Facts about Rosa Parks
Rosa Louise McCauley Parks is recognized as the 'Mother of the Modern-Day Civil Rights Movement'. This brave African-American civil rights activist changed the way the community was treated in racist-America, during the early twentieth century...
Facts about Rosa Parks:
Rosa Parks grew up at a time when black and white people in America were segregated in every aspect of daily life. Transportation seating policies were demeaning and insulting. School bus transportation was only made available to the 'white' students, forcing their 'black' contemporaries to walk for miles. "I realized there was a black world and a white world", was young Rosa's observation of life in Montgomery. Her life was not devoid of pleasant 'white' memories. But, her situation as a young black woman made it impossible for her to ignore the dictates of racism.
Rosa married Raymond Parks in 1932. Her husband encouraged her to complete her high school education in 1933. In 1943, Rosa Parks joined her husband as a Civil Rights Movement activist, in the capacity of NAACP secretary. She enjoyed a short tenure at the Maxwell Air Force Base in 1944, an area where racial segregation was banned. A white couple, Clifford and Virginia Durr, encouraged Rosa to attend Highlander Folk School, a center that trained workers' rights and racial equality protagonists.
Rosa was deeply stirred by the brutal 'black' murders of Emmett Till, George W. Lee and Lamar Smith. The tide of events that gave racist-America its first taste of 'black' power raged in 1955. Aged 42, Rosa refused to give up her bus seat to a white passenger. Her action sparked arrest and other individual civil disobedience movements. Parks was wrongly charged with 'violation of Chapter 6, Section 11 of the Montgomery City code'. After the plans for the Montgomery Bus Boycott were announced, Parks was tried for 'disorderly conduct' and 'violation of local ordinance'.
The 30-minute trial declared Parks guilty and imposed a fine of $14. The resultant Montgomery Bus Boycott made Parks a symbol of the Civil Rights Movement. It wasn't before long Parks was honored as an international icon of the cause. Thereafter, she collaborated with civil rights leaders like Martin Luther King, Jr., to take the Civil Rights Movement to another level. Parks was awarded the 1979 Spingarn Medal, Congressional Gold Medal, and posthumous honors at the Capitol's National Statuary Hall and Capitol Rotunda.
Rosa Parks suffered a number of hardships as a result of her defiance. Nevertheless, she lived on the wages of a seamstress till 1965, after which John Conyers, the African-American US Representative, hired her as a secretary. She retired from the Detroit congressional office in 1988. She founded the Rosa L. Parks Scholarship Foundation in 1980, a program designed for high school seniors. Parks co-founded the Rosa and Raymond Parks Institute for Self Development Center, with Elaine Eason Steele, in honor of her husband, who succumbed to cancer in 1977. She published her biography 'Rosa Parks: My Story', in 1992. Rosa Parks died on October 24, 2005, at the age of 92.

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