Paying Tribute to Ms Coretta Scott King..
This is the story of Ms Coretta King, it is with sadness as we grieve the passing of a true legendary lady the epitome of love, hope and character. Ms King was a special person and the following is her story. Join me at this very sombre moment as we all around the world remember this wonderful lady who carried her husbands dream honorably.Click on the link below (The King Center) to listen to Martin Luther King Jnr.
Coretta Scott King (1927- ). The founding president of The King Center in Atlanta, Georgia, Coretta Scott King emerged as an African-American leader of national stature after the death her husband, Martin Luther King, Jr.
Born on April 27, 1927, in Marion, Alabama, Coretta Scott spent her childhood on a farm owned by her parents, Obie Leonard Scott and Bernice McMurry Scott. By the early 1940s, her father's truck-farming business had become increasingly successful, prompting harassment from white neighbors. The family suspected that resentful whites may have been responsible for a 1942 fire that destroyed the Scott family's home. Hoping for better opportunities for their offspring, Obie and Bernice Scott encouraged their three children to excel in school. Coretta Scott graduated from Lincoln High School, a private Black institution with an integrated faculty, and in 1945 she followed her older sister Edyth to Antioch College in Ohio, where she received a B.A. in music and elementary education. An accomplished musician and singer, Scott held her concert debut in 1948 in Springfield, Ohio, performing as a soloist with the Second Baptist Church.
Enrolling in 1951 at Boston's New England Conservatory of Music with a grant from the Jessie Smith Noyes Foundation, Scott developed her singing talent and eventually earned a Mus.B. in voice. While there, she also began dating Martin Luther King, Jr., a doctoral candidate at Boston University's School of Theology. Despite the initial objections of King's parents, who wanted him to marry a woman from his hometown of Atlanta, the two were married at the Scott family home near Marion on June 18, 1953.
During the period of her husband's public career, Coretta King usually remained out of the public spotlight, raising the couple's four children: Yolanda Denise (born November 17, 1955), Martin Luther, III (October 23, 1957), Dexter Scott (January 30, 1961), and Bernice Albertine (March 28, 1963). While her primary focus was on raising children, in 1962 she served as a voice instructor in the music department of Morris Brown College in Atlanta.
Coretta King also worked closely with her husband and was present at many of the major civil rights events of the 1950s and 1960s. In 1957, she accompanied her husband on a trip to Europe and to Ghana to mark that country's independence. In 1959, the Kings traveled to India, where Coretta King sang spirituals at events where her husband spoke. In 1960, after the family moved from Montgomery to Atlanta, she helped gain her husband's release from a Georgia prison by appealing to presidential candidate John F. Kennedy for his assistance. Kennedy's willingness to intervene to help the jailed civil rights leader contributed to the crucial support he received from African-American voters in the 1960 election. In 1962, Coretta King expressed her long-standing interest in disarmament efforts by serving as a Women's Strike for Peace delegate to the seventeen-nation Disarmament Conference held in Geneva, Switzerland. She also attended the 1964 ceremony in Oslo, Norway, where Dr. King was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize.
In the mid-1960s, Coretta King's involvement in the civil rights movement increased as she performed "freedom concerts," which consisted of poetry recitation, singing, and lectures demonstrating the history of the civil rights movement. The proceeds were donated to the Southern Christian Leadership Conference. In February 1965, while Martin Luther King was jailed during voting rights protests in Alabama, she met with Black nationalist leader Malcolm X shortly before his assassination. Prior to 1968 Coretta King also maintained speaking commitments which her husband could not fulfill.
After the assassination of Martin Luther King, Jr., in Memphis on April 4, 1968, Coretta King devoted her life to actively propagating her husband's philosophy of nonviolence. Just a few days after the assassination she led a march on behalf of sanitation workers in Memphis, substituting for her husband, and, later in the month, keeping his speaking engagement at an anti-Vietnam war rally in New York. In May she also helped launch the march on Washington of the Poor People's Campaign, thereafter participating in numerous antipoverty efforts. In addition, during 1969, she published her autobiography, My Life with Martin Luther King, Jr.
Coretta King began mobilizing support for the Martin Luther King, Jr., Center for Nonviolent Social Change in 1969. Her plans included an exhibition hall, a restoration of King's childhood home, an Institute for Afro-American studies, a library containing King's papers, and a museum. As founding president of the center, she guided the construction of its permanent home, located on Auburn Avenue next to Ebenezer Baptist Church where Dr. King had served as copaster with his father.
By the 1980s, Coretta King had become one of the most visible and influential African-American leaders, often delivering speeches and writing nationally syndicated newspaper columns. In 1983, she led an effort that brought more than a half-million demonstrators to Washington, D.C., to commemorate the twentieth anniversary of the 1963 march on Washington for jobs and freedom, where Martin Luther King, Jr. had delivered his famous "I Have a Dream" speech.
Also during the 1980s, Coretta King reaffirmed her long-standing opposition to the apartheid system in South Africa. She participated in a series of sit-in protests in Washington that prompted nationwide demonstrations against South African racial policies. In 1986, she traveled to South Africa to investigate apartheid. Several Black opposition leaders criticized her plans to meet with President P. W. Botha and with Chief Buthelezi, who was viewed by many as an accommodationist. Consequently, King canceled her meetings and, instead, met with African National Congress leader Winnie Mandela. After her return to the United States, she met with President Ronald Reagan to urge him to approve sanctions against South Africa.
Perhaps the most notable achievement in Coretta King's public life was her participation in the successful effort to establish a national holiday in honor of Martin Luther King, Jr. In 1984, she was elected chairperson of the Martin Luther King, Jr. Federal Holiday Commission, which was established by an act of Congress to formalize plans for the annual celebrations that began in 1986.
Also notable are Coretta King's speeches at London's St. Paul's Cathedral in 1969 and at Harvard University's Class Day exercises. She was the first woman to speak at each of the events. King has also been involved in various women's organizations such as the National Organization for Women, the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom, and United Church Women.
May the Lord Rest her Soul in Eternal Peace.
Amen
12 Comments:
A legend indeed!.A moment of silence in her honour.
May she rest in Peace and may the flames King's dream keep burning
POI - what are you saying????
Is that English??
Thanks Strawberries, Poi & Irena for joining in.
R.I.P.
What Poi is saying is:- three/third is not as bad is it?. mixture of french and ebonics I think. BTW I only came back to say tapo first in.
May she rest in peace indeed, Brother Jero.
I'm sorry to be the dissenter, but everywhere I turn I am attacked by images, stories and memorials to Coretta Scott King. I mean no disrespect when I say, okay, enough already! She was a great woman, since everyone says so, but I am tired of hearing about it and anyway I don't believe it.
Um, can we talk about the name of your blog now ? (I was once in that play, so I fell in love with your blog name at once!!) Or the "pirates" who are about to be charged in Kenya? or the Narc meltdown? I feel terrible for raining on everyone's Coretta parade, and I apologise, but my sympathy for women who achieve their fame by having married or being descended from the right man is limited indeed. Yes, I know. There goes Mrs. Ghandi (both of them, the Indian one and the Italian one), Hilary Clinton, that yellow-themed woman who was in the Philipines, and all manner of U.S. first ladies, and etc., ad nauseum etc. Not to mention African first ladies--in this respect, thank god for Liberia!
But still: it pisses me off. Surely my fellow XXs, we can do better than that? As my college t-shirt used to say, (I went to a college that supplied either three or four U.S. first ladies and an unspecified number of same abroad): Surely there must be a better way to get one of us into the White House!
What did Mrs. King actually DO? As opposed to being famous for being Martin Luther King's wife and being a celebrity on that account? What did she herself DO?
Okay, I'll shut up now.
But I still love your blog name, Brother Jero!
Remarkable woman!
RIP
There was a peice that was done in the Daily Mail, Women who stood by their men. Coretta King stood by Martin Jr., long after he'd died. She stood when in this day and age, running and leaving him to he's own devices would have been so much more easier. Finally to be reunited with him, God Bless her.
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She came, she lived and she left a legacy to be emulated. Question is when we are gone what will the world say we contributed? Thanks BJ for posting this.
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