February 19, 2015

Page 1

AFRICAN AMERICAN HISTORY MONTH See Calendar of Events on Page 13

February 19 - 25, 2015

VOL. 64, No. 6

www.tsdmemphis.com

75 Cents

A meeting, a moment and the matter of ‘movement’

by Brittney Gathen

Special to The New Tri-State Defender

Two mothers – both with sons killed under clouds of suspicion – greeted each other in a gathering room of Unity Christian Church in Memphis’ Whitehaven community. One was from Florida and the other from Arkansas and neither woman was prepared for the tragedy that claimed the life of her child. In various parts of the country, sounds continue to resonate and images painfully signal the mounting concern about African-American lives that end abruptly during violent confrontations. The collective aftermath of the more high-profile instances has brought the birth of #blacklivesmatter and stimulated discussions about whether a neo-civil rights movement is underway. Sybrina Fulton, the mother of slain Florida teen Trayvon Martin, and Teresa Carter, the mother of 21-year-old Chavis Carter, met at Unity Christian Church after the Heal the Hood Foundation’s Citywide Anti-Violence Youth Symposium on Jan.

9th. Jonesboro, Ark. police maintain that Carter’s son fatally shot himself in the head while handcuffed in the

back of a squad car. “It was very intense and very emotional because we could feel each

NNPA News Service

The Root

President Lyndon B. Johnson and the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. meet at the White House on March 18, 1966. (Photo: Yoichi R. Okamoto/White House Press Office via Wikimedia Commons)

SEE BLACK LIVES ON PAGE 2

by George E. Curry

by Breanna Edwards

SEE LETTER ON PAGE 2

Defender last Saturday (Feb. 14th). The two women were able to meet because attorney Benjamin Crump represented the Fulton family and now is representing the Carter family. Learning of Fulton’s planned visit to Memphis to keynote the symposium, Carter and Kareem Ali, who has been working with the Carter family, contacted Crump and arrangements were made for the mothers to meet. What Fulton shared now is part of what sustains Carter. “She told me to continue to pray, never let up, continue to fight and just be strong and keep my head up,” Carter said. “It has helped me with some of my anger because I still have so much anger built up. So, when I go to getting angry or I get upset, then I remember the things she said because that’s what got her through.” Carter uses advice from Fulton to help maintain her focus on positive memories with her son, who died on July 29th, 2012. “I try to think about the good times that me and him shared, and what he’d be doing now, if he was still

Separate Selma marches cancelled as groups unify

LBJ’s condolence letter to Coretta Scott King set to be auctioned President Lyndon B. Johnson’s April 5, 1968 letter of condolence to the widow of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. – dated the day after King was assassinated – has been a highly controversial document at the center of a legal battle, and now it is up for auction, the Washington Post reports. In the historic letter, Johnson expresses his condolences to Coretta Scott King and adds that King’s assassin would be found. “We will overcome this calamity,” Johnson wrote. Years later, in 2003, Coretta Scott King gave the letter to singer Harry Belafonte, a staunch supporter and friend of her husband. Around 2008, the Post reports, Belafonte thought to auction the letter through Sotheby’s after Coretta Scott King died, but the Kings’ three surviving children were against the plan, being particularly guarded regarding their father’s legacy. This led to a lawsuit between Belafonte and the King estate after the estate claimed that the letter had been taken without permission, which ended any plans for a possible auction. Belafonte was allowed to keep ownership of the letter after the two sides reached a settlement early last year. Now the letter is set to go on the auction block in early March, just days after the 50th anniversary of the 1965 marches from Selma to Mont-

Teresa Carter (left), whose handcuffed son died of a gunshot in the back of a Jonesboro, Ark. police car, meets Sybrina Fulton, the mother of Trayvon Martin – the unarmed Florida teen killed by George Zimmerman, the neighborhood watch coordinator acquitted of charges in Martin’s fatal shooting. (Photo: George Tillman Jr.) other’s pain,” said Carter, as she recalled the meeting with Fulton during an interview with The New Tri-State

Caron Byrd, executive director at Ronald McDonald House of Memphis, served as tour guide during a visit Monday by Prince Khaled bin Alwaleed Bin Talal bin Abdul Aziz Al Saud of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia. (Photos: George Tillman Jr.)

Royalty in Memphis Saudi Arabi’s Prince Khaled tours Ronald McDonald House, National Civil Rights Museum Royalty arrived in Memphis on Sunday in the person of His Royal Highness Prince Khaled bin Alwaleed Bin Talal bin Abdul Aziz Al Saud of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia. Brothers and business partners Jim Byrd and Darrell Byrd partnered with Ronald McDonald House Charities of Memphis to welcome Prince Khaled, whose agenda reflected a visit to the Ronald McDonald House Charities of Memphis facilities and some of the city’s historical landmarks, including the National Civil Rights Museum. The Byrd brothers’ business ties in the Memphis business community include owning eight McDonald’s restaurants. Ronald McDonald House Charities® of Memphis, at no charge to its guests, provides supportive services and a “home-away-from-home” for St. Jude families and their children receiving treatment for cancer and other catastrophic childhood illnesses. Prince Khaled’s visit to Memphis was to learn more about the history and mission of Ronald McDonald House of Memphis. The agenda featured lunch with the non-profit’s staff, board members and founders. He also interacted with families, learning about the emotional and physical support they receive when staying at Ronald McDonald House. A member of the Saudi Royal Family, Prince Khaled is the son of His Royal Highness Prince Alwaleed bin Talal bin Abdul Aziz Al Saud, the

chairman and CEO of Kingdom Holding C o m p a n y, one of the world’s most successful diversified investment holding firms. Prince Khaled is His Royal High- the founder ness Prince Khaled of KBW Inbin Alwaleed Bin vestments, a Talal bin Abdul closed private investment Aziz Al Saud company with holdSee Additional ings in a wide spectrum of photos on companies Page 5 – from construction and engineering to mining and energy companies – across three continents. Since opening its doors in 1991, Ronald McDonald House® of Memphis has provided a home for more than 8,300 children from nearly every state and 45 countries. (To learn more: visit www.rmhc-memphis.org.; www.kbw-investments.com and www.khaledbinalwaleed.com.)

WASHINGTON – A very public conflict between the Bridge Crossing Jubilee, Inc., the local group that has been commemorating the 1965 Selma-to-Montgomery March for more than four decades, and the largely white-run The Faith & Politics Institute, a Washington-based group that had organized competing marches in Selma and Montgomery on the weekend commemorating the 50th anniversary of “Bloody Sunday,” has been resolved with both groups agreeing to participate in a single march in Selma, a coalition of organizations has announced. “The organizations in the unified committee will sponsor one march, the sacred Bloody Sunday re-enactment march across the Edmund Pettus Bridge on Sunday, March 8, 2015,” the 10 major organizations said in a joint press release. “No organizations in the unified committee will sponsor and or participate in any other march.” The Faith & Politics Institute, which focuses on bringing people together to reflect on spiritual values and hold conversations across racial, religious, ideological and party lines, had announced plans to hold a march led by President Obama in Selma on Saturday, the day before the big march, and a separate march and rally on Sunday in Montgomery that would have competed directly with the annual bridge-crossing ceremonies. Rep. Johns Lewis (D-Ga.), who was brutally beaten on “Bloody Sunday,” is closely affiliated with the Faith & Politics Institute. In an “Open Letter” to the group, dated Feb. 11, Alabama State Sen. Hank Sanders of Selma wrote, “It appears to me that Faith and Politics has set out to not only diminish but to destroy Bloody Sunday. You not only scheduled another march on Saturday in Selma but you scheduled a march and rally in Montgomery on Sunday during the afternoon when the sacred Bloody Sunday March takes place in Selma. It would have been so simple to hold your events in Montgomery on Saturday and join the events in Selma on Sunday. However, the arrogance of power has caused you to try to diminish the sacred Bloody Sunday March and Commemoration and change history.” After publication of Sanders’ letter, representatives from 10 organizations – including the Bridge Crossing Jubilee, the Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC), Rainbow PUSH, the National Action Network (NAN), The Faith in Politics Institute, and the National Voting Rights Museum in Selma – came together to resolve the conflict. The end result is that President Obama will speak in Selma on Saturday, March 7, the actual anniversary of the Bloody Sunday, but there will be no march in Selma that Saturday

Alabama state Sen. Hank Sanders’ “open letter” helped set the stage for resolution of a very public conflict over commemorating the 1965 Selma-to-Montgomery March.

Dr. Bernard Lafayette is credited by many with helping resolve the conflict over commemorating the 1965 Selma-to-Montgomery March.

or in Montgomery on Sunday. The Faith in Politics Institute and local organizers have clashed before. “This was not the first time I am sorry to say that the issue of who will be among those on the front lines has recently become a bone of contention. Faith and Politics has insisted that only SEE SELMA ON PAGE 3

MEMPHIS WEEKEND

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February 19, 2015 by The Tri-State Defender - Issuu