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  • Cross Burning at Ku Klux Klan Rally - Macon, Georgia - 1975.
    Ku Klux Klan 02_Ken Hawkins.jpg
  • Hooded Klansmen at cross burning at Ku Klux Klan rally - Macon, Georgia - 1975.
    Ku Klux Klan 10_Ken Hawkins.tif
  • Ku Klux Klan Grand Dragon Dr. Edward Fields gives an inflammatory speech at a KKK rally near the town of Monroe, Georgia.
    Ku Klux Klan 13_Ken Hawkins.tif
  • Female Ku Klux Klan members sign a new member to their cause at a rally where Ku Klux Klan members simulated the lynching of an African American with a gorilla masked dummy at a Klan Rally outside Jackson, Georgia. The rally - held in a rural farm field - attracted about 125 people and attempted to both incite violence against blacks and enlarge the local KKK membership.
    Ku Klux Klan 11_Ken Hawkins.tif
  • Ku Klux Klan members simulate the lynching of an African American with a gorilla masked dummy at a Klan Rally outside Jackson, Georgia. The rally - held in a rural farm field - attracted about 125 people and attempted to both incite violence against blacks and enlarge the local KKK membership.
    Ku Klux Klan 03_Ken Hawkins.jpg
  • Flashing the "W" or "white power" symbol, Ku Klux Klan members simulate the lynching of an African American with a gorilla masked dummy at a Klan Rally outside Jackson, Georgia. The rally - held in a rural farm field - attracted about 125 people and attempted to both incite violence against blacks and enlarge the local KKK membership.
    Ku Klux Klan 04_Ken Hawkins.jpg
  • Ku Klux Klan members and supporters jeer and taunt African American civil rights marchers in Monroe, Georgia.
    Ku Klux Klan 05_Ken Hawkins.jpg
  • Ku Klux Klan members and supporters jeer and taunt African American civil rights marchers in Monroe, Georgia.
    Ku Klux Klan 09_Ken Hawkins.jpg
  • A Ku Klux Klan member wipes a bayonet with a clump of grass at a KKK rally in Macon, Georgia.
    Ku Klux Klan 01_Ken Hawkins.jpg
  • Ku Klux Klan members and supporters jeer and taunt African American civil rights marchers in Monroe, Georgia.
    Ku Klux Klan 12_Ken Hawkins.tif
  • Nicaraguan Cruz Roja (Red Cross) workers carry the wounded and escort noncombatants out of the besieged city of Leon during a break in street fighting in the 1978 Civil War in Nicaragua.
    Nicaragua _ Ken Hawkins006.tif
  • Artifact crosses worn by Archbishop Oscar Romero. El Salvador prepares for the beatification ceremony and mass announcing the beatification of Archbishop Oscar Romero. The Archbishop was slain at the alter of his Church of the Divine Providence by a right wing gunman in 1980. Oscar Arnulfo Romero y Galdamez became the fourth Archbishop of San Salvador, succeeding Luis Chavez, and spoke out against poverty, social injustice, assassinations and torture. Romero was assassinated while offering Mass on March 24, 1980.
    RomeroBeat_Ken Hawkins-9484.tif
  • From October 13, 1990, through October 13, 1998, Conyers, Georgia housewife Nancy Fowler claimed that the Virgin Mary appeared to her and relayed messages to all citizens of the United States. The messages ranged from admonitions to prayers to warnings of war. The Virgin's supposed visits to Conyers, a suburban community about thirty miles east of Atlanta, make Conyers one of the longest-lived Marian apparition sites in the nation.<br />
In the early 1990s the roads to Conyers were clogged with pilgrims yearning to hear Mary's message. They came from every direction, but most were from heavily Hispanic southern Florida. They headed toward a large field adjacent to Fowler's home. Once there, they prayed on Mary's Holy Hill, filled bottles with water from the Blessed Well, or visited the small bookstore on the property.<br />
At midday the pilgrims moved toward Fowler's farmhouse. Inside, Fowler waited for a message from the Virgin Mary in the Apparition Room; outside, members of Our Loving Mother's Children, the volunteer group that organized the Conyers gatherings, led the crowd in song and in prayer. The pilgrims prayed in their native tongues, including English, Spanish, Russian, and Chinese. When Mary's message was broadcast over loudspeakers, the pilgrims raised their rosaries, icons, and petitions heavenward, hoping the items would be blessed by the presence of the Virgin Mary. Some claimed miracles at this site—rosaries turning to gold, the sun spinning and changing colors, and the scent of rose petals filling the air.
    Apparition_KenHawkins018.tif

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