After being under fire for one of its leaders attending a Louis Farrakhan speech, the Women’s March issued a statement on Mar. 6 addressing the issue.
The statement claimed that the Women’s March was committed to fighting against “anti-Semitism, racism, misogyny, homophobia, and transphobia.”
“Minister Farrakhan’s statements about Jewish, queer, and trans people are not aligned with the Women’s March Unity Principles, which were created by women of color leaders and are grounded in Kingian Nonviolence,” the statement read. “Women’s March is holding conversations with queer, trans, Jewish and Black members of both our team and larger movement to create space for understanding and healing.”
They then claimed that they had been silent over the Farrakhan controversy for nine days because they have been “holding these conversations and are trying to intentionally break the cycles that pit our communities against each other.”
Anti-Semitism, misogyny, homophobia, transphobia, racism and white supremacy are and always will be indefensible.
Please read our statement: pic.twitter.com/bRFqAGf81t
— Women's March (@womensmarch) March 6, 2018
Anti-Defamation League (ADL) CEO Jonathan Greenblatt praised the Women’s March for their “strong statement”:
Hey @womensmarch, kudos for a strong statement. This is a good first step. Yet leaders who attend Farrakhan's speeches or have heard his anti-Jewish & anti-LGBTQ hate should not hesitate to condemn it. Plain and simple. https://t.co/15o00DV4rA
— Jonathan Greenblatt (@JGreenblattADL) March 6, 2018
However, others felt that the Women’s March statement was too weak and didn’t adequately address the controversy:
This is one of the weakest things I've ever read. Your external silence has been because you hadn't been bothered by farrakhan's bigotry until we forced you to address it. You were externally silent when he preached and you will be externally silent about it in the future. https://t.co/Bv6w3WS8GN
— Chloé S. Valdary 📚 (@cvaldary) March 6, 2018
When Charlotsville happened you gave us condemnation. When @TamikaDMallory supports someone *who literally promotes the exact same racism* you urge "patience" and "empathy."
This is so sorrowful.
— Chloé S. Valdary 📚 (@cvaldary) March 6, 2018
No apology.
No condemnation of Louis Farrakhan.
No explanation for why @womensmarch leaders decided to pal around with one of the most famous bigoted, racist, misogynist, anti-Semitic charlatans in the entire world.
I guess #LoveTrumpsHate means never having to say you’re sorry. https://t.co/pov3qXj7pM— Jerry Christmas 🎅🏼🎄 (@JerryDunleavy) March 6, 2018
https://twitter.com/JamesHasson20/status/971099622717448192
The controversy started when Women’s March co-president Tamika Mallory attended the Nation of Islam’s Saviour Day, where Farrakhan issued a speech that was laced with a variety of anti-Semitic conspiracy theories. Mallory and the rest of Women’s March leaders remained largely silent about it until the Mar. 6 statement.
Mallory and two other Women’s March leaders, Carmen Perez and Linda Sarsour, have prior connections to Farrakhan’s Nation of Islam that were not addressed in the statement.