Martin Luther King )r. Special Edition "A C A L I TO A C T I 0 N II C20 January 19, 2000 (The |J o r tla n b ( 0 b s m ie r JULY FREEDOM DAYS MOMENTS IN CIVIL RIGHTS HISTORY J a m s A d au s - It was July 6, 1944, wartime on the homefront, and Jackie Robinson was up at bat. In three years he would make a pact with the devil of racism; he would resist striking back at his tormenters as a strategy in desegre­ gating the Brooklyn Dodgers and major league baseball. But on this day in 1944, as he would for the rest of his life. Jack Roosevelt Robinson made history as a freedom tighter. Of the 435 members of the House of Representatives in 1971, only twelve were women, one ot whom was black - New York’s Shirley Chisholm. In the Senate, there was only one white woman. With women a population majority, something hadjto change. On July 13, 1971, threk hundred women gathered in Washington, D.C., to found the Na­ tional Women’s Political Caucus (NWPC). Among those represent­ ing African American women were Congresswoman Chisholm, activist (and widow of Medgar Evers) Myrlie Evers, Mississippi crusader Fannie Lou Hamer, National Council ot Negro Women president Dorothy Height, and National Welfare Rights Organization vice president Beulah Sanders. Taking the conference at its word on women candidates. Congress- woman Shirley Chisholm announced her candidacy for president the fol­ lowing January. The first Black woman elected to Congress, now she was the first black woman to run for president. Campaigning on a for­ eign policy platform that demanded an end to the Vietnam War and an end to the European-American pact thwarting the liberation of peoples of color, she earned surprising grassroots support. Significantly, on July 13, 1972 - one year to the date from the founding of the NWPC - when the roll of delegates was called at the Democratic National Con­ vention in Miami Beach, Florida, Chisholm actually won 151 delegate votes! On July 16, 1970, the Folklore Institute o f Indiana University hosted the Conference on African Folklore. It was important sign of the times. Beyond "relating" to Af­ rica, people now wanted to "know” Africa. With knowledge of historical African folklore would come rev­ elations from African American culture. To people who had been indoctrinated to believe that they (alone among all the people of the world) ‘had no culture”; to people who had not only lost touch with home but lost sight of it as well; to people who no longer even knew where home was - East Africa or West, mid-northern Igbo or south­ ern Zulu - what a transformation this discovery was about to unleash. In nommo, the word, was proof ot vast cultural retentions traceable in the imprint of the distinctively Afri­ can (and African diasporan) talking animal tales. Decoding the connec­ tive tissue of content and metaphor. Brer Rabbit and Ananci traced their roots of ancestry to the moralistic animal fables of Aesop, one of the world’s greatest and most enduring philosopher/teachers. The knowl­ edge became ours that Aesop - al­ ternately spelled Esop, Ethiop (as in Ethiopia), and Aethiop - means “African.” And there was more. Black South Carolinian rice baskets were found in West Africa. Shotgun house architecture had a new pedi­ gree. On July 26,1968, Americans met four new families: the Lords, Phila­ delphia Main Line and terribly rich; the Siegals, Jewish; and the Grays, the first African American ever on a daytime drama. In short, these were the families with One Life to Live. Very early into the cliffhangers, it was disclosed that the Grays had a difficult past. Sadie Gray had lost her daughter. It was a terribly trag­ edy. Stay tuned. Then C arla Benari, an “exotic” and “glamor­ ous” actress “in the throes of a nervous breakdown,’ turned up at Llanview Hospital, where poor dear Sadie worked. As related by C arla’s alter ego and real-life ac- tress/em bodim ent, Ellen Holly, in her autobiography, One Life, it was rumored that C arla’s “mental fragility was caused by the burden o f carried secrets.” Her finances were shaky, she lived in a run­ Health Service and local agen­ cies denied over four hundred unsuspecting black men trea t­ ment readily available when the study began that would have cured the disease and stemmed its spread. C ondem nation had raged over Nazi experim ents on human subjects during World War II; the 1964 Helsinki Dec­ laration noted that the U.S. was A insworth ^ D rug 3002 NE Ainsworth are as diverse as YOU* 2 8 2 -0 7 8 7 Ainsworth Drug Salutes: Martin Luther King Jr. Utility Paystation • Western Union Tri-Met Tickets & Passes • Prescriptions Your Neighborhood Pharmacy Papa ftfurplufj down apartm ent “ custom arily rented out to chorus gypsies from touring road companies,” and ex­ actly what was bothering her and why she came to Llanview re­ mained a mystery. But C arla’s glamour and “emotional needi­ ness” soon made her irresistible to two doctors. Stay tuned for weeks on end. Marrying one doc­ tor wasn’t good enough for Carla Benari. (Noooo) She had to tall in love with the other doctor, too, a black man - (Yesssss) - and kiss him on national television (the hussy)? And as she confessed her love for him ...sw itchboards at ABC affiliates across the country lit up. Cut to commercial. The main New York switchboard was jammed, as Holly would learn, “flooded with calls from irate w h ite m en defen d in g C arla’s...Caucasian virtue.” And then, before sponsors had time to cancel, Sadie came on camera. “Clara!” she said. “ Mama!” Carla gasped. No wonder the girl was a mess. Carla Benari was Sadie Gray’s lost daughter, back from the “dead” of passing for white. This is what it took to get blacks on daytimeTV. Two more years would go by before Flip Wilson premiered his prime time variety show on Sep­ tember 17, 1970 - a first since Nat King Cole’s show in the 1950s. On July 27, 1972, news of the now -infam ous “T uskegee Study o f Untreated Syphilis in Negro M ales” began to spread w o rld w id e. For fo rty y ears, 1932 to 1972, the U.S. Public \K I \ LARGE H A M . i ’i/Z A $4^ì I PEPPERONI Valid through 1999 ¡PIZZA 3523 NE 15th (New Natures Center) 249-1666 Salutes Martin Luther KingJr. Unintentionally, through a lack of understanding, we don't value the gifts that give us life... the trees, the air, the water. They speak to us, they sustain us, but we don't hear and continue the violence against ourselves. We must protect our legacy. “There is such a thing as freedom o f exhaustion. Some people are so worn down by the yoke o f oppression that they give up...The oppressed must never allow the conscience o f the oppressor to slumber... To accept injustice or segregation passively is to say to the oppressor that his actions are morally right. ” By Martin Luther King Library C areers behind other nations in p ro tec­ tions against human experim en­ tation; provisions on inform ed consent were even endorsed by A m erican agencies. Still noth­ ing rescued the Tuskegee men. This is an excerpt from the hook "Freedom D ays". P erm is­ sion fo r reprint was g iven by John Wiley and Sons, Inc. CANNON’S = R !B EXPRESS Salutes Dr. M artin Luther King, Jr. Live the Dream. The A m erican I ibra ry A ssociation is lo o k in g fo r p e o p le o f c o lo r to h elp m a nage and m a in ta in the in fo rm a tio n w o rld in th e I 'h r i r y / I n f o r m a t i o n Science scholarships for g ra d u ate study, please contact us in itia tiv e N ____ ________ 1 800 545-2433, x 4276 spectrum @ ala.org • w w w .a la .o rg /s p e c tru m Chicken • Pock Ribs • Beef Riba C a te rin g & T a k e -O u t Wayne & Juanita Cannon (Proprietors) Our Specialty: Real Hickory Smoked Bar-B-Q Mon-thur 11 30am-9:00pm • FRI-SAT 11:30am-11:00pm • Sun 1:00pm-7:00pm 288-3836 3328 N.E. KILLINGSWORTH I PORTLAND PARKS b Recreation