Thursday, December 23, 2010

When Eastern Bluebirds Come to Call

       What are you looking at?


What is he doing??


What's that finch doing here?

Finch: Was it something I said?

Why is that finch still here??

Much better

Four of a kind beats two pair,
 
But a straight flush wins the hand

Friday, December 3, 2010

Rosa Parks, February 4, 1913 - October 24, 2005


(Sculpture by Ed Dwight of Rosa Parks in downtown Grand Rapids Michigan)
It was December 1 of 1955 when Rosa Parks famously refused to give up her bus seat in Montgomery, Alabama. This monument to her stands in Rosa Parks Circle in Grand Rapids, Michigan.*

Parks wasn’t the first to refuse to give up her seat (look up Claudette Colvin, a 15 year old who refused to give up her seat and was arrested and jailed, 9 months before Rosa), but Parks was the one chosen by the African-American leaders in Montgomery for the lawsuit test case. The bus boycott may or may not have been spontaneous but it lasted 381 days and became a turning point in the Civil Rights Movement. At the time, Parks was working as a secretary at the local branch of the NAACP.

Some claim both events were entirely spontaneous and deny any advance planning, and others vociferously argue otherwise. Those who question the accuracy of the spontaneity claim are usually shouted down with accusations of racism in diminishing what took place. And rare mention is ever made of the earlier women who “sat down” for their rights. Their names are not known by most.

Regardless of the ultimate truth, nothing can take away from Parks’ courage in refusing to give up her seat. Just a few months before this incident, 14 year old Emmett Till was brutally mutilated and murdered for allegedly flirting with a white woman (his killers were later acquitted in a gross miscarriage of justice). Parks knew she would be arrested and she was. She was bailed out later that night and ended up becoming a symbol of the Civil Rights Movement.
(Photo from the internet)
Bus 2857, now known as the Rosa Parks Bus, can be found in the Henry Ford Museum in Dearborn, Michigan. It was retired from use in Alabama and sold in 1971. The buyer gutted it and used it for storage. It sat in his field for 30 years. When his descendants tried to sell it, the Henry Ford Museum caught wind of it and had the winning bid at auction. They restored it and visitors can now sit in the place where Rosa sat.
For all of the accolades received in her lifetime, Rosa Parks' life was anything but easy. Employment became difficult for her and her husband in Alabama (Parks was fired after her arrest). They moved to Virginia in 1957 and later to Detroit, Michigan. Parks worked as a seamstress, until she was hired by U.S. Representative John Conyers as a secretary/receptionist in 1965. She remained in that position until 1988. This is the duplex she lived in from 1961-1988 (3201-3203 Virginia Park St, Detroit).
Parks continued to work tirelessly for Civil Rights, donating time and money consistently throughout her later years. Our nation was treated to a sorry spectacle during the last years of her life when a lawsuit was filed on her behalf against a hip-hop group who referenced “moving to the back of the bus” in a song. Relatives decried the suit and claimed they were kept from seeing Parks. They also claimed Parks was not aware of what was taking place. Her longtime friend and caretaker proceeded with the suit that ended up being settled. Rosa Parks passed away in 2005 and was laid to rest in Woodlawn Cemetery in a chapel that is now named for her.
She had no children but left a meaningful legacy to the world of how one person can make a difference.
“I am leaving this legacy to all of you...to bring peace, justice, equality, love, and fulfillment of what our lives should be. Without vision, the people will perish, and without courage and inspiration, dreams will die - the dream of freedom and peace.”
*The sculptor, Ed Dwight, has an interesting story of his own. Back in 1962, when he was an air force jet pilot, President Kennedy nominated him as an astronaut trainee, making Dwight the first African-American ever appointed. After Kennedy was assassinated in 1963, Dwight was dropped from the program and eventually became a sculptor.
(Photo from the internet)
When I first saw this work, I questioned why she was standing up instead of sitting down. But Dwight's thought was to show Parks as emerging from her seat, becoming the quiet leader that she was. I suppose we could also say she was standing up for "the dream of freedom and peace."  May we all show as much courage today.
Rosa on a mural in Detroit MI