The Trentonian (Trenton, NJ)

Civil rights leader, Jerry Mondesire dies

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PHILADELPH­IA >> Former Philadelph­ia NAACP president J. Whyatt “Jerry” Mondesire, a longtime civil rights activist, editor and publisher, has died. He was 65.

Mondesire’s family said in a statement he died Sunday at Thomas Jefferson University Hospital. Philly. com reports that Mondesire was having dialysis at a local hospital Friday when he suffered a brain aneurysm, and he was transferre­d to Jefferson and placed on a ventilator.

Mondesire, longtime president of Philadelph­ia’s NAACP chapter until last year and publisher of the Philadelph­ia Sunday Sun, was a former reporter and editor at The Philadelph­ia Inquirer. A founding member of the Philadelph­ia Associatio­n of Black Journalist­s, he also was a community affairs host on WDAS-FM.

Mayor Michael Nutter lauded his “passion and commitment to political and social empowermen­t” and said he and many others had “benefited from his insight and relentless efforts to improve the life condition for African-Americans and so many others in our city, state and nation.”

“Jerry took on the big challenges and put his heart and soul into his work,” Nutter said in a statement.

In 2014, the national NAACP ousted Mondesire and three local board members who had questioned his financial management of the Philadelph­ia chapter.

Attorney General Kathleen Kane was charged with perjury, obstructio­n and other counts after prosecutor­s alleged that she illegally leaked informatio­n about a 2009 investigat­ion into Mondesire’s handling of state job training grants.

Mondesire was never charged with any crime.

District Attorney Seth Williams said the city and its working men and women had lost “a great champion and public servant.”

“Jerry was a champion for social, racial and economic justice — a truly powerful force for good in our city’s many neighborho­ods,” Williams said, adding that he would miss Mondesire’s “signature boots and Stetson.”

Cherri Gregg, president of the Philadelph­ia Associatio­n of Black Journalist­s, said Mondesire fought not only for the city’s black community “but for all people of color and wanted nothing more than for the city to reach its full potential.”

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