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Volume 48, Number 20
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W I N S TO N - S A L E M , N . C .
THURSDAY, January 20, 2022
The Chronicle’s Virtual MLK Event uplifts, inspires, offers call to action BY TEVIN STINSON THE CHRONICLE
Since 2000 The Chronicle, the city’s oldest and most respected community newspaper, and the Ministers’ Conference of Winston-Salem and Vicinity, has celebrated Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Day with the annual prayer breakfast held at the Benton Convention Center. Last year, due to the pandemic, the event was held virtually and that was the case this year as well. The production, which was pre-recorded and aired on Facebook Live on Monday, Jan. 17, included singing, poetry, inspirational messages, and more. The event was headlined by special guests, internationally renowned speaker Gloria Mayfield Banks, and the 35th General President of Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity, Inc., Dr. Everett B. Ward. Banks, a native of Detroit, overcame obstacles along her journey to become the successful business woman she is today. Although she grew up dyslexic, Banks went on to graduate from Howard University with a bachelor’s degree in marketing and later from Harvard University with a master’s in business administration. Banks also has an honorary doctorate from the University of Maryland Eastern Shore. Just like Dr. King, Banks said she has been
This year marks The Chronicle’s 22nd year hosting an MLK event. able to overcome obstacles in her life by having a dream. “A dream can be so impactful and it can penetrate in so many different ways and we see that by the way Dr. King did not sit on his dream,” Banks said. “Looking back, everything has come true that I talked about because it first started as a dream. Never be afraid to dream and always dream out loud.” Ward is a frequent speaker in areas of higher
education, leadership development, and political/ civic engagement. Before becoming the elected general president of the Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity, Inc., in 2015 Ward became the 11th president of Saint Augustine’s University (SAU), the third SAU alumnus to serve as president. During his address, Ward said Dr. King unrelentlessly sacrificed his own wellbeing to take up the banner for freedom and justice.
“Here’s a man who knew that death was at his front door every day through possibilities of violence. But he understood and he welcomed that and said in spite of that threat, I’m going to give my life so that my children, and my children’s children, and all of our children, can live in a nation ‘where they will not be judged by the color of their skin but the content of their character.’” Ward noted that Dr.
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King was only 26 years old when he received his Ph.D. from Boston University and could have easily stayed in the North, but instead he returned to the South to fight for his people. “At that time, less than one percent of African Americans had a PhD, let alone a Ph.D. from Boston University, and he chose to return to the South,” Ward said. “And then to put his own personal life on the line says that he made two
choices that are very notable and one that we should honor and then emulate. It’s not enough to just honor Dr. King on Jan. 15 and celebrate his birthday, the question becomes, what are you doing 364 days of the year to carry that legacy forward and then pass it on to a new generation?” While delivering her charge to the community, Elder Tembila Covington, president of the Ministers’ Conference of WinstonSalem and Vicinity (MCWSV), asked those who tuned in, “What are you doing for others?” Covington, who is the pastor of Exodus United Baptist Church, said the same question which Dr. King asked while delivering a speech in 1957, is still relevant today in the fight for justice. “As things begin to evolve and require you and I to take action, remember what the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. once said: ‘Life’s most persistent question and urgent question is what are you doing for others?’ We should respond with the power and the courage … to do unto others what you would have them do unto you. This is justice.” You can watch The Chronicle’s 22nd Annual Virtual Dr. Martin Luther King Event in its entirety by going to The Chronicle’s Facebook page.
Navigating Jim Crow: Green Book and Oasis Spaces in North Carolina BY TEVIN STINSON THE CHRONICLE
At the height of the Jim Crow era, when Black people could lose their lives for leaving their neighborhoods, a guide called the “Negro Motorist Green Book” provided Black motorists across the country with a list of establishments that didn’t discriminate. The guide included restaurants, hotels, gas stations, drug stores, barbershops, bars and more, even addresses and names for people who
would open their homes to those in need. Thanks to North Carolina African American Heritage Commission, Mount Tabor United Methodist Church, and the WinstonSalem Alumnae Chapter of Delta Sigma Theta Sorority Inc., locals have the opportunity to learn more about the Green Book and the impact it had right here in Forsyth County, with an exhibit called “Navigating Jim Crow: Green Book and Oasis Spaces in North Carolina.” During the opening ceremony for the exhibit held last week, Rev. Lonnie Pittman, senior pastor of Mount Tabor United Methodist Church, said it’s important to remember history like the Green Book for those who think those times are behind us. Pittman said growing up in Alabama, he heard about the division and racism in the South, but says he was “sheltered from it” until one day in the ‘90s, while stopped at a light in Pensacola. Pittman said he looked to his right and saw members of the KKK
Photo by Tevin Stinson
The Navigating Jim Crow: Green Book and Oasis Spaces exhibit features eight different panels that include history about the book and a brief video. where we are, and where er. For 30 years, the annual handing out flyers. guide helped thousands “These cowards were we need to go.” Assistant Pastor Rev. avoid unwarranted run-ins. hiding their faces and spewing hate. I thought Bob Richardson encour- In the beginning, Green it was all over, at least aged the community to enlisted other postmen to we were in a much better visit the exhibit and let contact Black entrepreplace, but yet there was others know about it as neurs along their routes that reminder that it is still well. “We invite you to and invite them to list in alive and well,” Pittman bring family and friends to the book, as well as sell the see this very, very impor- book to travelers for about continued. “The reason I tell that tant exhibit because these 25 cents. Dr. Virginia Newell, story is because I was shel- are matters about which tered from it, I didn’t fully we should all be apprised.” 104, one of the first Black The Green Book, women to be elected to understand, and then I saw it right there in that mo- which was the brainchild the Winston-Salem Board ment … and so we need to of Victor H. Green, was of Alderman (now City tell these stories. We need first published in 1936. Council), said she didn’t to remember things like Green, a native of Harlem, really know about the the Green Book to remind worked for the postal ser- Green Book growing up us of where we’ve been, vice and was a travel writ- because she had five broth-
ers and really didn’t have to worry about driving much. But she said she did know there was something that told Black people on the road where they could and could not go. “Let me put it this way … I knew there was something that explained to Black people when they would drive that they had to be careful,” Newell said. The exhibit will be on display at Mount Tabor United Methodist Church, 3543 Robinhood Road, on Jan. 22, Feb. 6, and Feb. 20 from 1-4 p.m. The selfguided exhibit includes several different copies of the Green Book, eight different panels that include history about the book, and a brief video. The exhibit also includes a list of 18 different establishments that were located right here in Forsyth County, including the Belmont Hotel, the Lincoln Hotel, and College Service Station, which was located on Claremont Ave. For more information about the exhibit, visit https://www.mttaborumc. org/green-book.
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