SMRs and AMRs

Saturday, February 02, 2013

Not the romanticized, children’s-book story of a meek seamstress

Rosa Parks, Revisited

By CHARLES M. BLOW, NYT

Most of what you think you know about Rosa Parks may well be wrong.

On the verge of the 100th anniversary of her birth this Monday comes a fascinating new book, “The Rebellious Life of Mrs. Rosa Parks,” by Jeanne Theoharis, a Brooklyn College professor. It argues that the romanticized, children’s-book story of a meek seamstress with aching feet who just happened into history in a moment of uncalculated resistance is pure mythology.

As Theoharis points out, “Rosa’s family sought to teach her a controlled anger, a survival strategy that balanced compliance with militancy.”

Parks was mostly raised by her grandparents. Her grandfather, a follower of Marcus Garvey, often sat vigil on the porch with a rifle in case the Klan came. She sometimes sat with him because, as the book says she put it, “I wanted to see him kill a Ku Kluxer.”

When she was a child, a young white man taunted her. In turn, she threatened him with a brick. Her grandmother reprimanded her as “too high-strung,” warning that Rosa would be lynched before the age of 20. Rosa responded, “I would be lynched rather than be run over by them.”

(More here.)

1 Comments:

Blogger Tom Koch said...

Today's "Left side of the aisle" folks go to amazing lengths to side with folks like Rosa Parks - my how things have changed. It would be a safe bet to assume the Rosa's grandfather warned her about the likes of; Robert Byrd, Jimmy Byrnes, Hugo Black, Ernest Hollings, J. William Fulbright, Albert Gore Sr., Sam Ervin, Richard Russell, George Wallace, Orval Faubus, Lester Maddox...

11:17 AM  

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