🌟 EVENT DETAILS
2nd Annual STONES-IN-SELMA! Celebration
Honoring Civil Rights Leaders, Foot Soldiers & Activists
Preliminary Stone Awards Ceremony
📍 Selma, Alabama
📅 March 6–7, 2026
🕊 During the 61st Anniversary Selma Bridge Crossing Jubilee
🌉 Mission Statement
“Let’s GO back to the Bridge of Hope — to reboot Black Wall Street across America.”
The Stones-In-Selma initiative exists to honor the legacy of those who stood on the front lines of the Civil Rights Movement and to uplift today’s moral leaders who continue that fight. Through celebration, remembrance, and action, we seek to inspire unity, leadership, and economic empowerment across Black communities nationwide.
🎤 Presented By
The Ma’&9 MustardSeeds Foundation
&
Memphis “FOOT” Man — Moral Leader
📍 Event Schedule
2nd Annual Stones-In-Selma Preliminary Stone Awards Ceremony
🗓 Friday, March 6, 2026
🕕 6:00 PM
📌 MK 87 Venue
100 Broad Street, Selma, AL 36701
An elegant Black Tie Gala honoring Civil Rights leaders, foot soldiers, and modern-day activists, featuring the Inaugural “Bridge of Hope Ambassador” Inductee Ceremony.
👔 Dress Attire: Black Tie
🎟 Admission: $20 at the door
Rise of 300 Moral Leaders Gathering
🗓 Saturday, March 7, 2026
🕛 12:00 Noon
📌 Brown Chapel AME Church
410 Martin Luther King St, Selma, AL 36703
Hosted as part of the 2nd Annual STONES-IN-SELMA! Celebration, this powerful afternoon calls together:
Mayors • Senators • Councilmembers • Congressmembers • State Representatives • Clergy • Pastors • Activists • Organizational Leaders • Community Builders
For a sacred moment of:
🙏 Prayer & Honoring
📸 Reenactment Photo Session
🌉 Reflection during the Selma Bridge Crossing Jubilee
A collective stand for justice, unity, and renewed moral leadership
To join the RO300, bring your organization, or register your group, call (901) 273-5038 and leave a message.
Click Here ----> Travel & Lodging Info
#StonesInSelma #BlackWallStreetReboot #RO300 #FromSelmaToMemphis #FootsoldiersAwards #2Chronicles7
“Stones in Selma!” is more than a commemoration—it’s a catalytic movement. 60 years after Bloody Sunday, we gather where history was made to honor the Civil Rights Footsoldiers who risked everything for freedom. But we don’t stop at remembrance.
This weekend ignites a new mission: to rebuild Black Wall Street ...
The struggle for civil rights in America was never confined to one city, one march, or one speech. It was—and still is—a living movement stretching across time and geography. Selma, Alabama and Memphis, Tennessee stand as twin pillars in that legacy.
Selma, 1965 – The March That Shook a Nation
On March 7, 1965, a ...
The Selma to Montgomery marches of 1965 ignited a national reckoning with racial injustice. On “Bloody Sunday,” hundreds of peaceful marchers were beaten on the Edmund Pettus Bridge while demanding voting rights. Their courage led directly to the passage of the Voting Rights Act of 1965.
That same moral courage ...