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Sapphire
She was one of my heroes. I've not yet seen anything about this outside of our local Detroit coverage.

http://www.freep.com/news/latestnews/pm6900_20051024.htm

QUOTE
Rosa Parks, civil rights heroine, is dead

Monday, October 24, 2005

BY CASSANDRA SPRATTLING
FREE PRESS STAFF WRITER

When Rosa Parks refused to get up, an entire race of people began to stand up for their rights as human beings.

It was a simple act that took extraordinary courage in Montgomery, Ala., in 1955. It was a place where black people had no rights white people had to respect. It was a time when racial discrimination was so common, many blacks never questioned it.

At least not out loud.

But then came Rosa Parks.

This mild-mannered black woman refused to give up her seat on a city bus so a white man could sit down.

Jim Crow laws had met their match.

Parks' refusal infused 50,000 blacks in Montgomery with the will to walk rather than risk daily humiliation on the city's buses.

This gentle giant, whose quietness belied her toughness, became the catalyst for a movement that broke the back of legalized segregation in the United States, gave rise to the astounding leadership of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., and inspired fighters for freedom and justice throughout the world.

Parks, the beloved mother of the civil rights movement, is dead, a family member confirmed late Monday.

But already it's evident that her spirit lives in hundreds of thousands of people inspired by her unwavering commitment to work for a better world - a commitment that continued even after age and failing health slowed her in the 1990s.

In death as in life, she touched the well known and the little known people of the world.

'Freedom is for all human beings'

Parks' health had been declining since the late 1990s. She had stopped giving interviews by then and rarely appeared in public. When she did, she only smiled or spoke short, barely audible responses.

In one of her last lengthy interviews with the Detroit Free Press in 1995, she spoke of what she would like people to say about her after she passed away.

"I'd like people to say I'm a person who always wanted to be free and wanted it not only for myself; freedom is for all human beings," she said during an interview from the pastor's study of St. Matthew African Methodist Episcopal Church, a small congregation she joined upon moving to Detroit in 1957.

While it's known worldwide that her refusal to give up her bus seat sparked the Montgomery bus boycott, it's less well known that Parks had a long history of trying to make life better for black people.

It was a desire embedded in her from childhood by her grandfather - her mother's father with whom she lived when she was growing up. He taught his children and grandchildren not to put up with mistreatment. "It was passed down almost in our genes," Parks wrote in her 1992 autobiography, "My Story." (Puffin, $5.99)

She recalled that when her grandfather was home, he kept a shotgun by his side in case the Ku Klux Klan dropped by.

Of her grandfather, Sylvester Edwards, she wrote: "I remember that sometimes he would call white men by their first names, or their whole names, and not say, 'Mister.' How he survived doing all those kinds of things, and being so outspoken, talking that big talk, I don't know, unless it was because he was so white and so close to being one of them."

Her grandfather's father was a white plantation owner; his mother a slave housekeeper and seamstress.

In recent years, Parks has relied heavily on a wheelchair and, according to court documents, suffers from dementia.

The dementia was revealed as a result of two lawsuits filed on her behalf against the record company for the hip hop duo Outkast. The 1999 lawsuit claims the record label BMG Entertainment violated her publicity and trademark rights for the 1998 song "Rosa Parks,' by using her name without her permission for commercial purposes.

But some of her family members claim Parks was incapable of filing such a suit of her own accord. They say it was an attempt by one of her attorneys, Gregory Reed and her longtime friend, Elaine Steele, to get money.

Meanwhile, in October of this year a federal judge appointed former Detroit Mayor Dennis Archer as her guardian ad litem-a temporary, court-appointed attorney to assure her interests in the lawsuits are fairly represented.

Steele has had durable power of attorney over Parks and serves as her patient advocate, meaning she will make medical decisions upon incapacitating illness since 1998, according to documents obtained by the Free Press.
70sliberalism
Sob.gif



so long Rosa, so long...


Sob.gif
graham4anything
Sob.gif Sob.gif

One of the true heroes of our time (or any time.) Rest in Peace, Miss Parks

Sob.gif Sob.gif
TheRestofUs
God speed Rosa. Join those with quiet courage and bless us all with your spirit. pray.gif angel.gif
Pegatha
I used to work in Montgomery, where she was universally revered.
Indianhead
A Southern Lady...whose quite dedication,
and committment to her time was rock solid.

Rebels take many forms, come in many colors.

I cherish them all, and Ms. Parks has a special place.
She made us better people, focused our reality.

I love ya Miss Rosa. I'll never forget you, nor will
my children, and I pray their children.






God, it hurts...
ConcernedObserver
Rosa Parks, Civil Rights Icon, Dies at Age 92

Associated Press
Monday, October 24, 2005; 10:30 PM



DETROIT -- Rosa Lee Parks, whose refusal to give up her bus seat to a white man sparked the modern civil rights movement, died Monday. She was 92.

Mrs. Parks died at her home of natural causes, said Karen Morgan, a spokeswoman for U.S. Rep. John Conyers, D-Mich.

Mrs. Parks was 42 when she committed an act of defiance in 1955 that was to change the course of American history and earn her the title "mother of the civil rights movement."

At that time, Jim Crow laws in place since the post-Civil War Reconstruction required separation of the races in buses, restaurants and public accommodations throughout the South, while legally sanctioned racial discrimination kept blacks out of many jobs and neighborhoods in the North.

The Montgomery, Ala., seamstress, an active member of the local chapter of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, was riding on a city bus Dec. 1, 1955, when a white man demanded her seat.

Mrs. Parks refused, despite rules requiring blacks to yield their seats to whites. Two black Montgomery women had been arrested earlier that year on the same charge, but Mrs. Parks was jailed. She also was fined $14.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/conte...5102402053.html
Edie
To a wonderful woman who defined courage: Your presence and your strength made this world a better place for all of us.
Indianhead
From The Detroit Free Press article:

When South African freedom icon Nelson Mandela came to Detroit in 1990, the person he was most honored to meet was Parks. When he got off the plane, a line of dignitaries waited to greet him. Mandela simply stood in awe when he saw Parks. "He chanted, 'Rosa, Rosa, Rosa Parks!'." recalled Keith, who had escorted her to the airport to meet Mandela.

"He recognized her before he recognized anyone," Keith said.

Mandela later told Keith that Parks was his inspiration while he was jailed and her example inspired South African freedom fighters.

Mandela called Parks "the David who challenged Goliath" in a 1993 speech at the NAACP convention in Indianapolis.

The best-selling poet and writer Maya Angelou said of her, "Mrs. Parks is for me probably what the Statute of Liberty was for immigrants. She stood for the future, and the better future."

Angelou recalled the pleasure of having Parks as a guest at her home in Winston-Salem, N.C., several years ago.

"She was as tender as a rose and she was as strong as steel."

U.S. Rep. Carolyn Cheeks Kilpatrick, D-Mich., said Parks was her role model all her adult life.

Kilpatrick recalled first meeting her in the early 1980s as a state legislator.

"I remember thinking how dare I not do all I can after seeing this little, strong woman who took a stand to make life better for me, for all of us, how dare any of us to shirk from any injustice."

During the 1995 Free Press interview, Parks spoke of the bus boycott's enduring legacy.

"I hope it will remind people how we struggled and what we had to go through, and that they'll be willing to continue to work for our freedom because we still have quite a long way to go," she said.
Pie
Rest in Peace, Brave Lady. Your immense courage shall not be forgotten. angel.gif

(BTW- Aaron Brown has been all over this news this evening.)
winston smith
QUOTE(Pie @ Oct 24 2005, 07:32 PM)
Rest in Peace, Brave Lady.  Your immense courage shall not be forgotten. angel.gif

(BTW-  Aaron Brown has been all over this news this evening.)

*

Good night sweet princess. May flights of angels take thee to they rest.
Indianhead
How important was she?

Check this excerpt from CNN:

----------------
At the time of her arrest, Parks was on her way home from work as a seamstress.

The 42-year-old woman took a seat in the front of the black section of a city bus in Montgomery. The bus filled up and the bus driver demanded that she move so a white male passenger could have her seat.

But Parks refused to give up her seat, and police arrested her. Four days later, Parks was convicted of disorderly conduct and fined $14.

That same day, a group of blacks founded the Montgomery Improvement Association and named King, the young pastor of Dexter Avenue Baptist Church, as its leader, and the bus boycott began.
For the next 381 days, blacks -- who according to Time magazine had comprised two-thirds of Montgomery bus riders -- boycotted public transportation to protest Parks' arrest and in turn the city's Jim Crow segregation laws.

The mass movement marked one of the largest and most successful challenges of segregation and helped catapult King to the forefront of the civil rights movement.
------------------
This is why America weeps tonight .
TheRestofUs
I can't stop crying. But, there is joy and love, as well as selfish sorrow in my tears.
Indianhead
QUOTE(TheRestofUs @ Oct 24 2005, 09:56 PM)
I can't stop crying. But, there is joy and love, as well as selfish sorrow in my tears.
*


When you lose someone like this...it's appropriate.
I've had brothers-in-arms on the battlefield die.
Brothers in law enforcement die. Close family members
die. And it feels the same...the same. Part of us died today.
We should weep, we must weep, we have a soul.
Frenchy
A class lady and a true American hero. We will never have people of such principal & devotion again. She was part and parcel of the Greatest Generation.
TheRestofUs
Indianhead my brother. Go and read my final posts about the 93 year old man. I want to share a memory with you.
Pie
From TRoU's post on another thread:

Sixty Years On by Elton John

Who'll walk me down to church when I'm sixty years of age
When the ragged dog they gave me has been ten years in the grave
And the Sinorita plays guitar, plays it just for you
My rosary has broken and my beads have all slipped through

You've hung up your great coat and you've laid down your gun
You know the war you fought in wasn't too much fun
And the future you're giving me holds nothing for a gun
I've no wish to be living sixty years on

Yes I'll sit with you and talk let your eyes relive again
I know my vintage prayers would be very much the same
And Magdelena plays the organ, plays it just for you
Your choral lamp that burns so low when you are passing through

And the future you're giving me holds nothing for a gun
I've no wish to be living sixty years on
JasonATexan
I wasn't aware of her or knew she did what she did. That might be the sadest thing is the only way I became aware of the story behind her was when right-wingers were trying to compare Cindy Sheehan's arrest to hers. I don't think there is a lot of comparsions other then standing up for what one believes in, but I do think it is sad that her did might be the only way to bring her memory back up to my generations. It's easy for us who didn't grow up during that time period to forget what others did before us. Let's hope other youths at least understand better then I did.
Indianhead
QUOTE(JasonATexan @ Oct 24 2005, 10:33 PM)
I wasn't aware of her or knew she did what she did. That might be the sadest thing is the only way I became aware of the story behind her was when right-wingers were trying  to compare Cindy Sheehan's arrest to hers. I don't think there is a lot of comparsions other then standing up for what one believes in, but I do think it is sad that her did might be the only way to bring her memory back up to my generations. It's easy for us who didn't grow up during that time period to forget what others did before us. Let's hope other youths at least understand better then I did.
*


Never too late to learn little brother.
The brothers and sisters who fought the voter registration
fights were the inspiration to a generation of Democrats.
Racial barriers, literacy tests, property owner tests,
the remnants of Jim Crow. Bury it deep. Never let it rise again.
Peggy
Rosa Parks showed true integrity and dignity when she refused to give up her seat on that bus. If only we could all have the strength to stand up for what is right, at all times, no matter what the risks or consequences might be. But the truth of the matter is most of us are just cowards, including myself.

Rosa Parks, a true American heroine!

graham4anything
QUOTE(JasonATexan @ Oct 25 2005, 12:33 AM)
I wasn't aware of her or knew she did what she did. That might be the sadest thing is the only way I became aware of the story behind her was when right-wingers were trying  to compare Cindy Sheehan's arrest to hers. I don't think there is a lot of comparsions other then standing up for what one believes in, but I do think it is sad that her did might be the only way to bring her memory back up to my generations. It's easy for us who didn't grow up during that time period to forget what others did before us. Let's hope other youths at least understand better then I did.
*


Jason-
People on this board like C.O. and myself, among others have been lamenting the fact that your generation just doesn't seem to care enough.
When it was us at your age and younger that seemed to fuel the great protest
movement.
Today's kids just...I don't know.

Thank you for being here, and sticking it out and "getting it"

While you may not know the Rosa Park's out there, your wanting to do something these months shows you know her spirit and it is never too late to learn the names we older people so admire.

Reading some of these posts that were put overnight since I left my message above, like TROU, I am sitting here at 520 am in the morning, tears running down my face for Miss Parks.
Sob.gif Sob.gif

Can you imagine what must have gone through her mind as she watched in horror during Katrina?
Trigger
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/americas/4373794.stm

Rosa Parks, the black woman whose 1955 protest action in Alabama marked the start of the modern US civil rights movement, has died at the age of 92.
Mrs Parks' refusal to give up her seat to a white man on a bus prompted a mass black boycott of buses, organised by Baptist minister Martin Luther King Jr.

His protest movement brought about the 1964 Civil Rights Act, which outlawed racial discrimination in the US.

Mrs Parks' lawyer said she died in her sleep at her home in Detroit, Michigan.

"She sat down in order that we all might stand up - and the walls of segregation came down," civil rights leader Jesse Jackson said.
demo
QUOTE(Pie @ Oct 24 2005, 11:32 PM)
Rest in Peace, Brave Lady.  Your immense courage shall not be forgotten. angel.gif

(BTW-  Aaron Brown has been all over this news this evening.)

*



May she rest in peace...........
Indianhead
Excerpts from this morning's Washington Post:

...

"At her husband's urging, Parks finally earned her high school degree in 1933, when fewer than 7 percent of blacks had graduated from high school. About the same time, she was finally allowed to register to vote -- on her third try. She briefly was able to see past the racial separation of the times when she worked at Maxwell Air Force Base, where segregation was banned.

"I could ride on an integrated trolley bus on the base," she told biographer Douglas Brinkley, "but when I left the base, I had to ride home on a segregated bus. . . . You might just say Maxwell opened my eyes up."

"She was a volunteer secretary to E.D. Nixon, president of the Montgomery chapter of the NAACP, while working as a seamstress and housekeeper to a white couple, Virginia and Clifford Durr. The Durrs became her friends, and they suggested -- and sponsored -- her attendance at a training workshop on racial desegregation at the Highlander Folk School in Monteagle, Tenn., in the summer of 1955.

"So a few months later, in the winter of 1955, when Parks refused to give up her seat on the bus, it was with the knowledge of both the everyday indignities of segregation and the building momentum of the civil rights movement.

"Parks was working as a seamstress for the Montgomery Fair department store, and as she waited for the Cleveland Avenue bus to take her home, she let a full bus go by. The Jim Crow laws reserved the first four rows of a city bus for whites and the last 10 for blacks. The seats in the middle could be used by blacks if no whites sought them. But if a white person wanted a seat, the whole row was emptied.

"Also, bus drivers in Montgomery made blacks, who were nearly 70 percent of the riders, enter the front door, pay their fare, disembark and re-enter by the back door. Many blacks were left standing, fareless, when the bus driver pulled away before they could reboard.

"James F. Blake, the driver of the bus Parks boarded in 1955, had put her off a bus in 1943 when she refused to enter through the back door because the back was jammed. After that, she refused to board any bus he drove, but when the bus pulled up to the Court Square stop, Parks forgot to check who the driver was. She got on and took a seat in the middle section, next to a black man at the window and across the aisle from two women. At the next stop, some white people got on, filling up the seats reserved for them, and one white man was left standing.

"Let me have those front seats," the driver said, indicating the front seats of the middle section. No one moved. He repeated himself: "Y'all better make it light on yourselves and let me have those seats."

"The black rider by the window rose, and Parks moved to let him pass by. The two women across the aisle also stood up. Parks slid over to the window. "I could not see how standing up was going to 'make it light' for me," she wrote in her autobiography, "My Story" (1992). "The more we gave in and complied, the worse they treated us.



"I thought back to the time when I used to sit up all night and didn't sleep, and my grandfather would have his gun right by the fireplace, or if he had his one-horse wagon going anywhere, he always had his gun in the back of the wagon," she wrote. "People always say that I didn't give up my seat because I was tired, but that isn't true. I was not tired physically, or no more tired than I usually was at the end of a working day. I was not old, although some people have an image of me as being old then. I was forty-two. No, the only tired I was, was tired of giving in."

"The bus driver said he would have her arrested, and she replied, "You may do that." He called the police and waited. Some riders got off, but not everyone, and Parks recalled that it was very quiet. When the police arrived, she asked one, "Why do you all push us around?" She said he replied, "I don't know, but the law is the law, and you're under arrest."

"She was bailed out that night, and her boss at the NAACP asked if she would be the test case for a lawsuit. She discussed it with her husband and mother and then agreed. Meanwhile, the leaders of the Women's Political Council mimeographed 35,000 handbills calling for a bus boycott. Black ministers got behind the effort. All 18 black-owned cab companies agreed to stop at all bus stops and charge 10 cents per ride, while others carpooled or walked.
...

"As Parks went into her trial, a young girl called out, "Oh, she's so sweet. They've messed with the wrong one now." The crowd took up the latter half of the cry.

"She was found guilty of violating the segregation law and fined. Her attorneys, afraid that the charge might be overturned without the underlying law being addressed, filed a petition with the U.S. District Court that directly challenged the law. It was a wise strategy: Parks's original appeal was dismissed and the conviction upheld, so it was the second case that went to the Supreme Court about a year later, and the court overturned the segregation laws.
...

"Although her action fueled the smoldering rights movement, there had been sparks before. A five-week bus boycott in 1900 in Montgomery succeeded in breaking segregation, but 20 years later, the reemergence of the Ku Klux Klan brought it back. A Supreme Court decision in 1946, a case argued by future Supreme Court Justice Thurgood Marshall, outlawed Jim Crow segregation in interstate transportation. A 1953 bus boycott in Baton Rouge, La., desegregated that city's public transit. A Columbia, S.C., woman sued, and won, over segregation of her city's buses in 1954.

"She was given the Medal of Honor, the highest award that the U.S. government bestows, and the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the nation's highest civilian award. More than 40 colleges and universities gave her honorary doctorates, and her name is cited in virtually every U.S. history book that addresses the civil rights movement."

------------
Young people...take this from history...she tried to register three
times before she succeeded. She tasted desegregated buses on
a US Air Force Base. Segregation had been outlawed, but
activity by the Klu Klux Klan brought it back. A petite, educated,
mannered lady recognized when the time was right. And then
waited for more than a decade to be recognized.

We must always be vigilent, we must always remember...
(and some of us must be proficient with firearms wink.gif)
Arneoker
QUOTE(graham4anything @ Oct 25 2005, 05:55 AM)
Jason-
People on this board like C.O. and myself, among others have been lamenting the fact that your generation just doesn't seem to care enough.
When it was us at your age and younger that seemed to fuel the great protest
movement.
Today's kids just...I don't know.

Thank you for being here, and sticking it out and "getting it"

While you may not know the Rosa Park's out there, your wanting to do something these months shows you know her spirit and it is never too late to learn the names we older people so admire.

Reading some of these posts that were put overnight since I left my message above, like TROU, I am sitting here at 520 am in the morning, tears running down my face for Miss Parks.
Sob.gif  Sob.gif

Can you imagine what must have gone through her mind as she watched in horror during Katrina?
*

History is so important.

Last night I was talking to my five-year old daughter, basically giving her a five to ten minute, extemely condensed history of the world from the time of the Babylonian exile of the Jews to the present day U.S. I gave her the right hooks so that she kept asking me to "tell me more."

Hopefully she will be interested when the time comes for her to learn and understand about things such as the civil rights movement, and the history will be enough to fire her imagination, that she will have little lack from not having lived through it.
ConcernedObserver
This is for you Jason..

Rosa Parks, Rosa Louise McCauley (1913-2005 ), African American civil rights activist, who is often called the Mother of the Civil Rights Movement. Her arrest for refusing to give up her seat on a bus triggered the Montgomery bus boycott of 1955 and 1956 and set in motion the test case for the desegregation of public transportation.

On December 1, 1955, in Montgomery, Alabama, Rosa Parks was arrested for disregarding an order to surrender her bus seat to a white passenger. Her protest galvanized a growing movement to desegregate public transportation and marked a historic turning point in the African American battle for civil rights. Rosa Parks was much more than an accidental symbol, however. It is sometimes overlooked that at the time of her arrest, she was no ordinary bus rider; she was an experienced activist with strong beliefs.

Rosa Louise McCauley was born in Tuskegee, Alabama. She was the granddaughter of former slaves and the daughter of James McCauley, a carpenter, and Leona McCauley, a rural schoolteacher. The future civil rights leader grew up in Montgomery, Alabama, where she attended the all-black Alabama State College. In 1932 she married Raymond Rosa Parks, a barber, with whom she became active in Montgomery's chapter of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP).

Raymond Parks's volunteer efforts went toward helping free the defendants in the famous Scottsboro case, in which nine young black men were accused of raping two white women. Rosa Rosa Parks worked as the NAACP chapter's youth adviser. In 1943, when Rosa Rosa Parks actually joined the NAACP, her involvement with the organization became even greater. She worked with the organization's state president, Edgar Daniel Nixon, to mobilize a voter registration drive in Montgomery. That same year, Rosa Parks was elected secretary of the Montgomery branch.

In the early 1950s Rosa Parks found work as a tailor's assistant at a department store, Montgomery Fair. She also had a part-time job as a seamstress for Virginia and Clifford Durr, a white liberal couple; they encouraged Rosa Parks in her civil rights work. Six months before her famous protest, Rosa Parks received a scholarship to attend a workshop on school integration for community leaders. It was held at the Highlander Folk School in Monteagle, Tennessee, and Rosa Parks spent several weeks there.

The segregated seating policies on public buses had long been a source of resentment within the black community in Montgomery and in other cities throughout the Deep South. African Americans were required to pay their fares at the front of the bus and then to reboard through the back door. The white bus drivers, who were invested with police powers, frequently harassed blacks, sometimes driving away before African American passengers were able to get back on the bus. During peak hours, the drivers pushed back the boundary markers that segregated the bus, crowding those in the “colored section” to provide more whites with seats.

On December 1, 1955, Rosa Parks took her seat in the front of the “colored section” of a Montgomery bus. The driver asked Rosa Parks and three other black riders to relinquish their seats to whites, but Rosa Parks refused (the others complied). The driver called the police, and Rosa Parks was arrested. She was released later that night after Nixon and the Durrs posted a $100 bond.

Although three black women had been arrested earlier that year for similar acts of defiance, and Rosa Parks herself had been thrown off a bus by the same driver 12 years before, this time the opponents of segregation were prepared to mount a counterattack. The Montgomery chapter of the NAACP had been looking for a test case to challenge the legality of segregated bus seating and to woo public opinion with a series of protests.

The morning after her arrest, Rosa Parks agreed to let the NAACP take on her case. Another organization, the Women's Political Council (WPC), led by JoAnn Robinson, initiated the idea of a one-day bus boycott. Within 24 hours of Rosa Parks's defiance, the WPC had distributed more than 52,000 fliers announcing the bus boycott, which was to take place the day of Rosa Parks's trial. On December 5, as buses went through their routes almost empty, Rosa Parks was convicted by the local court. She refused to pay the fine of $14, and with the help of her lawyer, Ed D. Gray, she appealed to the circuit court.


Rosa Parks was widely known as the Mother of the Civil Rights Movement, but her iconic stature afforded her little financial security. She lost her job as a seamstress at Montgomery Fair and was unable to find other work in Montgomery. Rosa Parks and her husband relocated to Detroit, Michigan, in 1957, where they struggled financially for the next eight years. Rosa Parks's fortunes improved somewhat in 1965, when U.S. congressional representative John F. Conyers Jr. hired her as an administrative assistant, a position she held until 1987..

Rosa Parks always remained a committed activist. In the 1980s she worked in support of the South African antiapartheid movement, and in Detroit in 1987 she founded the Rosa and Raymond Rosa Parks Institute for Self-Development, a career counseling center for black youth.

Rosa Parks received numerous awards and tributes, including the NAACP's highest honor, the Spingarn Medal, in 1970 and the prestigious Martin Luther King, Jr. Award in 1980. Cleveland Avenue in the city of Montgomery was renamed Rosa Rosa Parks Boulevard in 1965. In 1996 U.S. president Bill Clinton awarded her the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the highest honor that the U.S. government can give to a civilian.

A friend once described Rosa Parks as someone who, as a rule, did not defy authority, but once determined on a course of action, refused to back down: "She might ignore you, go around you, but never retreat.

Her example is one we all would do well to cherish always.
xyzse
I have heard of Rosa Parks for a while,
However, only now do they place a bit more emphasis on her background. Much of what she is, and when she is talked about is mostly cosmetic. I know of what she has done and what it has symbolized. She is an icon, and will be missed.

I am happy to note, that this is the first time I have heard of her being active in fighting against segregation even before the Bus incident. That part of her story, I did not know about before.
hughesfan
sad.gif
ap215
RIP Rosa. Sob.gif
hughesfan
QUOTE(JasonATexan @ Oct 24 2005, 10:33 PM)
I wasn't aware of her or knew she did what she did. That might be the sadest thing is the only way I became aware of the story behind her was when right-wingers were trying  to compare Cindy Sheehan's arrest to hers. I don't think there is a lot of comparsions other then standing up for what one believes in, but I do think it is sad that her did might be the only way to bring her memory back up to my generations. It's easy for us who didn't grow up during that time period to forget what others did before us. Let's hope other youths at least understand better then I did.
*


Jason I am proud of you for knowing you need to know. It is not your fault that you don't know more about her. I teach a class of freshmen who are interested in becoming teachers. Most of these students also happen to be African American (as am I). We were reviewing the Brown case, and a couple of my students had never heard of Thurgood Marshall or knew anything about what he did in the battle to fight school segregation. I was quite saddened by this fact. It is because of Marshall and of course Parks, that we have the luxury of ignoring the horrors of the past. That's the irony. Their battle for equality was in a sense so successful that children have no idea of where things once were. I have to wonder now...just as I am typing this, if they would be happy about that fact (that children don't even have to concern themselves with colored drinking fountains and/or the "struggle," or if they would be saddened, as I am, that so many have no clue). sad.gif
shammala
QUOTE(Arneoker @ Oct 25 2005, 05:54 AM)
History is so important. 

Last night I was talking to my five-year old daughter, basically giving her a five to ten minute, extemely condensed history of the world from the time of the Babylonian exile of the Jews to the present day U.S.  I gave her the right hooks so that she kept asking me to "tell me more."

Hopefully she will be interested when the time comes for her to learn and understand about things such as the civil rights movement, and the history will be enough to fire her imagination, that she will have little lack from not having lived through it.
*



Thank You,sir. You sound just like my husband talking to our daughter,she is now eight,and Very interested in History.And aren't we blessed to have the heart and compassion to pass down the Truth to our young? Just because we care.
My daughter knows more about history than any kid in her class (Third Grade) Which really isn't saying much as we live in a very red town in a very red state,but she will make a strong fight for her future by learning her history,along with your lovely daughter and many others.

Rosa Parks,not only led the African Americans in the fight for freedom,that movement also sparked passion for the American Indians right for freedom of religion,that passed in the 70's.

I bow to her and am humbled by the courage it took for her to staund up,Or sit down in the face of personal integrity.
Ho`
Salute_Liberty
May the Memory of Rosa Parks be never forgotten. She is the model of the true meanings to DIGNITY, LIBERTY, and PRINCIPLE. All Americans should unite under her name and be "tired of giving in" to fear tactics and lies. Like her, all Americans should stand up against any system that creates segregation, discrimination, and promotes or influences hatred against others.
wundermaus
A beacon of light that illuminated a prejudice and backward nation has gone out... but ignited a firestorm of justice and liberty for our nation and the world that will never be extinguished... such humble and righteous bravery in the face of such overwhelming ignorance and hatred! Shine your light on us forever, Ms. Rosa Parks! Heaven holds a special place for you... and in the people's hearts.
Sapphire
QUOTE(graham4anything @ Oct 25 2005, 05:25 AM)
Can you imagine what must have gone through her mind as she watched in horror during Katrina?
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I think it's a blessing that Ms. Park's "awareness" was greatly diminished over the last few years. I think it would have broken her heart to see the steps backward this country has taken. I'm equally glad she was mostly unaware of the squabbles over her estate that had been taking place, and unaware of her near-eviction from her apartment home. Incidentally, the owners of the building gave the apartment to Ms. Parks outright after her financial managers screwed up so badly. Good for them! (I posted about this many months ago)

If you visit the Free Press online - http://www.freep.com/index.htm - our local Detroit paper - there's a lot of really good coverage about Ms. Parks.

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In one of her last lengthy interviews, with the Detroit Free Press in 1995, she spoke of what she would like people to say about her after she passed away.

"I'd like people to say I'm a person who always wanted to be free and wanted it not only for myself; freedom is for all human beings," she said during an interview from the pastor's study of St. Matthew African Methodist Episcopal Church, a small congregation she joined upon moving to Detroit in 1957.


Many of the businesses in the area have lowered their flags to half mast. I would not be surprised to see Gov. Granholm issue a proclomation for the state within the next day or two.

The city is planning a tribute for Dec. 1st, anniversary of the bus boycott, and renaming the Immigration and Naturalization building in her honor.

I hope we never forget what Ms. Parks did. I'm making sure my children don't.
politicasista
John Kerry Statement on Passing of Rosa Parks

Senator John Kerry issued the following statement on the passing of Rosa Parks:

“On December 1, 1955, a seamstress from Montgomery, Alabama, became a hero when she sat down on a bus to stand up for the civil rights of all Americans.

“I remember reading about Rosa Parks when I was a kid, and I will never forget last year meeting this courageous woman who helped bend the course of history by risking her life doing what today Americans can take for granted.

“Rosa Parks’ passing reminds us of the responsibility we each have to make our America freer and stronger. Our work is not yet complete to guarantee civil rights, voting rights and human rights are protected in this country. The best way to celebrate Rosa Parks’ life and legacy is by acting on the courage of our convictions and holding our government accountable whenever our ideals of equality, freedom and justice are endangered.

“Rosa Parks remains in death what she was in life: a legend who will be remembered in our history books as well as our hearts because we would not be the country we are today without her courage so many years ago. Now she must inspire us to be the still greater country we are capable of becoming.”
prophet3865
Rosa Parks sparked the Civil Rights movement during that one fine day when she didn't give up her bus seat to a white man. And ever since then they have gotten rid of the segregation laws and she has inspired the hearts and minds of thousands of black people across the nation to stand up for themselves. But not just blacks but for every American in this country, as if to say "That we can do better than this, we do not need laws to hold us down and to tear away our freedoms,we do not need laws to keep us from truly being happy in life, laws that tear us away from our families and friends and our spouse(s)."-By Greg Gumina Copyright 2005 biggrin.gif . And that's true too, we do not need laws to tear us away from our civil liberties. And i'm sure that's exactly what Rosa Parks was trying to say on that day when she was standing up for her rights as a black American Women of much faith,hope and value who believed that the system could be better than the way it was at the time that it was all happening right before her very eyes. And now in the modern world we are confronted by President Bush and the Bush Administration or Congress for that matter. And it has been an uphill battle. It is the most corrupt political system we have ever had in the history of America and i'm sure that almost every American out there who has come to grasps with this has realized just how bad things really are. But you know we'll find out what's going to happen over the next few years or so, whether Bush gets impeached or whether he stays in office until 2008. I hope to hear from you soon,good luck in all you do.




QUOTE(Sapphire @ Oct 24 2005, 10:09 PM)
She was one of my heroes.  I've not yet seen anything about this outside of our local Detroit coverage.

http://www.freep.com/news/latestnews/pm6900_20051024.htm
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