Rosa Parks

Many have blogged about her and done a far better job than I. However I would be remiss if I didn’t mention Rosa Parks and the role she played in helping to bring civil rights to the forefront. Rest in Peace.

(CNN) — Rosa Parks, whose act of civil disobedience in 1955 inspired the modern civil rights movement, died Monday in Detroit, Michigan. She was 92.

Parks’ moment in history began in December 1955 when she refused to give up her seat on a bus to a white man in Montgomery, Alabama.

Her arrest triggered a 381-day boycott of the bus system by blacks that was organized by a 26-year-old Baptist minister, the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.The boycott led to a court ruling desegregating public transportation in Montgomery, but it wasn’t until the 1964 Civil Rights Act that all public accommodations nationwide were desegregated.

Facing regular threats and having lost her department store job because of her activism, Parks moved from Alabama to Detroit in 1957. She later joined the staff of U.S. Rep. John Conyers, a Michigan Democrat.

Conyers, who first met Parks during the early days of the civil rights struggle, recalled Monday that she worked on his original congressional staff when he first was elected to the House of Representatives in 1964.

“I think that she, as the mother of the new civil rights movement, has left an impact not just on the nation, but on the world,” he told CNN in a telephone interview. “She was a real apostle of the nonviolence movement.”

He remembered her as someone who never raised her voice — an eloquent voice of the civil rights movement.

“You treated her with deference because she was so quiet, so serene — just a very special person,” he said, adding that “there was only one” Rosa Parks.”

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2 Comments

  1. Stacey October 25, 2005 at 2:18 pm

    Wow, MLK was only 26 when that happened?

    Segregation was definitely an ugly part of our country’s existence. And in the course of things it was really so recent.

    Rest in peace, Rosa.

  2. bornfool October 25, 2005 at 2:17 pm

    A very special lady. More so because she didn’t consider herself to be.

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