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Associated Press

WASHINGTON (AP) - Thousands of people, many holding signs with names of gun violence victims and messages such as "Ban Assault Weapons Now," joined a rally for gun control on Saturday, marching from the Capitol to the Washington Monument.

Leading the crowd were marchers with "We Are Sandy Hook" signs, paying tribute to victims of the December school shooting in Newtown, Conn. Washington Mayor Vincent Gray and other city officials marched alongside them. The crowd stretched for at least two blocks along Constitution Avenue.

Participants held signs reading "Gun Control Now," "Stop NRA" and "What Would Jesus Pack?" among other messages. Other signs were simple and white, with the names of victims of gun violence.

About 100 residents from Newtown, where a gunman killed 20 first-graders and six teachers, traveled to Washington together, organizers said.

Participant Kara Baekey from nearby Norwalk, Conn., said that when she heard about the Newtown shooting, she immediately thought of her two young children. She said she decided she must take action, and that's why she traveled to Washington for the march.

"I wanted to make sure this never happens at my kids' school or any other school," Baekey said. "It just can't happen again."

Once the crowd arrived at the monument, speakers called for a ban on military-style assault weapons and high-capacity ammunition and for universal background checks on gun sales.

Education Secretary Arne Duncan told the crowd it's not about taking away Second Amendment gun rights, but about gun safety and saving lives. He said he and President Barack Obama would do everything they could to enact gun control policies.

"This is about trying to create a climate in which our children can grow up free of fear," Duncan said. "This march is a starting point; it is not an ending point ... We must act, we must act, we must act."

Del. Eleanor Holmes Norton, D.C.'s non-voting representative in Congress, said the gun lobby can be stopped, and the crowd chanted back, "Yes, we can."

"We are all culpable if we do nothing now," Norton said

James Agenbroad, 78, of Garrett Park, Md., carried a handwritten sign on cardboard that read "Repeal the 2nd Amendment." He called it the only way to stop mass killings because he thinks the Supreme Court will strike down any other restrictions on guns.

"You can repeal it," he said. "We repealed prohibition."

Molly Smith, the artistic director of Washington's Arena Stage, and her partner organized the march. Organizers said that in addition to the 100 people from Newtown, buses of participants traveled from New Jersey, New York and Philadelphia. Others flew in from Seattle, San Francisco and Alaska, they said.

While she's never organized a political march before, Smith said she was compelled to press for a change in the law. The march organizers support Obama's call for gun control measures. They also want lawmakers to require gun safety training for all buyers of firearms.

"With the drum roll, the consistency of the mass murders and the shock of it, it is always something that is moving and devastating to me. And then, it's as if I move on," Smith said. "And in this moment, I can't move on. I can't move on.

"I think it's because it was children, babies," she said. "I was horrified by it."

After the Connecticut shootings, Smith began organizing on Facebook. The group One Million Moms for Gun Control, the Washington National Cathedral and two other churches eventually signed on to co-sponsor the march. Organizers have raised more than $50,000 online to pay for equipment and fees to stage the rally, Smith said.

Lawmakers from the District of Columbia and Maryland rallied the crowd, along with Marian Wright Edelman of the Children's Defense Fund and Colin Goddard, a survivor from the Virginia Tech massacre.

Goddard said he was shot four times at Virginia Tech and is motivated to keep fighting for gun control because what happened to him keeps happening- and nothing's been done to stop it.

"We are Americans," he said, drawing big cheers. "We have overcome difficulties when we realize we are better than this."

Smith said she supports a comprehensive look at mental health and violence in video games and films. But she said the mass killings at Virginia Tech and Aurora, Colo., and Newtown, Conn., all began with guns.

"The issue is guns. The Second Amendment gives us the right to own guns, but it's not the right to own any gun," she said. "These are assault weapons, made for killing people."

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March on Washington for Gun Control: http://www.guncontrolmarch.com/

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Follow Brett Zongker at https://twitter.com/DCArtBeat


(Copyright 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.)

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  • Abuse
    Steve wrote...
    Emotions get in the way
    of rational thinking. People need to stop and really think about what they are demanding versus the Constitutional rights for all. Gun control advocates are calling on measures that have been proven time and time again to be ineffective and this is where emotions are driving them to react instead of thinking.
  • Abuse
    Michoacan wrote...
    Fighting efforts to keep guns out of the
    wrong hands is irrational. If anything, irrational gun nuts fight to ensure that the criminally oriented among us, the suicidal and the psychotic have unimpressed access to the weapons of their choice with which to carry out their terrible deeds.
  • Abuse
    Steve wrote...
    It's a sad day when government officials
    and american citizens alike, march against the Consititution in order to fill an agenda. Gun control is proven failure. Gun control harms the innocent. Gun control doesn't address the real issues.
  • Abuse
    2cents wrote...
    The media, Biden and their cheerleaders . . .
    . . . are working hard on Obamas new anti-gun assignment. All under the guise of protection. And as with so many such leftist projects over the last few years, millions of wide-eyed,, chanting followers will again put aside intellect and board the train. The trampling of our nation has turned out to be so much easier than anyone might have thought.
  • Abuse
    Michoacan wrote...
    Alarmist gun nuts assure us that the End Times
    approach if we move to readopt previously enacted gun laws which our nation was somehow able to survive. It is a measure of their hysteria that they suppose everyone has memories as short as theirs.
  • Abuse
    Steve wrote...
    The "gun nuts" are trying to protect the
    freedoms that the anti gun kooks are trying take away.
  • Abuse
    orichalcem wrote...
    Isn't this the same group that marched
    yesterday to stop abortion?
  • Abuse
    Steve wrote...
    Dear Comrades
    Let us march against the Constitution, join us in the fight and go "forward"
  • Abuse
    SurpriseMe wrote...
    bad apples
    The issue is not guns. It is the people using the guns. The biggest problem for the responsible gun owners are those who are not responsible. My family and friends we have trigger locks on every gun, gun safes and ammo stored in another safe separate from the guns. It is not possible if a gun owner uses a trigger lock for a gun to hurt anyone unless the trigger lock is removed.
  • Abuse
    Michoacan wrote...
    Many of the gun nuts who comment on
    this board applaud Arpaio when he violates the First, Fourth and Fifth Amendment rights of Maricopa County residents. The only right that gun nuts seem to have an interest in protecting is the Their target practicing right.