters used to paint Davis as an everyman forced to face
the executioner by a faulty justice system. Jealous noted that
Davis professed his innocence even in his final words.
"Troy's last words that night were he told us to keep fighting
until his name is cleared in Georgia," Jealous said. "But most
important, keep fighting until the death penalty is abolished and
this can never be done to anyone else."
After four years of extraordinary appeals, every court that
examined Davis' case ultimately upheld his conviction and death
sentence for the 1989 slaying of Savannah police officer Mark
MacPhail, who was shot twice while trying to help a homeless man
being attacked outside a bus station. MacPhail's family and
prosecutors say they're still confident Davis was guilty.
Regardless, questions raised by Davis and his lawyers garnered
support from thousands worldwide, including dignitaries such as
former President Jimmy Carter and Pope Benedict XVI. The night
Davis was executed, protests were held from Georgia to Washington,
from Paris to Ghana.
During a call-and-response litany at the funeral, the
congregation chanted in unison: "We pray to the Lord for our souls
and the soul of Troy Davis, martyr and foot soldier."
"He transformed a prison sentence into a pulpit," the Rev.
Raphael Warnock, pastor of Ebenezer Baptist Church in Atlanta, said
in his eulogy Saturday. "He turned death row into a sanctuary."
Other than expressions of outrage at Davis' execution, there was
little doom and gloom at his funeral. Warnock's congregation at
Ebenezer, the church where Martin Luther King Jr. once preached,
helped raise money for the 3 ½ hour service, which carried more
than a hint of celebrity sheen.
Davis' closed casket was piled with a spray of blue and white
flowers - a color scheme decoded by a close friend who mentioned
his love of the Dallas Cowboys. Attendees each got a glossy,
22-page program filled with a scrapbook's worth of photos, many of
Davis in his white prison garb posing with family members during
weekend visits.
A song by the Billboard-charting gospel singer Dietrick Haddon
got the crowd so excited that ushers walked the aisles stopping
people from taking video and photos with their cell phones.
And the comedian and activist Dick Gregory, who joined the
others in an impassioned call to end the death penalty, first
brought people to their feet in laughter.
Gregory said he needed to apologize to Davis' family after the
way he handled a recent phone call from a bill collector. "He
said, `Are you Dick Gregory?' And I said, `I am Troy Davis!"'
Davis' nephew, 17-year-old DeJaun Davis-Correia, was the only
family member to speak during the service.
He recalled Davis, the uncle who had been in prison his entire
life, spending long hours with him on the phone helping with
homework, particularly math. Davis-Correia, whose mother is Davis'
older sister, said the family always knew when he had tests in
school because Davis wrote them all down on his calendar, the same
calendar he filled with the birthdays of all his friends and
supporters. And he said his uncle would have wanted a note of
celebration at his funeral.
"You really shouldn't be sad all the time, you should be happy
and be positive," Davis-Correia said. "That's the attitude my
uncle instilled in me."
Amnesty International, which worked for years to exonerate
Davis, urged its supporters worldwide to remember him Saturday by
wearing black armbands and "I am Troy Davis."
The advocacy group's U.S. director, Larry Cox, spoke from the
dais behind Davis' casket Saturday urging those who fought to spare
his life not to give up until America ends its use of the death
penalty.
"If you thought you saw us fighting to save Troy Davis, now
that we've been inspired by Troy Davis, you ain't seen nothing
yet," Cox said.