New York Daily News

Bronx kids inspired by rights hero

- BY EDGAR SANDOVAL and LEONARD GREENE

MONTHS BEFORE Rosa Parks made history in 1955 by refusing to surrender her seat on a segregated bus, a young Montgomery, Ala., student challenged injustice by doing the same thing.

But Claudette Colvin, 15, and pregnant by a married man, was hardly the test case person local leaders were looking for to launch their civil rights campaign.

So Colvin was relegated to the footnotes of history — only to reemerge and get her credit long after the battles were won.

Colvin kicked off Black History Month on Monday by recounting her story to students at Evander Childs High School in the Bronx, reminding them that they are never too young to make history of their own.

“We still have a long way to go,” Colvin told a crowd of elementary and middle-school students who had assembled at the school.

“I consider myself a survivor. So many people were lost.”

Bronx City Councilman Andy King said he wanted Colvin to share an unfiltered version of history so that children could take civil rights to the next level.

“She was the inspiratio­n for the civil rights movement. You are in the presence of living history,” King told the children. “She is a pioneer.”

Students walked away feeling inspired to make their own changes.

“She was brave and very strong. I could not believe they put her in a jail for adults. She was almost my age,” said Ishah Diop, 13, an eighth-grader at the Learning Tree school in the Bronx.

“She overcame so much. But she remained empowered.”

Learning Tree student Phillip McCoy, 15, said he hopes to be part of the change Colvin started.

“She was very inspiratio­nal. I hope to one day grow up and practice the things they taught us,” he added.

 ??  ?? Claudette Colvin with students.
Claudette Colvin with students.

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