The Guardian (Nigeria)

Mother Of Freedom Movement

- • Compiled by Omiko Awa

ROSA LOUISE Mccauley, generally known as Rosa Parks, was an AfricanAme­rican civil rights activist. She was best known for her role in the Montgomery Bus Boycott in the United States of America. The U. S. Congress described her as: ‘ The First Lady Of Civil Rights’ and ‘ The Mother Of Freedom Movement,’ for her boldness and unyielding stand in the struggle to make blacks have equal rights with whites in the U. S.

Born in Tuskegee, Alabama, on February 4, 1913, she in 1932 became the wife of Raymond Parks, a member of the National Associatio­n for the Advancemen­t of Coloured People ( NAACP), who encouraged her to finish high school in 1933.

In December 1943, Parks became active in civil rights movement, having joined the Montgomery chapter of NAACP, and was elected secretary; a position she held till 1957.

As NAACP secretary, she investigat­ed the gang- rape of Recy Taylor, a black woman from Abbeville in 1944, and also set up a committee that sought justice for the lady.

On December 1, 1955 in Montgomery, Parks rejected a bus driver’s order to give up her seat to a white passenger, after the whitesonly section was filled. Although she was not the first black to go against the Bus Segregatio­n Ordiance, her action, however, spurred other events that came later.

Parks’ trial on the issue inspired the black community to boycott

Montgomery buses for over a year. Parks’ defiance and the Montgomery Bus Boycott became important symbols of black movement.

She organised and collaborat­ed with civil rights leaders, including Edgar Nixon, and Martin Luther King Jr. to raise awareness on the plights of AfricanAme­ricans in the U. S.

Although she suffered heavily for this, having lost her job and her husband also forced to quit his, Parks travelled widely and spoke extensivel­y on issues, including welfare, education, job discrimina­tion, and affordable housing, as they affect blacks in the U. S.

She supported and participat­ed in the Selma- toMontgome­ry Marches, the Freedom Now Party and the Lowndes County Freedom Organisati­on. She also took part in the Black Power Movement, attending the Philadelph­ia Black Power conference, and the Black Political Convention in Gary, Indiana. She also supported the Black Panther School in Oakland, among others. In the 1970s, she organised for the freedom of political prisoners, particular­ly cases involving self- defence. She helped found the Detroit chapter of the Joann Little Defence Committee.

With her husband’s death on August 19 and her brother in November, 1977, she mellowed down her activities.

In 1980, she co- founded the Rosa Louise Mccauley Scholarshi­p Foundation for college- bound high school seniors. In February 1987, she co- founded with Elaine

Parks

Eason Steele, the Rosa and Raymond Parks Institute for Self Department, an institute that runs the ‘ Pathways to Freedom’ bus tours, which introduces the importance civil rights to young people in the U. S.

In 1992, Parks published her autobiogra­phy, Rosa Parks: My Story, and followed it up with a memoir, Quiet Strength ( 1995).

She died on October 24, 2005, at the age of 92, in Detroit.

Aside serving on the boards of different organisati­ons, winning numerous awards and important places, including Highways named after her, her home in Detroit was in 2016 disassembl­ed by a Berlinbase­d American artist, Ryan Mendoza, and moved to Germany, where it currently serves as a museum in her honour.

Although she had no child, she was the first woman and the second black person to lie in honour in the Capitol.

Interred at the Detroit’s Woodlawn Cemetery in the chapel’s mausoleum, the chapel was renamed the Rosa Louise Parks Freedom Chapel in her honour.

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