eric --.l i want to call chairman and all of those to the stage who have made today -- martin luther king the third. reverend nelsonked so -- reverend nelson, who worked so hard out here today. i want you all to come to the stage. come forward. reverend hatchett. kid,e days when i was a they used to say that we shall overcome. we saidas a teenager, we didn't want to sing that, that was old-school. ,hen i went to jail for 90 days and when i was stabbed and faced other things, i began to understand how much that song meant. those people faced death. those people did not know if they were coming back home that night. they needed something that would energize and fortify their spirit. old song. no that is the song of rejuvenation, three commitment, of connection. and they would lock arms because they knew that they may never hold hands again. they held goodman cheney's hands but lost him. in honor of them, 54 years later, standing in the shadows of jefferson sessions from selma, alabama, to lock arms and "wes and let us saying -- shall overcome." ♪ we shall overcome we shall overcome we shall overcome some day oh, be i