Return to Selma with the Workers Circle


In 1965, Workers Circle leaders stood on the frontlines of history, marching shoulder-to-shoulder with John Lewis, Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., and Amelia Boynton from Selma to Montgomery to demand voting rights and to an end to Jim Crow.

Now, as we approach the 60th anniversary of the Selma Bridge Crossing, we invite you to return to Selma and honor this legacy with us from March 6–10, 2025.

Take the first step in joining the Workers Circle delegation and be part of this historic commemoration by filling out the registration form and make a deposit.

College Network Delegation

If you are a college student or young adult, apply for our young adult immersion. You’ll learn history, current challenges, and organizing skills. You’ll visit the Equal Justice Institute and experience the Selma Jubilee programming as well. Together, we’ll march across the Edmund Pettus Bridge. All travel, food, lodging, and programmatic expenses are covered by the Workers Circle. We’re holding our immersion in partnership with the League of Women Voters Young Voter Power Cohort. We are no longer accepting applicants for the College Network Delegation.

Sunday – Bridge Crossing Only

All are invited to join the Workers Circle’s delegation on Sunday, March 9 in Selma for the afternoon Rally and Bridge Crossing. Sign up to receive more information.

We invite adult members to join us in Selma for an immersive Civil Rights weekend experience. Scholars in residence will help us reflect and contextualize Jewish organizing and Black organizing traditions and solidarity in the ongoing fight for a truly multiracial American democracy. You’ll have the opportunity to participate in the Selma Jubilee programs offered by Selma leaders, civil rights, and democracy organizations and of course the Bridge Crossing. The spots for the general delegation are sold out. If you are still interested in attending, please join our waitlist by emailing egulick@circle.org.

General Delegation

The HistorY

On March 7, 1965 John Lewis, Hosea Williams, Amelia Boynton, and civil rights activists from the Selma region amassed at Brown Memorial Chapel, marched through Selma and across the Edmund Pettus Bridge. Marchers were protesting the police killing of Jimmie Lee Jackson, who died protecting his mother as police attacked a peaceful civil rights march in nearby Marion, AL in late February. Civil rights activists determined they’d march from Selma to Montgomery to bring their demands to the Alabama state capitol.

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