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Tuesday, September 4, 2018

Invite Your Friends

Your Celebratory Quote

"I knew then and I know now that, when it comes to justice, there is no easy way to get it. You can't sugarcoat it. You have to take a stand and say, 'This is not right.' And I did." Claudette Colvin

FEATURED


Claudette Colvin Sits Down for Her Rights

Claudette Colvin was the first person to be arrested for resisting the Montgomery bus segregation laws. Inspired by fellow Black women like Sojourner Truth and Harriet Tubman, the 15-year old, at the time, “just couldn’t move. History had me glued to the seats,” she told NPR.

It’s no coincidence that Colvin knew Rosa Parks very well. They both went to Martin Luther King Jr.’s church. Nine months after the incident, Parks stayed seated on her bus ride, despite being asked to stand by the bus driver and became one of the faces of the civil rights movement. Colvin understood why, because Parks was already doing work with the NAACP and Colvin was a pregnant teenager.

While rejected by the NAACP, Colvin did ultimately help end segregation on the bus. She was asked by the NAACP to testify in Browder v. Gayle, and the supreme court ruled to end segregation laws on December 20, 1956.

Colvin was arrested and her life negatively changed because of her act of courage. She was labeled an outcast by her community and her parents feared for her life, staying up with a gun in case the KKK would target her.

While overlooked for her contribution to the civil rights movement, Colvin still gave others the courage to act and resist. Like her mother said after picking her up from the precinct, “Well, Claudette, you finally did it.”

ARTICLES


  • A First at United Farm Workers

    Teresa Romero is succeeding legendary Dolores Huerta as the President of United Farm Workers. An icon in her own right, Romero is the first Latina immigrant to be a president of a United States labor union. We’re so proud, Teresa!

  • Latina Woman Cast as Julius Caesar in Rural Oregon Theater

    Not your average Shakespeare play: Vilma Silva has been cast as the lead eponymous character of Julius Caesar. This casting reinforces the idea that “Color conscious casting acknowledges the differences that we see and experience daily and asks, how can these differences enhance the story?"

SHOUT OUTS


  • The Soapbox

    This week we are shouting out The SOAPBOX. This Philadelphia nonprofit is a community print shop, book and zine making center and library as well as a host of workshops and events! Learn more about their work and how you can engage. 

  • The Southern Coalition for Social Justice

    This week we also are shouting out The Southern Coalition for Social Justice which works in issue areas such as voting, environmental justice, and criminal justice. This organization and others are critical as voting rights are still under attack.  Learn more about their work and how you can engage. 

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