By Andrea Stevens
AFRO Staff Writer
astevens@afro.com
Civil rights advocacy is taking a digital turn as the Rev. Dr. Jamal Bryant spearheads an electronic protest of Dollar General. The protest, launched in late summer, targets what Bryant describes as systemic exploitation of Black workers and communities by one of the nationโs largest retailers.
Dollar General has yet to release a public statement in response to or in acknowledgement of the protest or the statement Bryant has made regarding the campaign.
โDollar General is twice as large as Walmart and Target combined,โ Bryant said. โTheyโve doubled their stores, especially in rural and impoverished areas, and yet nobodyโs paying attention.โ

Bryant is senior pastor of New Birth Missionary Baptist Church in Stonecrest, Ga. The civil rights leader said the boycott of Target has dominated public discourse, but Dollar General has escaped similar scrutinyโ until now.
โWe had to take a different approach,โ said Bryant. โIn many regards, it [Dollar General] amplifies the food deserts in our community, [but] itโs the only option. I dare not, out of compassion, tell our people to starve to death.โ
Instead of encouraging a physical boycott, Bryant is urging supporters to engage in what he calls an electronic protest โflooding the company with emails, phone calls and social media posts demanding accountability.
โWe have to figure out a food co-op in our community so that people get access to fresh vegetation,โ he said. โSomething is wrong if it is more affordable for me to get a hamburger than it is for me to get a salad.โ
Bryant said the issue goes beyond retail policy.ย
โItโs not just because of gun violence or the Klan,โ he said. โItโs because of health and nutrition. And health and nutrition is a civil rights issue. We have to speak to it.โ
He said the campaignโs rural focus is intentional.
โWhen you think of Georgia, you immediately think of Atlanta,โ he said. โYou donโt think of Warner Robins, Columbus, Tifton. A lot of those rural communities are deserving of our attention and our affection at the same time.โ
Speaking on economic injustice and the resilience of the Black community, Bryant pointed to a history of loyalty despite systemic neglect.
โBlack people are the most forgiving people on the planet,โ he said. โWe overwhelmingly still pledge allegiance, still register to vote, still pay taxes and have never received reparations. Our patriotism is never called into question.โ
Bryant said itโs time for the Black Church to lead on issues of economic inequality.
โPreachers have lost their prophetic voice,โ he said. โEighty-seven percent of Black people donโt own a single share of stock, and yet when they come to church, the only investment they hear about is tithing.โ
Bryant acknowledged that speaking out against powerful corporations comes with personal risks. His advocacy, he said, has led to threats and security concerns that affect not just him, but his family.
โIโve had to change my phone number,โ he said. โIโve talked to my daughtersโ colleges to make sure theyโre safe. These are real issues.โ
Despite the challenges and personal toll, Bryant said he has no intention of backing down. For him, the work is not optional. It is a calling.
โThis is not a hobby,โ Bryant said. โThis is what I was called and born to do.โ

