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Not Good but Getting Better: A Small Southern Town Tries to Shake Memories of Klan Violence

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ANNISTON, Ala. - Down highway 202 on a patch of land not far from where old Forsythe's grocery store used to be, there's a dead end that holds the buried skeletons of a small Southern town.

This place along the foothills of the Appalachian Mountains is full of old bones. They are buried behind the walls of downtown Anniston's fading brick storefronts, beneath the cracked pavement where innocent blood was shed, and in the memories of black folks who have lived across the railroad tracks most of their lives.

On last Thursday morning, as the sun shone down that lonely road, Josephine Hawkins (pictured below), a lifelong resident of Anniston, sat on the edge of a guardrail and remembered the hurt that happened here on this swath of beaten-brush 50 years earlier.

"It was unbelievable what they did to them people," said Hawkins, 79, her voice rising just above the hum of nearby traffic. "It was like a terror, just all tore up. There was belief and disbelief all at the same time. But we knew something bad was going to happen, so much was building up."

Back then the Ku Klux Klan and staunch segregationists ran the city -- they did so brazenly, and sometimes with the heavy hand of violence. The outside world, outside of the Deep South at least, was made painfully aware of this on May 14, 1961.

It was Mother's Day, at this very spot. A Ku Klux Klan mob smashed the windows of a Greyhound bus carrying a group of Freedom Riders and tossed a Molotov Cocktail through its shattered glass, setting the bus ablaze.

When the passengers tried to escape, the men outside held the door shut, trapping them inside. It was only the fear of an exploding gas tank that forced the gang to relent, according to one account. By another, it was a lawman with a pistol and a shot into the air.


Either way, the riders poured from the vehicle gasping from smoke inhalation, and into the teeth of the awaiting mob. They were beaten and clubbed as flames and black smoke licked from the bus mere yards behind them.

It was an ugly moment in Anniston, but not the only one that day.

Before the bus made it down the highway, where they were forced off the road by slashed tires and a cavalcade of more than 40 trailing vehicles, it was trapped at the town's bus station, surrounded by the same men. There, they were badly beaten.

The group on the Greyhound bus was one of two that had left from Washington, D.C. more than a week earlier on a journey through the Deep South to challenge segregation along interstate highways. Both received a violent welcome in Anniston. The second group was on a Trailways bus that pulled into Anniston behind the Greyhound.

Shortly after pulling into a station at Ninth Street and Noble Street, a group of Klansmen rushed onto the bus and delivered more beating. The riders had intentionally sat in mixed-race couples, and with blacks in the white section of the bus and whites in the black section. Blacks were beaten to the back of the bus.

Charles Person was the youngest of the original Freedom Riders. He was 18 then, and he was on the Trailways bus that day in Anniston. Person said that he was clubbed in the head with a rod and otherwise pummeled.

On Thursday, he returned for the first time to the scene of that savage beating. Person joined a group of other original Freedom Riders and students touring the South as part of the 50th Anniversary of the Freedom Rides.

"It's hard because it was much like this," Person said, gazing out of the window moments after speaking to a group gathered at the unveiling of plaques commemorating the Freedom Riders at the now shuttered Greyhound and Trailways bus stations. "The bus was parked right about where we are now. It brings back those memories."

The black community here had been used to the fear, intimidation and violence of the white supremacists in the community. There was cradle to grave segregation, suspected lynchings and one family more than any other that stuck fear in their hearts: The Adams family.

The Adams family owned a gas station and several stores in town, according to historians and local residents. Kenneth Adams was perhaps the most notorious racist among the Adams family, a Klansmen who in 1956 attacked the singer Nat King Cole while on stage during a concert in Birmingham. Adams became enraged when he saw Cole and a white woman in the audience winking or smiling at each other, according to Civil Rights historian Ray Arsenault.

The Adams's were the boogey men to black Annistonians and no doubt played a role in the planning or execution of the Mother's Day attacks, said Arsenault.

The family was so big and their general attitude so surly and mean towards blacks, "they could have been their own Klan," said John Will Davis, a local black artist who lives in Anniston.

"You were always nervous because the KKK was out to destroy us, and they didn't hide that," said Samuel Williamson, another black Annistonian who was a little boy in 1961.

Williamson said race relations have improved today, but there are still deep divides.

"It's not good but it's getting better," he said. There's still a Klan presence here, he said, "you just don't know who is who anymore."

He lives on West 15th Street, about 10 blocks from the site of the bus bombing. The black community in Anniston is centered across the railroad tracks, in west Anniston. Like so many other once segregated black communities, there once were black-owned businesses and blacks owned homes up and down 15th Street. It even counts David Satcher, the first black man to serve as Surgeon General of the United States, as a native son.

Today 15th Street is a crumbling shell of iron and brick, like the rest of Anniston.

The town of 24,000 people has had huge economic and environmental difficulties. When Fort McClellan closed down in 1999, it decimated the local economy. But it also left behind chemical waste from chemical weapons it had stored at the base, which has contaminated the soil.


Anniston has a dark cloud hanging over it that it desperately wants to shake.

The Mayor of Anniston, Gene D. Robinson, is the city's biggest pitchman. He not only wants to move on from the past, every few conversations include a pitch for business people to invest in Anniston and for young people to move here. He talks little of the city's ugly reputation.

"There's no Ku Klux Klan and stuff like that. Why bring it up if it's not going on?" Robinson said. "That element of Annisiton is gone and has been gone for a long time. Our elected officials don't have that in them. We don't have Ku Klux Klaners, we don't have marchers and stuff. We're just a typical American small town."

A few years ago the city erected a plaque at the scene of the 1961 fire bombings. There are plans to build a 5-acre park on the site, "a place for education and reflection." They have also erected murals and plaques at the site of the now shuttered Greyhound and Trailways bus stations.

At a reception held in honor of the Freedom Riders, original riders and students were given the red carpet treatment. For the first time since that bloody day in 1961, the community of Anniston opened its arms.

Anniston City Councilman David Dawson stood at the front door, hugging each and every person that came through it. "I'm so sorry," he said. "I'm so, so, so sorry." He then handed out lapel pins that read, "Anniston, The Model City."

Richard Couch, an attorney and son of one of the men who attacked the Freedom Riders was there, and said that he is forever tainted by the sins of his father.

"It's a stain against my name that I don't want on my name anymore," Couch said, tears slowly streaming from his eyes. "I would rather my name carry the legacy of someone who reaches out in love and peace than something that happened fifty years ago." Couch was born three years after the bus bombing. But he grew up hearing about it. "It was always a point of shame in our family," he said. Couch's father, Jerome Couch, was a mean-hearted man with a blue pick-up truck who joined in the beating and chase of the riders.

Couch's mother and father divorced when he was a young man. And he ended up being raised by his more tolerant and progressive maternal grandfather. He hasn't talked to his father in more than a decade.

A few seats away from Couch at the reception the other night was Hank Thomas, a Freedom Rider who was on the Greyhound bus when it was torched.

Thomas spoke of reconciliation and offered his forgiveness to those that nearly killed him half a century earlier. And in a moment unthinkable just years earlier, Couch, the son of a racist and Thomas, the Civil Rights activist, embraced in a teary hug.

"In some ways I looked at this and it was a tragic event that people were injured and property was destroyed but it's something at this point in time that should be celebrated because it opened the door on a broader conversation about what was going on in the South and in Alabama," Couch said.

On highway 202, the original Freedom Riders and students gathered on what had been scorched earth 50 years earlier. Josephine Hawkins leaned back on the guardrail and shielded her eyes from the sun.

"To me it ain't no better now than it was," Hawkins said. "They were rough on us back then. Still rough on us now."

 

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Zille Says DA Is S. Africa's 'Most Non-Racial' Party

Seaholm Student to be Charged With Ethnic Intimidation in Graffiti Case

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From Birmingham Patch:

The student suspended from Seaholm High School for writing racist graffiti in a boys bathroom April 20 has been charged with ethnic intimidation, Oakland County prosecutors said late Tuesday.


Courtney Thomas, an 18-year-old African American student, is scheduled to be arraigned Wednesday in 48th District Court and has been suspended indefinitely after confessing on May 11 to what is the first in a string of racist incidents at the high school.

Judge Kimberly Small approved the warrant Tuesday after hearing evidence presented by members of the Birmingham Police Department.

Neither the police nor school administrators could confirm whether Thomas was responsible for other incidents at Seaholm, which includes more graffiti and racist notes discovered in an African-American teacher's mailbox and the lockers of several African-American students.


Read more here.

 

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Romare Bearden Retrospective: Once-Neglected Artist Gets His Due

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From SF Weekly;

In the early weeks of 1969, protesters gathered before the entrances of New York City's major art museums to complain about the institutions' treatment of African-American artists. The public demonstrations faulted the museums for ignoring the achievements of contemporary black painters and sculptors and shunning the input of black curators.



At the Metropolitan Museum of Art, one activist handed out leaflets that called the neglect an "insidious segregation," while at the
Museum of Modern Art, one demonstrator held a sign, "Retrospective for Romare Bearden Now," that championed an artist who should have been a household name.

Four decades later, everything has changed, and it's hard to believe that someone like Bearden was once absent from the walls of America's foremost exhibit halls. A traveling show now at the Museum of the African Diaspora presents him in his full majesty, including the collage work that came to define him for a more general audience.

In the '60s and '70s, Bearden's collages - heaps of faces, limbs, and objects that told epic narratives of their subjects - made the covers of well-known publications. Bearden peopled his art with African-Americans who had big, expressive eyes; made each body a mélange of cutouts, so that shoulders, hands, and feet were out of proportion; and played with iconic symbols from the present and the past, like
U.S. flags, African masks, and jazz instruments.

Read more here.

 

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Cornel West v. Barack Obama

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From The Nation;

Professor Cornel West is President Obama's silenced, disregarded, disrespected moral conscience, according to Chris Hedges's recent column, "The Obama Deception: Why Cornel West went Ballistic." In a self-aggrandizing, victimology sermon deceptively wrapped in the discourse of prophetic witness, Professor West offers thin criticism of President Obama and stunning insight into the delicate ego of the self-appointed black leadership class that has been largely supplanted in recent years.


West begins with a bit of historical revision. West suggests that the President discarded him without provocation after he offered the Obama for America campaign his loyal service and prayers. But anyone with a casual knowledge of this rift knows it began during the Democratic primary not after the election. It began, not with a puffed up President, but when Cornel West's "dear brother" Tavis Smiley threw a public tantrum because Senator Obama refused to attend Smiley's annual State of Black America.

Smiley repeatedly suggested that his forum was the necessary black vetting space for the Democratic nominees. He needed to ask Obama and Clinton tough questions so that black America could get the answers it needed. But black America was doing a fine job making up its own mind in the primaries and didn't need Smiley's blessing to determine their own electoral preferences. Indeed, when Smiley got a chance to hold candidate Clinton "accountable" he spent more time fawning over her than probing about her symbolic or substantive policy stances that impacted black communities. Fiercely loyal to his friend, Professor West chose sides and began to undermine candidate Obama is small and large ways.

Read more here.

 

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In Book, Sugar Ray Leonard Says Coach Sexually Abused Him

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From the New York Times;

The opening segment of a forthcoming autobiography by Sugar Ray Leonard runs counter to the cunning style he used in winning boxing championships in five weight divisions more than a quarter-century ago. It is more like hearing the bell, rushing to the center of the ring and being hit with a straight right hand.

Most fans of Leonard remember him for his sweet smile and lightning-fast hands, as a transcendent and breakout celebrity in a brutal profession. But by Page 36 of "The Big Fight: My Life In and Out of the Ring," to be published next month by Viking, Leonard has mentioned his cocaine use, growing up in a home with alcohol abuse and domestic violence, luckily surviving a car wreck with his mother at the wheel, almost drowning in a creek as a child who was unable to swim, and fathering a son at 17.

Two pages later, Leonard delivers the book's bombshell while indirectly addressing a growing concern in the sports industry at large. He reveals publicly for the first time that he was sexually abused as a young fighter by an unnamed "prominent Olympic boxing coach."

Read more here.

 

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Snapped: TV Twosome Al Roker & Deborah Roberts

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NBC's beloved weatherman Al Roker and his wife ABC News anchor Deborah Roberts were spotted in New York City this week on their to the 2011 American Ballet Theatre Spring Gala at The Metropolitan Opera House. Roker's tuxedo showed off his slimmer waist and his gold tie matched nicely with his wife's striking leopard print gown.





Roker
Al Roker



Couple Full Length
black couple

 

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USA Character Project: 'Duck'

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From the USA Network;

Emmanuel isn't like other ten-year-olds - he can't play with them, he can't focus at school, and he can't even bear to be hugged by his mother. Manny's crippling fear of being touched is threatening to ruin his life.

Until, at his mother's prompting, he visits a local boxing gym. There, with help from a seasoned trainer, Emmanuel learns not just to confront his phobia, but to use it, in this inspiring story about facing our fears, owning our strengths, and fighting for a chance to be who we are.

Read more here.

 

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Hoops Star Maya Moore Becomes First Woman To Represent Jordan Brand

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From Clutch:

Thought basketball superstar Maya Moore had already broken every record? Think again.

This morning, the University of Connecticut phenomenon inked a historic endorsement deal with Nike imprint, Jordan Brand, becoming the first female basketball signee on the brand's roster. The 22-year-old forward joins Derek Jeter, Dwyane Wade, Carmelo Anthony, Chris Paul and Andre Johnson as the newest athlete signed with the brand.

In a press release from the company announcing the deal, Nike and the Jordan family expressed their excitement naming Moore as their newest brand ambassador. Michael Jordan, the brands namesake said.

Read more here.

 

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Naomi Campbell's Fashion for Relief Fundraiser

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Supermodel Naomi Campbell gets a lot of flack for her frequent temper tantrums but the model does have a softer side and she showed it at her annual Fashion for Relief fundraiser this year in Cannes, France. The show benefited Japan's recent natural disasters and had a lot of falls but was full of beautiful faces and fierce fashion to benefit a good cause.

 

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Focus Is on Obama as Tensions Soar Across Mideast

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From the New York Times:

Few game-changing proposals are emerging to defuse tensions in the Middle East as a busy week of diplomacy unfolds with President Obama's address to the region and his meeting with Israel's prime minister.

Against the backdrop of Middle East uprisings that have intensified animus toward Israel and growing momentum for global recognition of a Palestinian state, American and Israeli officials are struggling to balance national security interests against the need to adapt to a transformative movement in the Arab world.

The White House unveiled a $2 billion multiyear economic aid package for Egypt, which officials say would largely shift existing funds. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel prepared to arrive in Washington with a package that he hoped would shift the burden of restarting the peace process to the Palestinians.



Read more here.

 

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African American Scribe Hired to Adapt 'Amulet' For Will Smith to Produce

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From indieWire:

And the Smith Family machine continues on its course to take over the world.

Papa Will Smith's Overbrook Entertainment production house and Warner Bros have brought on African American scribe Rob Edwards to pen the script for a film called Amulet, to be based on the graphic novel series of the same name by Kazu Kibuishi, which "follows a teenage boy and his sister, who are pulled into a mystical world of demons, monsters and talking animals and discover that they are the last in a line of gatekeepers who must quickly learn to control a powerful amulet to save the world," according to Variety.

I actually first wrote about this project last summer, when I discovered it, while browsing through Jaden's IMDB page. Although, I don't recall there ever being an official announcement of it.

At the time, Oscar-winning screenwriter, Akiva Goldsman, who also penned Smith's 'I Am Legend' adaptation, was attached to write the screenplay, but no director was (and still isn't) signed on to helm the project. Also at the time, Jaden Smith and his little sister, Willow Smith, were both attached to star in it!

Read more here.

 

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Smithsonian Acquires Parliament-Funkadelic Mothership

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From the Washington Post:

The funkiest UFO in the galaxy is about to land in Chocolate City.


The Mothership - the iconic stage prop made famous by legendary funk collective Parliament-Funkadelic - has been acquired by the Smithsonian's National Museum of African American History and Culture where it will help anchor a permanent music exhibition when the museum opens its doors in 2015.

"I'm about to cry!" Parliament-Funkadelic frontman George Clinton said over the phone from his home in Tallahassee on Wednesday. "They're taking the Mothership! They're shipping it out! ... But I'm glad it's going to have a nice home there."

It isn't the original Mothership. This 1,200-pound aluminum spacecraft was built in the mid-'90s - an indistinguishable replica, Clinton says, of the smoke-spewing stage prop he first introduced to slack-jawed funk fans in 1976.

Read more here.

 

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Oprah's Star-Studded Farewell Show: Celebrities Pack Chicago's United Center

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From the Huffington Post:

Oprah Winfrey wiped away tears as celebrity after celebrity surprised her during a farewell double-episode taping of "The Oprah Winfrey Show" that will precede her finale.

"Thank you is not enough, but thank you," Winfrey told the crowd of 13,000 gathered at Chicago's United Center on Tuesday night for "Surprise Oprah! A Farewell Spectacular." "For your love and your support, thank you."

The crowd gave Winfrey a standing ovation when she first walked on the stage. Then the stars came out, with Winfrey's producers making good on their promise of the biggest celebrities of movies, music and television.

Aretha Franklin sang "Amazing Grace." Tom Hanks acted as host for the evening. Michael Jordan, who led the Chicago Bulls to six NBA championships during the 1990s, told Winfrey she inspires him. Tom Cruise, famous for his couch jumping on Winfrey's show, was there. Jerry Seinfeld wore a tuxedo to give a comedy routine. And Madonna said she is among the millions of people who are inspired by Winfrey.

"She fights for things she believes in, even if it makes her unpopular," Madonna said.

Read more here.

 

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Academic Smackdown on Twitter: Black Scholars Spar Over Cornel West's Remarks

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From the Root:

Tempers are flaring as members of the black intelligentsia are getting in on the melee surrounding Dr. Cornel West's controversial comments about President Barack Obama.

You know the slam heard around the world in Chris Hedges' posting on Truthdig earlier this week: "I think my dear brother Barack Obama has a certain fear of free black men," West said. "It's understandable. As a young brother who grows up in a white context, brilliant African father, he's always had to fear being a white man with black skin. All he has known culturally is white. He is just as human as I am, but that is his cultural formation. When he meets an independent black brother, it is frightening. And that's true for a white brother." Ouch.

Writer Adam Serwer threw down the gauntlet, lighting into West about his comments, calling them "petty" in a piece written for the American Prospect. Tuesday night, Ed Shultz invited West onto his The Ed Show on MSNBC, enumerating the digs (disguised as quotes, some would argue) that West has made about President Obama, including calling him a "black mascot of Wall Street oligarchs and a black puppet of corporate plutocrats." West also said that the president "now has become head of the American killing machine and is proud of it." Ouch again.

Read more here.

 

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Creating An Entertainment Center

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entertainment center

From family movie nights to Super Bowl Sundays to Real Housewives marathons, a home entertainment center has to be functional for all TV needs.

Whether you are looking for something understated or IMAX ready, here are some tips on the best way to frame your entertainment center.

Our sister site Shelterpop has some great ways to blend your tv into your décor.


Your television can be a reflection of you... literally. Seura and Creative Mirror have begun to sell mirrors with built in LCD screens, allowing you to inoffensively distribute TVs around the house.

televisions
Other understated options include customizing your own TV frame. Companies like VisionArt (shown above) and Dhesja have created options to turn your TV into art. A painting can easily retract to show off a just as beautiful LCD TV!

televisions

But sometimes, more is more. A television can easily become another piece of furniture. The statement piece of the whole entertainment center. You can install it in a wall or frame it with the perfect flat screen stand.

This article chronicles the hunt for the perfect stand.

tv stands


Stands from Target, Best Buy and Pier 1 Imports can house hundreds of your favorite DVDs, video games, CDs and books. Rustic wood can serve as the perfect compliment to the high tech electronics it displays.

Don't want to buy a stand? This video shows you how to build your own!



wires

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All of the toys that you will be featuring in your home entertainment center come with very important things that most people forget about... wires. To avoid getting tangled in clutter, think about buying a Cable Zipper. This makes sure that everything stays plugged in, without creating a safety hazard.

 

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Let Freedom Ring: 2011 Freedom Riders Reach New Orleans

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NEW ORLEANS - As the brass band played and the crowd cheered, the bus rolled into this city 50 years late, but right on time.

After 10 days, eight states, 19 cities and enough Freedom Songs to fill my head for the next 80 years, the 2011 Freedom Riders rolled into New Orleans after two groups set out on the same journey from Washington, D.C. a half-century earlier.

The original groups rolled through the South challenging Jim Crow, only to be beaten and brutalized by the KKK, their bus fire bombed and its members bloodied. They had to abandon their original route to New Orleans and instead called on hundreds of Freedom Riders from around the country to descend upon Mississippi to fill the jails in protest.

But on Monday evening, when that bus pulled into New Orleans, the journey was finally realized. This group, which included 40 college students and five original Freedom Riders, is the first and only group of Freedom Riders to ever make it to New Orleans.

It was a journey of more than 1,700 miles, but it was more than just a trip along old highways and country roads through towns steeped in movements of Civil Rights and civil wrongs, of desegregated lunch counters and museums -- this journey was one of laughter and many tears, of warm embraces and rude awakenings. It was also a journey into ourselves. A long look at who we are and where we have been. And thanks to these 40 great minds, it offered an encouraging look at where we might be headed.


These students were black, white, Hispanic and Asian, from Ivy League universities and Historically Black Colleges and Universities alike. And in their own ways, each and every one of them was open-minded and committed to social justice and equality. How many of us can say the same thing?

"I've been liberated," said Marshal Houston, a white college student from the University of Alabama. "I'm not going to settle for any oppressive system that denies love and liberation to other people no matter where they come from, no matter what they look like, what class or anything."

The 2011 Freedom Ride included five original riders: Robert and Helen Singleton, Joan Mulholland, Ernest "Rip" Patton and Charles Person, who at 18 years old was the youngest of the 1961 riders.

"Wow," said Helen Singleton, finally exhaling after the trip. "That's all I can say."

"The future is in good hands," chimed in Robert Singleton, her husband of 56 years, noting the commitment of their young counterparts.


Students like Collis Crews, a student rider from North Carolina A&T.

"I've been exposed to a lot of things that I always knew were going on but not at that light, some of the things that I've seen made me sick to my stomach, but now we have to keep pushing," Crews said. "The original freedom riders are done, and on this ride they have now passed this torch to us, the younger generation. Not just the student Freedom Riders," he said, "but our whole generation. There's still racism, sexism and all these other types of discrimination going on throughout the world and we have to do something to eliminate them."

Along the way we met and heard about so many unsung heroes -- the foot soldiers, the high school and college students, the many ministers and local activists who launched sit-ins where such acts could get you attacked or even killed.

There were Freedom Riders and so many others on the frontlines fighting, non-violently, for the rights of black Americans.

There was The Friendship Nine in Rock Hill, South Carolina; The Greensboro Four in Greensboro, North Carolina (pictured above) and countless others in once-segregated and violently repressive cities and towns that dot the Black Belt. They were beaten, arrested and even expelled from colleges and universities for joining the movement.

Jim Zwerg, one of the original Freedom Riders, who suffered a broken back and other serious injuries after a particularly brutal beating by the Klan in Montgomery, said that nonviolence was not just a tactic, but a way of life. As a white man in the movement, he bore the brunt of the violence delivered by the racists who called him a "nigger lover."

Zwerg represents the heart and soul of what these Freedom Riders stood for.

"I had accepted non-violence as a way of life," Zwerg said with tears in his eyes. "Once you embrace nonviolence the first person to be changed is you," he said. "And you look at that adversary as someone with potential. You can hate the hatred but not the person. You can hate the prejudice but not the person being prejudice."

Student Freedom Rider Lu-Ann Haukaas Lopez, from the University of Alaska said this of her journey: "Seeing these lives lived out before me, even just for the ten days, and the humility, and seeing the generous spirit that these original riders have, that has changed me more than anything."

Before this journey, I asked myself if I could have gotten on that bus. I doubted that I could. I didn't know if I would have had the courage to battle such hate with nonviolence. I guess what I was really questioning was whether or not I had the capacity to love those who had no such love for me.

I still don't know if I could have joined the Freedom Riders in 1961, when there was so much hate in the air. But I do know that the future is brighter because of the seeds planted along this journey of ours. The students are taking the lessons they learned back to their communities and college campuses. They now have a network that spreads across more than 30 states from Alaska to Alabama.

Perhaps there's still enough in all of us to recommit to making this world a better place.

It doesn't take a Freedom Ride to do it. Just courage.

 

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5 Trends From Beyonce's 'Run the World (Girls)' Video

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betyonce, girls run the world; beonce fashion

There's been a lot of buildup for Beyonce's "Run the World (Girls)" apocalyptic girl power video, including multiple teasers and mixed reviews for her recycled Diplo beat. But Beyonce delivers on the theatrics in this video, and of course she wears a million and one outfits throughout. Check out ways to duplicate a few of her slick trends.







 

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Happy Birthday, Malcolm X

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Malcolm X, President Obama, Barack Obama

While still not a United States federal holiday, May 19 marks the birthday of a unique man in American history. Malcolm X would be 86 today, having been born on this date in 1925 as Malcolm Little in Omaha, Nebraska, the fourth of seven children.

For as long as Malcolm was alive and in the years since he was violently gunned down in front of a crowd that included his wife and daughters in Manhattan's Audubon Ballroom on February 21, 1965, the mere mention of Malcolm's name evokes controversy.

In his teenage years growing up in the Roxbury section of Boston, Malcolm was a mischievous young guy, parading around with white women he dated at a time when inter-racial dating was still taboo and involving himself with petty drug dealing. His shenanigans would continue when he moved to Harlem in 1943. After dodging military enlistment, Malcolm returned to Boston in 1945 and joined a burglary ring, which would later result in his arrest and subsequent sentencing for eight to ten years at Charlestown State Prison in Charlestown, Boston.

His time in prison proved to be pivotal. It was there he became a devout Muslim and a member of the Nation of Islam. He also changed his last name from "Little" to "X" and when he got out, he joined the ranks of the Nation serving as a minister.

Malcolm's time with the Nation catapulted him onto the front lines of the Civil Rights Movement and made him a boldfaced name in the media. On March 8, 1964, he separated himself from the Nation of Islam for many reasons, though chief among them was a supposed feud with the Nation's leader Elijah Muhammad, who grew jealous of Malcolm's growing popularity. Malcolm remained a Muslim, eventually converting to Sunni Muslim.


Less than a year later, three members of the Nation of Islam assassinated Malcolm. At the funeral, the actor and activist Ossie Davis delivered a touching eulogy, referring to Malcolm as "our shining black prince." Speaking to Malcolm's polarizing legacy even before it was firmly cemented, Davis also said, "They will say he is of hate - a fanatic, a racist - who can only bring evil to the cause for which you struggle! And we will answer and say to them: Did you ever talk to Brother Malcolm...For if you did you would know him and if you knew him you would know why we must honor him."

Near the end of his life, Malcolm's attitude towards whites and the world at large matured. His worldview embraced a more united front and a more abstract enemy as evidenced in a speech entitled, 'The Ballot or the Bullet' delivered in Cleveland, Ohio in 1964. In it, Malcolm said:

"Now in speaking like this, it doesn't mean that we're anti-white, but it does mean we're anti-exploitation, we're anti-degradation, we're anti-oppression. And if the white man doesn't want us to be anti-him, let him stop oppressing and exploiting and degrading us. Whether we are Christians or Muslims or nationalists or agnostics or atheists, we must first learn to forget our differences. If we have differences, let us differ in the closet; when we come out in front, let us not have anything to argue about until we get finished arguing with the man."

For all who knew him and all who study him, Malcolm X has shifted from being one of history's most controversial figures to one of its more complex. Perhaps that's why the title of his latest biography, 'Malcolm X: A Life of Reinvention' by Manning Marable is so fitting. In his lifetime, Malcolm went from criminal to minister to activist to leader to outcast to martyr. And even amidst his controversial role in American history, the man who was given a stamp by the United States Postal Service in 1999 has still become an influence in today's leaders.

Take for instance, President Obama's Middle East speech today. The tone was Malcolm-ian, as President Obama spoke of a need for the United States and the Middle East to smooth out their very complicated relationship. "Such open discourse is important even if what is said does not square with our worldview," the President said. "America respects the right of all peaceful and law-abiding voices to be heard, even if we disagree with them. We look forward to working with all who embrace genuine and inclusive democracy. What we will oppose is an attempt by any group to restrict the rights of others, and to hold power through coercion - not consent. Because democracy depends not only on elections, but also strong and accountable institutions, and respect for the rights of minorities."

It sounds like something Malcolm X might have said if he were alive today.

 

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Taraji Henson, Michael Ealy to 'Think Like a Man'

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As previously reported, film producer Will Packer is in the thick of bringing Steve Harvey's best-selling relationship book 'Act Like A Lady, Think Like A Man' to the big screen.

With Packer heading up executive producing duties, alongside Harvey, Rushion McDonald and Rob Hardy, it was announced today that Taraji Henson, Kevin Hart and Michael Ealy have been tapped to star, according to Variety.

Directed by Tim Story, 'Think Like a Man' follows the relationship between an aspiring chef, played by Ealy, and a high-powered advertising executive, played by Henson. While Hart is set to portray a soon-to-be-divorced, self-professed relationship expert who doles out advice to the couple.


Harvey's book, which was published in 2009 and offers up his experiences about the dos and don'ts of meeting and mating, has sold over 2 million copies worldwide making the 'Original King of Comedy' as a New York Times Best Seller.

"It's pretty amazing," Harvey told us about the book's meteoric success back in February 2009. "It really has to be some amount of favor from God, because I have no experience at writing a book," he continued. "It ain't like I've been there, done that. It's got to be favor from God. It's gotta be something that he has planned for me bigger than I could see, because I just wanted to write a book so the women on my show could quit asking me to write a book."

Production for 'Think Like a Man' is tentatively scheduled to begin this summer.

 

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