Page 20 The Portland Observer Black HlStOiy M onth February 20, 2013 The Courage and Vision of Medgar Evens continued from page 18 know that in Mississippi and else­ where some people are resorting to Jim Crow-era tactics to disenfran­ chise voters in a desperate attempt to reverse 50 years of hard earned political progress. He would be pleased to know that all public schools are techni­ cally available to all children and that many school systems are even led by black administrators. But he would be dismayed to learn that even so, many black children are still getting a separate, unequal, and SUNDAY failing education. He might smile at the number of black doctors, lawyers, and million­ aires in Mississippi now, but would be disappointed to know the state also has the highest child poverty, low birth weight, and infant mortal­ ity rates. He would also be so sad to see the number of young, middle- aged, and older black m en in Mississippi’s prisons, trapped in a prison pipeline leading to social and economic death. He would be relieved to know black M ississippians no longer live in constant fear of the Ku Klux MONDAY 17 © Kian and the kind o f white su­ prem acist terrorism that took his life. But he would be alarmed by the proliferation o f gun violence that still keeps residents o f many black com m unities locked in their hom es after dark in a new kind of Am erican terror. And he would be dismayed by the resurgence of hate crimes like the cruel hit-and-run death of James Craig Anderson, a black man as­ saulted and then run over in 2011 by a group o f young white men who made a habit of coming to Jackson to assault and harass black people TUESDAY 18 for sport. But he would be proud that they, unlike his own killer, were brought to justice swiftly by the county district attorney, the son of black civil rights pioneers. In some ways the battles of the Civil Rights Movement were easier to fight 50 years ago because they were easier to see. Today the rigid lines that create two systems of opportunity for children in Missis­ sippi and elsewhere are no longer written into law but remain present and the children know it. One group of children is still tracked towards limited opportunity, second class citizenship, and the invisible but powerful cradle to school to prison pipeline. Strong adult voices for children have to become a stronger and stron­ ger force if the clock of racial and economic progress is not to con­ tinue to move backwards. The fab­ ric of family and community must be rewoven and the child must be placed at the center of all o f our concerns. Medgar Evers remains a beacon for all of us who are still inspired by his example and vision. We must not let all he lived and died for re­ cede on our watch. Marian Wright Edelman is Presi­ dent o f the Children's Defense Fund. WEDNESDAY THURSDAY 19 20 26 27 SATURDAY 21 22 23 Presidents Day 24 25 O Purim Share a Smile Day Justin Bieber bom, 1994 Peace Corps Anniversary Iditarod Race Begins Dr. Seuss bom, 1904 Read Across America Day Yellowstone National ParkEs.(1872) N ational Anthem Day Patricia MacLachlan bom, 1938 Inventor Alexander Graham Bell bom, 1847 8 First meeting of Congress (1789) Boston Massacre (1770) Oreo CookiesSold for the 1st time in 1912. Dav Pilkey bom, 1966 Artist Michelangelo bom, 1475 Mem Fox bom, 1946 National Cereal Day Scientist Luther Burbank bom, 1849 Telephone Patent Granted (1876) 9 Working Women's Day Explorer Amerigo Vespucci bom, 1454 Robert Sabuda bom, 1965 Barbie's Birthday (1959) (continued next week)