I 111111111111111 111111 u 11111111111111111111111 WILS 08/20/95 **CHILL WILSON LIBRARY . N C COLLECTION - UML- IP 0 BOX 8890 CHAPEL HILL NC 27515-8890 Che Carwia ©mes PLUME 94 - NUMBER 35 DURHAM, NORTH CAROLINA - SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 2015 TELEPHONE (919) 682-2913 PRICE: 50 CENTS melia Boynton Remembered as the Rosa Parks’ of Selma Movement ■ By George E. Curry ■ NNPA Editor-in-Chief ■WASHINGTON (NNPA) - Bielia Boynton Robinson, who fed Wednesday in Montgomery, ja. at the age of 104, is being iised as the “Rosa Parks” of I Selma voting rights move- ent. ■Mrs. Boynton, as she was gown throughout the move- fent. had been hospitalized Ice suffering a stroke in July, lie was a courageous voting bhis crusader who was brutally ■ten on “Bloody Sunday” on I Edmund Pettus Bridge, the Kl leg of the Selma to Mont- teiery, Ala. March that provid- jiiie impetus for passage of the fidmark Voting Rights Act of 965, which was signed into law president Lyndon B. Johnson. [She and her late husband, ini Boynton, opened their line to Atlanta-based voting Bus organizers representing e Student Nonviolent Coordi- Ing Committee (SNCC) and I Southern Christian Leader- ip Conference (SCLC). Dr. ariin Luther King, Jr. also con- icted many of his strategy ses- )ns in the Boynton home. ■Dr. Boynton was the straw at stirred the drink. She was major catalyst in the Selma to ■ Montgomery march,” said larlcs Steele, Jr., president and SO of SCLC, the organization Bounded by Dr. King. “She led start and more impor- ly, bring attention to Bloody day’ and her strength, cour- and tenacity helped make na the historical icon.that we w today. Dr. Boynton was ielma what Rosa Parks was Montgomery,” a reference he African American seam- is whose refusal to give up seat to a white patron ignited • 1955 Montgomery, Ala. Bus iycott that propelled King to Iona 1 fame. President Barack Obama, io was with the wheelchair- tond Boynton in March to pmemorate the 50th anniver- ry of the Selma to Montgom- ■March, also praised the civil jilts warrior. “Fifty years ago, she marched Selma, and the quiet heroism hose marchers helped pave ray for the landmark Voting its Act,” he said in a state- t. “But for the rest ofher life, sept marching - to make sure law was upheld, and barri- o the polls torn down. And trica is so fortunate she did.” Ibama added, “To honor the cy of an American hero like Delia Boynton requires only it we follow her example - that us fight to protect every- L right to vote.” pep. John Lewis (D-Ga.), lose skull was cracked in Sei- Ion “Bloody Sunday,” said: his nation has lost a crusader, irrior, and a fighter for jus- She was one of the most ridable, reliable leaders to 1 up for the right to vote elma, Alabama and in the |rican South.” e Continued, “Amelia Boyn- was fearless in the face of 11 injustice, willing to risk he had on the frontlines of ge in America. She was ar- d, shoved and pushed in of the Dallas County court- fee by sheriff Jim Clark. She ■ knocked down on Bloody |lay on March 7, 1965, on the |und Pettus Bridge as 600 of (tempted to march to Mont- nery to dramatize the dire I for voting rights legislation lis country.” lewis noted that Boynton led ■ registration drives in Ala na long before he was born. She wasaco-founder of the Ilas County Voters League in ■ and held voter registration fs throughout the darkest, Mrs. Amelia Boynton Rob inson (Photo by Stephonia Taylor McLinn) most dangerous decades of seg regation in Alabama, from the 1930s through the 1950s,” Lewis recounted. “In 1964, she became the first African American wom an to run as a Democratic candi date for Congress in Alabama.” Bom Aug. 18, 191I in Savan nah, Ga., Boynton moved to Sel ma after graduating in 1927 from what was then Tuskegee Institute in Alabama, now Tuskegee Uni versity. She taught in her native Georgia before taking a job in rural Dallas County, Alabama as a demonstration agent for the U.S. Department of Agriculture, helping residents learn about nu trition, health care, food produc tion, and homemaking. She outlived three husbands. Her first husband, Samuel Boyn ton, whom she married in 1936, died in 1963, the year before the Civil Rights Act of 1964 was signed into law by President Johnson. Her second husband, Bob Billups, died in 1973. Her third husband, James Robinson, a Tuskegee Institute classmate, died in 1988. She moved to Tuskegee, where she was living at the time of her death, to be with him after they were mar ried. She is survived by a son, Bruce Carver Boynton. Another son, Bill Boynton, Jr., died last year. Andrew Young, a former Martin Luther King lieutenant and former U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, recalled how difficult it was for blacks to reg ister to vote in Alabama during the 1950s and 1960s. Writing in his memoir, An Easy Burden: The Civil Rights Movement and the Transforma tion of America, he said, “In 1964, no blacks were registered in Wilcox County, less than four percent in Hale County, slightly less than seven percent in Perry and Choctaw Counties, and less than three percent in Dallas County, where Selma was lo cated.” And he described what hap pened to those who tried to alter the status quo. “In 1963, Bernard Lafayette and his wife settled in Selma 10 Annivresary Remembers Tragedy In New Orleans By Freddie Allen NNPA Senior Washington Correspondent WASHINGTON (NNPA) - As Gulf Coast residents and policymakers celebrated the recovery of the Crescent City on the 10th anniversary of Hurricane Katrina, advocacy groups challenged the narrative of a resilient and better New Orleans by launching KatrinaTruth.org, a website that shows that post-Katrina progress in New Orleans still hasn’t reached poor black communities. Judith Browne Dianis, the co-director of the Advancement Project, a multiracial civil rights group, said that, 10 years ago, the Advancement Project was on the ground in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina, working with communities to protect the.rights of survivors. “Ten years later, the city of New Orleans wants to sell us a bag of bad goods, telling us that the city has gotten better, but unfortunately the recovery and the reconstruction has been uneven and African American families have been left be hind,” said Dianis. On the a telephone call with reporters to discuss the launch of KatrinaTruth.org, Dianis described a landscape dominated by charter schools, dispossession, destruc tion and gentrification and new businesses that catered to a “mew class of wealthier, white residents,” as black New Orleanians face severe disparities in education, employment, housing and the criminal justice system. A recent poll by CNN/ORC found that more than half (51 percent) believe that the United States is still vulnerable to a “Katrina-like emergency” 10 years after the storm claimed more than 1,300 lives. “This is why the myth of resilient New Orleans that the city wants to sell everyone is so dangerous,” explained Dianis. “It is a narrative that paves over the history of black New Orleans and ignores the true cost of exclusionary, disaster capitalism poli cies.” KatrinaTruth.org is a direct response to the wrong narrative of progress espoused by the city’s KatrinalO media campaign and the media that echoes those sentiments, said Dianis. “In New Orleans, especially post-Katrina, what we’re seeing is nonprofit groups parachuting in, to ’fix’ New Orleans and to fix our families and to do what they think is best for New Orleans, but this has led not only to the duplication of work but also op portunity for new organizations to ignore the historical struggles that have plagued the black community,” said Gina Womack, the executive director of Families and Friends of Louisiana’s Incarcerated Children (FFLIC), a nonprofit focused on juvenile justice reform. and attempted to begin a full- fledged SNCC project,” Young said. “They hoped to win some converts to SNCC among young people at Selma University, but the administration of the school was extremely fearful, and they were banned from the campus. However, a few students did become active, and joined with adults like Mrs. Amelia Boyn ton, president of the banned NAACP, and the pastor of the Catholic Mission to form the be ginnings of a movement. “It did not take long for Ber nard to establish himself in Sel ma, but he was viciously beaten by a group of whites in front of his home one night, and might have been killed had a neighbor not appeared on his porch with a rifle and chased the attackers away.” ' Despite constant threats, Boynton did not give in to fear. Young wrote that she and her husband had two spare rooms and that they made one avail able to him and the second was shared by Dorothy Cotton and Septima Clark when they were in town to organize blacks. He wrote, “Mrs. Boynton never charged us a penny in rent for the months we stayed in her home.” In 1964, a year after the death of her first husband, Boynton ran for Congress, the first female African American to seek that office in Alabama and the first woman of any race to ru for Congress as a Democrat. She received 10 percent of the vote, a major accomplishment in an era in which few blacks were al lowed to register. Boynton, in wheelchair next to President Obama, at 50th anniversary celebra tion of the Selma to Montgomery March (Photo by Stephonia Taylor McLinn). Blacks 'Left Behind’ in New Orleans Recovery