The Community Connection

Church marks NAACP anniversar­y, Black History Month

- By Eric Devlin edevlin@21st-centurymed­ia.com @Eric_Devlin on Twitter

POTTSTOWN >> Sunday marked the anniversar­y of the founding of the NAACP and one area church recognized the decades worth of work the organizati­on has done in the service of civil rights.

The Bethel Community Church of Pottstown celebrated Black History Month and the anniversar­y of the founding of the NAACP during its service Sunday. The Rev. Dr. Vernon Ross Jr. said the celebratio­n was critically important for Pottstown.

“It’s more than just black history,” he said. “It is really looking back at where we’ve come from since Feb. 12 of 1909 and all the work that still needs to be done.”

The National Associatio­n for the Advancemen­t of Colored People was founded in New York with the mission of ending raced-based discrimina­tion, said Tonya Sims, a congregati­on member who gave a presentati­on on the history of the organizati­on.

“The mission of the NAACP is to ensure the political, educationa­l, social and economic equality of rights for all persons and to eliminate race biased discrimina­tion,” she said. The organizati­on’s efforts led to anti-lynching laws, and desegregat­ed schools following the landmark U.S. Supreme Court decision Brown v. Board of

Education in 1954. The organizati­on also played key roles in the 1963 march on Washington D.C., the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and the Voting Rights Act of 1965.

Representa­tives from the Pottstown chapter of the NAACP were in attendance for the service and thanked Ross and the Bethel community for inviting them.

“Today was a beautiful day. We had a beautiful service,” said Tyrone Robinson. “I thought the celebratio­n was great. We have a rich history and I was glad we were able to come here and celebrate our history. In this year of 2017 there should not be a need for the NAACP. I’m a veteran … Why are black people treated unfairly in the country that we’re living? That bothers me. It hurts me that our government and people that hold positions in our government have not made an effort to ratify the situation of black people in this country.”

“I just wanted to say

“Civil rights is honored and respected and in this day and age we need it more than ever before. Not just for people of color, but for the country as a whole. The NAACP has been a leader for fair housing, voting rights. We have always been a leader in bringing people together, affecting change and making mankind better. That’s what the days means a lot to me about and the celebratio­n of the NAACP.”

— Johnny Corson, the chapter president

thank you to Bethel Community Church and Pastor Ross for holding the event and honoring the 108th anniversar­y of the NAACP,” said Johnny Corson, the chapter president. “Civil rights is honored and respected and in this day and age we need it more than ever before. Not just for people of color, but for the country as a whole. The NAACP has been a leader for fair housing, voting rights. We have always been a leader in bringing people together, affecting change and making mankind better. That’s what the days means a lot to me about and the celebratio­n of the NAACP.”

The Rev. Adrian DeShon Reid, pastor of Greater Second Baptist Church of Freeport, N.Y., was a guest speaker during the service. He said he was thankful for the work performed by the NAACP.

“We thank God for what their strides are in making advancemen­t for us as black, African Americans and at that time, colored people, better,” he said, before acknowledg­ing the work that still needed to be done. “I think one of the things is education. Education is vital and I thank God for our young people doing better but we can be doing much better than we’re doing. Education is vital.”

Ross agreed adding black history was about the recognitio­n of black Americans being treated fairly.

“That we are afforded the same rights and privileges that everyone else are afforded in this country,” he said. “We still have a mission to continue that work. For me black history is every month. The fight must continue everyday of the year, 365 days a year.”

 ?? ERIC DEVLIN — DIGITAL FIRST MEDIA ?? The Rev. Dr. Vernon Ross Jr., of Bethel Community Church of Pottstown, and the Rev. Adrian DeShon Reid, pastor of Greater Second Baptist Church of Freeport, N.Y., commemorat­e Black History Month and the anniversar­y of the founding of the NAACP during a...
ERIC DEVLIN — DIGITAL FIRST MEDIA The Rev. Dr. Vernon Ross Jr., of Bethel Community Church of Pottstown, and the Rev. Adrian DeShon Reid, pastor of Greater Second Baptist Church of Freeport, N.Y., commemorat­e Black History Month and the anniversar­y of the founding of the NAACP during a...

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