Who Was Rosa Parks ?

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Who Was Rosa Parks' Personal Hero? Historian Jeanne Theoharis Says Malcolm X

Well!


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Re: Who Was Rosa Parks' Personal Hero? Historian Jeanne Theoharis Says Malcolm X

Someone I need to invest more time in learning about, read some interesting things yesterday, this among them.
 
Re: Who Was Rosa Parks' Personal Hero? Historian Jeanne Theoharis Says Malcolm X

Happy Birthday, El-Hajj Malik El-Shabazz
(Malcolm X)



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May 19, 1925, in Omaha, Nebraska, the man we would come to know as Malcolm X burst into the world.

As he evolved away from his past as Detroit Red, he transformed himself first, into a loyal protégé of the Honorable Elijah Muhammad, then, into a world renowned human rights activist. He never hid behind his legend to avoid speaking of his time as a petty criminal, instead using his story to bolster the confidence of everyday men facing his same struggles. He let them know, in no uncertain terms, that they didn’t have to have a pristine past to make a difference in the present and the future.

The seismic shift that occurred in our culture, politics and philosophy as Black Americans in the ’50s and ’60s will forever be linked to brother Malcolm and his strength in the face of adversity, his unwillingness to bow to the hypocrisy that he had grown to see within the Nation of Islam, and his refusal to dilute his power for a country that feared his influence.

When looking back at the often tumultuous days of Malcolm’s life, one can not help but wonder what was on his mind. As he began to separate from the Honorable Elijah Muhammad, the man he credited with saving his life, as he broke ranks with the Nation of Islam, the brothers he had molded into the image of Black manhood that was deemed necessary for the separation of Black and White Americans to be successful, as his philosophy began to shift away from merging race and religion, to his belief that matters of human rights can not be confined by such a flimsy institution, as he begin to realize that he was living a lie and all White Americans were no more our enemies than all Black Americans were our friends, what was on his mind?



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Many of us forget that he was only 39-years-old when he was gunned down in the Audubon Ballroom just north of Harlem, New York on February 21, 1965. In his short life he went through three pivotal transformations that culminated with the founding of Organization of Afro-America Unity and Muslim Mosque, Inc. Though the two convergent movements never gained the traction and power of the NOI, it spoke to Malcolm’s influence that he was able to step out on purpose and take people with him that were ready to die for him.

Where are those leaders today?

As we celebrate the birth of Malcolm, I’m reminded of the day that I had the honor of meeting his eldest daughter, Ambassador Attallah Shabazz in Los Angeles. I was able to look into her eyes and see her father’s spirit, intelligence, resilience and passion — and to also tell her that he shaped my philosophy on religion, politics and race. I shared with her that he gave me strength to stand on principal when it seemed that no one was standing by my side. She smiled when I told her that when I was first introduced to his focus on human rights, rather than civil rights — because how can we expect civility until we are first considered human? — it changed my life.​


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Re: Who Was Rosa Parks' Personal Hero? Historian Jeanne Theoharis Says Malcolm X


Rosa Parks documents reveal the
fury behind image of stoic protester



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WASHINGTON — The black-and-white photograph of Rosa Parks on the bus looks familiar.

She's staring forward, re-enacting her moment in history as if preparing for a place in a grade school textbook on the civil rights movement, conservatively dressed in a hat and patterned dress, holding her handbag tightly on her lap so as not to bother anyone.

But her words, written in her journals and letters at roughly the same period as her 1955 arrest, show a far more provocative and wounded Parks, who sees the daily humiliations of segregation in Montgomery, Ala., as soul-crushing, to the point that "the line between reason and madness grows thinner."

"Such a good job of 'brain washing' was done on the Negro, that a militant Negro was almost a freak of nature to them, many times ridiculed by others of his own group," she wrote.​

Both versions of Parks' persona - the stoic protester and the furious agitator - are revealed in intimate detail in a newly released trove of documents that includes 7,500 manuscripts and 2,500 photographs collected throughout her long life.

The collection, which had been stored in a warehouse amid an estate battle, is on loan to the Library of Congress for the next decade, as part of an agreement with the Howard G. Buffett Foundation, which bought it last year.

The public will have access to the collection beginning Wednesday, which would have been Parks' 102nd birthday. Parks died in 2005 at age 92.

The journals detail her daily life as a seamstress in the Montgomery Fair department store, where black employees were forced to eat lunch up against the bathroom designated for black employees and patrons. They show her raw anger at the murder of 14-year-old Emmett Till in Mississippi, less than four months before Parks' arrest, a killing "that could be multiplied many times in the South."

The diverse documents in the collection, kept in Mylar slips and acid-free folders, one by one create a mosaic of a life and a movement: A peanut butter pancake recipe scribbled on the back of a bank envelope. A program for a brunch honoring radical professor Angela Davis, whose defense on murder charges she supported. There are postcards from the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr., a worn Bible with a Spanish-language flashcard used as a bookmark, and a badge in her name for the Mississippi Freedom Summer voter registration drive of 1964.

"The icon Rosa Parks as mother of the civil rights movement - as shy, genteel, working-class black woman - it was the public persona she thought was important to maintain because of the tenor of the times she lived through," said Adrienne Cannon, African-American history and culture specialist for the Manuscript Division of the Library of Congress. "But in this collection, we hear more of that militant voice."

Cannon said that she believed Parks - whose political activism was better understood among civil rights activists and historians than the general public - wanted history to see her in a more complex light, and that the papers were maintained as a sort of time capsule, for a day when more of her edges could be understood.

"She held onto them until the end of her life, the most personal of the personal, because she wanted us to know the true Rosa Parks," Cannon said.

The narrative begins at an early age, when Parks recalls her fear as a 6- or 7-year-old,

"keeping vigil with my grandpa" who stood watch with a shotgun to protect their rural Alabama home from the Ku Klux Klan.

"I wanted to see him kill a Ku Kluxer," she wrote.​


Parks the Activist

Parks was already an activist - influenced by her husband, her grandfather, and an Alabama civil rights group known as the Women's Political Council - by 1955, when she refused to give up her seat on the bus for a white man, archivists said.

"I had been pushed around all my life and felt at this moment that I couldn't take it any more," she wrote on yellow paper, full of the scratched-out words and addenda of someone who is thinking how her words might be viewed later. "When I asked the policeman why we had to be pushed around? He said he didn't know. 'The law is the law. You are under arrest.'

" ... There is just so much hurt, disappointment and oppression one can take."​

The artifacts show Parks' deep involvement in the 13-month bus boycott that followed her arrest.

For example, the front of a datebook from Montgomery Fair shows a Hallmark logo, a butterfly and pink flowers - a 1950s rendering of aspirational leisure. Yet Parks transformed the datebook into a tool for the movement. On the back, she jotted names of carpool drivers needed to subvert the bus system during boycott, which ended when the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in her favor that segregated public buses were not constitutional.



Some objects combine the ordinary with the historic. A 1956 letter addressed to Parks' mother tells of a trip to New York, before a rally at Madison Square Garden.

"The people here are very nice," Parks wrote. "I spent Thursday night with Mr. and Mrs. Thurgood Marshall," when the future Supreme Court justice was chief counsel of the NAACP's Legal Defense and Educational Fund.

A 1957 memo from civil rights organizer Bayard Rustin gives her talking points for a speech at the Prayer Pilgrimage for Freedom, an event held at the Lincoln Memorial that helped vault King onto the national stage. Like others in the cache, the document shows the careful plotting of the movement at the granular level.

"It would be good if you point out what it means to the 'freedom fighters' to act in common with those who defend justice in the north," Rustin wrote.



Parks, who lost her job after her arrest, moved with her husband to Detroit in 1957 and did not find steady employment until 1965, when she began working for Rep. John Conyers Jr., D-Mich.

As the years went on, her iconic status grew. Documents from her later life include a photo with Pope John Paul II, a scrapbook from her visit to Japan, and the certificate for the Presidential Medal of Freedom, signed in 1996 by President Bill Clinton.

She never had children, but later in her life received birthday cards from students all over the world, including a batch she kept from the Prairie View Intermediate School in Texas sent in 2000.

"Dear Mrs. Parks," wrote Zack, in orange crayon on green construction paper. "I think what you did for African Americans is great. Was it scary to go to jail?"


Read more here: http://www.mcclatchydc.com/2015/02/05/255574/rosa-parks-documents-reveal-the.html#storylink=cpy



 
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