Yes this was terrific.
I do find it a shame the other two great women mentioned in this
article wasn't give their proper respect news wise.
These two ladies were on my 'great women'list growing up, especially
Ms Tucker as she was in my part of the world at the time.
Why is it still the case that we seem to only be allowed one icon at a
time?
Meta



--- In scifinoir2@yahoogroups.com, "Amy Harlib" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> 
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>  Terrific!  Rosa Parks in proper context.
> 
>
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
> 
> October 31, 2005
> Op-Ed Contributor
> The Long History of a Bus Ride 
> By JUAN WILLIAMS
> Washington
> 
> ROSA PARKS led an inspiring life. Unfortunately, we rarely hear
about it. 
> 
> That may sound surprising at a time when Rosa Parks is probably
mentioned in every American history textbook and is the subject of
dozens of biographies. The problem is that her story is usually
presented as a simplistic morality tale. It is a paint-by-the numbers
picture of virtue that goes like this: 
> 
> On Dec. 1, 1955, Mrs. Parks is an ordinary 42-year-old seamstress in
downtown Montgomery, Ala. She leaves work and gets on the Cleveland
Avenue bus to go home. When the whites-only section fills up, the bus
driver yells at Mrs. Parks to give up her seat to a white man. She
refuses and is arrested. Simply by sitting on a bus, Mrs. Parks sets
off the year-long Montgomery bus boycott that galvanizes national
attention, brings the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. to the start of
his journey as a civil rights leader and creates a model of nonviolent
protest against racial segregation.
> 
> There's no denying the appeal of this story - her body began lying
in honor in the Capitol yesterday. But this telling of the tale does a
disservice to Mrs. Parks and twists the history of the civil rights
movement. Her story is about more than one bus ride. And the civil
rights movement is more than one moment of defiance. The focus on Rosa
Parks leads to the neglect of other civil rights pioneers who did far
more to shape history.
> 
> Take two other black women who died recently with much less
attention to their life work. Constance Baker Motley, the first black
woman to be a federal judge, was an N.A.A.C.P. lawyer who helped to
write briefs used in arguing the Brown school desegregation case. In
the 50's, she went into hostile towns all over the South and won case
after case to make sure that their school districts really integrated.
She also directed the legal campaign that led to the admission of
James Meredith to the University of Mississippi and stood by him as he
faced down segregationist violence to enroll. And she stayed with
Medgar Evers as he battled the racists who eventually killed him.
> 
> Another woman who recently died, C. DeLores Tucker, didn't face that
kind of drama. But she broke through political barriers to become
Pennsylvania's commonwealth secretary, then blazed new paths by
working to get other black people into elected office and challenging
misogyny in rap music.
> 
> The one-dimensional telling of one day in the life of Rosa Parks
takes her away from the real story - and to my mind the really
inspiring story - of extraordinary black women like Judge Motley and
Ms. Tucker, who rose from working-class backgrounds to become
dedicated to creating social change. 
> 
> The truth is that Mrs. Parks was not someone who one day, out of the
blue, decided to defy the local custom of blacks sitting in the back
of the bus. That story leads some people to the cynical conclusion,
once voiced by a character in the movie "Barbershop," that all Rosa
Parks did was sit on her bottom. That's not only insulting but a
distortion that takes away the powerful truth that Rosa Parks worked
hard to develop her own political consciousness and then worked hard
to build a politically aware black community in the heart of Dixie.
> 
> Before that one moment of defiance on the bus she was a civil rights
activist who had long fought to get voting rights for black people in
Alabama. Apparently it is too confusing to mention that as far back as
1943 she had refused to follow the rules requiring black people to
enter city buses through the back door. And it invites too much
complexity to mention that in the late 40's, as an official of the
local branch of the N.A.A.C.P., she was forming a coalition with a
group of black and white women in Montgomery to fight segregated
seating on city buses.
> 
> Her education in rural Pine Level, Ala., came at Jim Crow schools
that taught her only enough to work for white people as a washerwoman,
maid or seamstress. In Montgomery, she worked mending dresses. One of
her employers was Virginia Durr, the wife of a powerful white lawyer.
Mrs. Durr, a member of the interracial Women's Political Council,
became Mrs. Parks's ally in a long-term effort to use political
pressure to end the daily indignity of riding segregated buses.
> 
> Mrs. Durr introduced Mrs. Parks to the Highlander Folk School in
Tennessee. The school taught strategies to empower white and black
people to get better wages, to register to vote and organize as a
political force. Even before Highlander, Mrs. Parks had championed the
rights of a teenager, Claudette Colvin, who was arrested in March 1955
for refusing to give up her seat to white people on a Montgomery bus. 
> 
> All of this preceded the moment when Rosa Parks refused to give up
her own seat on the bus. Even after her arrest she had to agree to
fight the charges of violating segregation laws, and risk angering the
white establishment in town and losing her job. Her husband and her
mother told her she was going to be lynched for becoming the named
plaintiff in a challenge to segregation. She made a deliberate
decision to take up the fight. There was nothing spontaneous about
this. And she knew that she would not be fighting alone. 
> 
> Rosa Parks was uncomfortable with the sainthood thrust upon her, and
used to say there was more to her life than "being arrested on a bus."
Her full, not so simple story is a guide to activism, an inspiration
to every American trying to find the power to create social change.
The best way to honor her memory is by also celebrating those people
whose stories are not so easy to grasp, but who played roles that Rosa
Parks would have said overshadowed her own. 
> 
> Juan Williams, a senior correspondent for NPR and a political
analyst for Fox News Channel, is working on a book about Bill Cosby
and race.
> 
> 
> 
>   a.. Copyright 2005 The New York Times Company 
>   b..  
>  
> 
> [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
>






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