Pubdate: Tue, 29 Jun 2004 Source: News & Advance, The (VA) Copyright: 2004 Media General Contact: http://www.newsadvance.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2087 Author: Bill Freehling / Lynchburg News & Advance NEIGHBORHOOD FIGHTS BACK In words and deeds reminiscent of the American civil rights movement, residents of Lynchburg's Diamond Hill non-historic neighborhood defiantly and determinedly took to the streets Monday to fight a problem plaguing their homes. "No, no, no, the drugs have gotta go," residents chanted as they marched down streets surrounding the Diamond Hill Recreation Center - an area that has recently topped police lists for drugs and violence. Children joined the march, waving American flags and saying: "No more weed. No more drugs." Aubrey Barbour drove a parks and recreation van behind the roughly 40 marchers, carrying a half-dozen residents who wanted to participate but couldn't walk the distance. Ahead of the van walked Lynchburg government officials - police officers, a prosecutor, the fire marshal and building commissioner to name just a few. Stopping frequently along the 1600 and 1700 blocks of Taylor Street, residents Ron Tinsley and Anthony Smith spoke on bullhorns to people gathered on front porches and yards. "By any means necessary," Smith said in the catch slogan of Malcolm X, "we' re taking our neighborhood back." Mixed in with the rhetoric was the message of Christian love. Resident Leonard Perry led the group in prayer before the march started from the recreation center about 6:45 p.m. Smith said Jesus loved the drug dealers, but he hated what they were doing to the neighborhood - bottoming out property values, keeping visitors away, intimidating longtime residents into finding safer pastures to live. Returning after a half-hour march down Taylor, Monroe, 16th, 17th and 18th streets, young marchers rushed onto the recreation center's newly renovated playground. Adults gathered and sang "We Shall Overcome." Participants seemed happy and united. "We've got people in this community who really care," Lt. George Royal of the Lynchburg Police Department told the crowd. "And I think we showed that today." They must continue to show that in the months ahead, said Barbour, who led 18 months worth of similar anti-drug marches in his Tinbridge Hill neighborhood in the late 1990s. "You're sending a message out to the people that you're not going to tolerate it," said Barbour, the director of the Yoder Recreation Center. Smith, who's lived in the neighborhood for three years, said more marches are planned. His mother recently moved out after seven years in the area. Everybody involved Monday night wants the drug dealers to leave instead. If the first march was any indication, they're determined to meet that challenge by any means necessary. "Either they're gonna leave or I'm gonna leave," Smith said after the march. "And I don't plan on going anywhere." - --- MAP posted-by: Terry Liittschwager