Started this discussion. Last reply by Huey P. Newton Jun 16, 2013. 12 Replies 0 Likes
Mr. Connors do you think that this film portrays you correctly?What does everyone think of the film?Mrs. LondonContinue
Mrs. London,
To answer your first question, I was not born with the name Kweisi Mfume. My name used to be Frizzell Gerald Gray, but I changed it after my aunt came back from a trip to Ghana. She suggested that I take that name because I had expressed a wish to connect with my African roots and because the name means "conquering son of kings".
Today, I am a trustee for the Enterprise Foundation, the Morgan State University Board of Regents, and the Baltimore Museum of Art. Also, I am on the advisory committee for the Harvard JFK School of Gov.
If you would like, you can find more info about your first question on http://www.notablebiographies.com/Ma-Mo/Mfume-Kweisi.html and for your second question on http://go.galegroup.com/ps/retrieve.do?sgHitCountType=None&inPS=true&prodId=GVRL&userGroupName=mlin_s_avonmid&resultListType=RELATED_DOCUMENT&contentSegment=9781414428871&isBOBIndex=true&docId=GALE|CX2690000019#568
Mrs. London,
My cousin Simeon Wright was the one who actually was called upon to donate my casket. Originally, there was going to be a memorial set up in honor of my mother and I until someone took the money and placed it back in this old shed at the cemetery. Finally, when my cousin had seen what they did with my casket without notifying anyone he took it in his hands and donated it to the Smithsonian. Man was I raging when I heard what they did to it.There were many museums that would have loved it, but this one stood out because it was a civil rights museum. My coffin is now on display there to represent that my death actually happened. That I existed and I was not just a picture in a book, but this was my real life that people need to remember. I am glad with my cousin's choice on my coffin's location and couldn't be more proud of it's purpose and what it stands as for people today.
http://www.smithsonianmag.com/arts-culture/QA-Simeon-Wright.html?c=y&page=2
Mrs. London,
On Christmas Day, 1957, my home was bombed soon after multiple rallies to desegregate buses in Birmingham. The bombing did not injure me, but in 1957 I was beaten with whips and chains as I tried to integrate an all-white public school.
Early in my life, I was a telegraph operator and I loved baseball. So much I would forward baseball reports from the telegraph office to local pool using a foghorn. I loved how the announcers would recreate the game from the telegraph reports. I eventually became the radio voice of the Barons, commenting on baseball. I used the line "shooting the bull" so much during the games that I ended up with the nickname "Bull" Connor.
http://www.coloredreflections.com/decades/Decade.cfm?Dec=2&Typ=2&Sty=1&SID=220
Mrs.London,
I donated those papers in appreciation of my enlightenment and inspiration there. I donated my papers in 1964 which was the year my stature on the global stage was confirmed, when I got my Nobel Peace Prize. The Press conference was On Monday, May 20, 1967.
Yes Tricia, I was! Thank you for noticing, I'm flattered! Although I dropped out of high school I went back to school and studied at the Carnegie Institute of Detroit to become a medical lab technician. There, I graduated with top honors and received a gold trophy for my academic achievement.
I was a track athlete at the all-black Dunbar Junior High School before I started to go to Little Rock High School.
Jefferson Thomas
Source: "Jefferson Thomas ." Little Rock Nine Foundation. Little Rock Nine Foundation. Web. 12 Jun 2013. a href="http://littlerock9.com/JeffersonThomas.asp&xgt" target="_blank">http://littlerock9.com/JeffersonThomas.asp&xgt;.
Mrs. London, I was in fact born in Kosciusko, Mississippi of both Choctaw and African American heritage. The Choctaw were a group of Native American people formerly living in central and southern parts of Mississippi. The Choctaws were removed to an Indian territory in the 1830s. Before this time period, my descendants lived in the Mississippi area for about two thousand years.
Mrs. London,
Many people attended Medgar's ceremony. To name a few, the current NAACP President, Benjamin Jealous, attended along with Vernon Jordan, a civil rights icon, and B.B. King, a Blues Legend from Mississippi. Other people who attended include William Bell (R&B artist), Tamilah Mann (gospel artist), and Angella Christie (saxophonist). Frank X. Walker and Minrose Gwin also had a book signing and reading for Remembering Medgar Evers: Writing the Long Civil Rights Movement, which they wrote all about Medgar, his assassination, and his accomplishments. President Bill Clinton and Attorney General Eric Holder were also there.
http://www.eversinstitute.org/
http://gma.yahoo.com/blogs/abc-blogs/medgar-evers-widow-myrlie-cant-let-dream-die-130016462.html
http://medgareverstributegala.eventbrite.com/
http://www.amazon.com/Remembering-Medgar-Evers-Movement-University/dp/0820335649
well it was very difficult but my Grandmother said, "There's God there." So, my Grandmother taught me to say the 23rd psalms.
"A psalm of David.
1 The Lord is my shepherd, I lack nothing.
2 He makes me lie down in green pastures,
he leads me beside quiet waters,
3 he refreshes my soul.
He guides me along the right paths
for his name’s sake.
4 Even though I walk
through the darkest valley,[a]
I will fear no evil,
for you are with me;
your rod and your staff,
they comfort me.
5 You prepare a table before me
in the presence of my enemies.
You anoint my head with oil;
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