• separate but equal

    From JAB@21:1/5 to All on Fri Sep 15 20:56:06 2023
    Claudette Colvin, at the age of 15 in 1955, refused to relinquish her
    seat to a white woman on a bus, asserting, "it's my constitutional
    right to sit here." This action occurred nine months before Rosa
    Parks' renowned protest. So, why did Colvin largely fade into
    obscurity while Parks became an icon of the Civil Rights movement?

    Many of the "incidents" within the Civil Rights movement were, in
    fact, meticulously orchestrated by the NAACP. Colvin, being an
    unmarried, pregnant teenager at the time, led the NAACP to reenact the
    incident with Rosa Parks, a respected older woman in her community.
    The NAACP wanted to avoid choosing someone who could be easily
    discredited or attacked.

    It's important to note that Rosa Parks' protest had a specific
    purpose: to challenge the notion of "separate but equal." In
    Montgomery, Alabama, buses at that time designated the front half for
    white individuals and the back half for Black individuals. If the
    "separate but equal" rule were true, once the white section filled,
    white passengers should have been turned away. However, this didn't
    happen. Instead, the bus driver expanded the white section and forced
    Black passengers to move back a row. Rosa Parks, not seated in the
    front of the bus but in the front of the Black section, refused to
    give up her seat. Her arrest highlighted that "separate but equal" was
    a false concept.

    When asked years later if she would repeat her actions, Colvin
    expressed, "I feel very, very proud of what I did. I do feel like what
    I did was a spark and it caught on. I'm not disappointed. Let the
    people know Rosa Parks was the right person for the boycott. But also
    let them know that the attorneys took four other women to the Supreme
    Court to challenge the law that led to the end of segregation."

    https://twitter.com/historyinmemes/status/1702835215692189752

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