WEBVTT 00:00:07.745 --> 00:00:13.011 In 1944, 11 years before her fateful decision on a Montgomery Bus, 00:00:13.011 --> 00:00:16.011 Rosa Parks was investigating a vicious crime. 00:00:16.011 --> 00:00:18.241 As an emissary for the National Association 00:00:18.241 --> 00:00:20.111 for the Advancement of Colored People, 00:00:20.111 --> 00:00:23.701 she had traveled to rural Alabama to meet with Recy Taylor, 00:00:23.701 --> 00:00:28.017 a young woman who had been sexually assaulted by six white men. 00:00:28.017 --> 00:00:30.747 It would be difficult enough to convince an Alabama court 00:00:30.747 --> 00:00:32.777 that even one of these men was guilty, 00:00:32.777 --> 00:00:34.645 but Rosa was undeterred. 00:00:34.645 --> 00:00:37.365 She formed a committee to defend Recy in court, 00:00:37.365 --> 00:00:39.006 flooding the media with testimony 00:00:39.006 --> 00:00:41.376 and sparking protests throughout the South. 00:00:41.376 --> 00:00:43.626 When a jury failed to indict the attackers, 00:00:43.626 --> 00:00:46.886 Parks demanded the governor assemble a new grand jury. 00:00:46.886 --> 00:00:51.324 She wrote, “I know that you will not fail to let the people of Alabama know 00:00:51.324 --> 00:00:55.324 that there is equal justice for all of our citizens.” NOTE Paragraph 00:00:55.324 --> 00:00:59.313 Throughout her life, Parks repeatedly challenged racial violence 00:00:59.313 --> 00:01:02.373 and the prejudiced systems protecting its perpetrators. 00:01:02.373 --> 00:01:05.409 But this work came at an enormous risk— 00:01:05.409 --> 00:01:07.689 and a personal price. NOTE Paragraph 00:01:07.689 --> 00:01:13.659 Born in 1913, Rosa was raised by her mother and grandparents in rural Alabama. 00:01:13.659 --> 00:01:18.774 But outside this loving home, the fear of racial violence cast a long shadow. 00:01:18.774 --> 00:01:22.224 The Ku Klux Klan frequently drove past their home, 00:01:22.224 --> 00:01:25.700 and Jim Crow laws segregated public spaces. 00:01:25.700 --> 00:01:29.798 At 19 she settled in Montgomery and married Raymond Parks, 00:01:29.798 --> 00:01:33.378 a barber who shared her growing fury at racial injustice. 00:01:33.378 --> 00:01:37.146 He was involved with the local chapter of the NAACP; 00:01:37.146 --> 00:01:40.256 a role many avoided for fear of persecution. NOTE Paragraph 00:01:40.256 --> 00:01:42.846 At first Raymond was eager to keep Rosa safe 00:01:42.846 --> 00:01:45.366 from the potential dangers of activism. 00:01:45.366 --> 00:01:49.817 But as she grew more incensed at the limitations imposed on African Americans, 00:01:49.817 --> 00:01:51.947 she could no longer stand by. 00:01:51.947 --> 00:01:55.947 When she officially joined the NAACP in 1943, 00:01:55.947 --> 00:02:00.951 Parks and Johnnie Rebecca Carr were the only women in the Montgomery chapter. 00:02:00.951 --> 00:02:03.581 She began keeping minutes for their meetings, 00:02:03.581 --> 00:02:06.641 and soon found herself elected secretary of the chapter— 00:02:06.641 --> 00:02:09.231 formally beginning her secret double life. NOTE Paragraph 00:02:09.231 --> 00:02:14.110 By day, Rosa worked as a seamstress to support her mother and husband. 00:02:14.110 --> 00:02:18.564 By night, she researched and documented numerous civil rights cases, 00:02:18.564 --> 00:02:23.369 from local policy disputes to high-profile murder cases and hate crimes. 00:02:23.369 --> 00:02:26.219 As secretary, she prepared public responses 00:02:26.219 --> 00:02:30.589 on behalf of the Montgomery chapter, battling the harsh sentencing, 00:02:30.589 --> 00:02:35.947 false accusation and smear campaigns frequently used against African Americans. 00:02:35.947 --> 00:02:40.441 In addition to her legal work, Parks was a brilliant local strategist. 00:02:40.441 --> 00:02:43.668 As advisor to the NAACP youth group council, 00:02:43.668 --> 00:02:46.591 she helped young people navigate segregated systems 00:02:46.591 --> 00:02:50.401 including voter registration and whites-only libraries. 00:02:50.401 --> 00:02:52.711 Through the cover of the NAACP, 00:02:52.711 --> 00:02:56.940 Parks strived to bring clandestine civil rights activities into the open. 00:02:56.940 --> 00:02:59.624 She advocated for civil disobedience training 00:02:59.624 --> 00:03:05.116 and spoke out against racial violence, particularly the murder of Emmet Till. NOTE Paragraph 00:03:05.116 --> 00:03:09.493 In 1955, her refusal to move to the back of a segregated bus 00:03:09.493 --> 00:03:12.503 helped ignite the grassroots movement she had hoped for. 00:03:12.503 --> 00:03:15.983 Parks was arrested and jailed for her one-woman protest, 00:03:15.983 --> 00:03:18.419 where she was visited by local activists. 00:03:18.419 --> 00:03:22.099 Together they planned a twenty-four hour bus boycott. 00:03:22.099 --> 00:03:25.819 It lasted for three hundred and eighty-one days. NOTE Paragraph 00:03:25.819 --> 00:03:29.857 Park’s simple act had transformed nascent civil rights activism 00:03:29.857 --> 00:03:31.437 into a national movement. 00:03:31.437 --> 00:03:34.987 In 1956, the boycott ended when the Supreme Court 00:03:34.987 --> 00:03:38.917 ruled in favor of desegregating public transport. 00:03:38.917 --> 00:03:42.247 But this victory for the movement had come at a great cost. 00:03:42.247 --> 00:03:45.627 Rosa had been receiving vicious death threats throughout the campaign, 00:03:45.627 --> 00:03:50.185 and was unable to find work in Montgomery because of her political reputation. NOTE Paragraph 00:03:50.185 --> 00:03:54.950 In 1957, she moved to Detroit to continue working as a seamstress, 00:03:54.950 --> 00:03:57.720 until being hired by Congressman John Conyers 00:03:57.720 --> 00:04:00.470 to help support his burgeoning civil rights campaigns. 00:04:00.470 --> 00:04:03.180 Ever vigilant in the fight against racial inequality, 00:04:03.180 --> 00:04:06.420 Parks remained active for the next 40 years. 00:04:06.420 --> 00:04:07.820 She wrote several books, 00:04:07.820 --> 00:04:11.310 traveled across the country giving talks to support other activists, 00:04:11.310 --> 00:04:14.920 and established an institute for the education of young people 00:04:14.920 --> 00:04:16.690 in her late husband’s memory. 00:04:16.690 --> 00:04:20.690 Today, Rosa Parks is remembered as a radical spirit 00:04:20.690 --> 00:04:24.080 who railed against the most powerful people and policies. 00:04:24.080 --> 00:04:27.170 Her call to action continues to resound: 00:04:27.170 --> 00:04:30.400 “knowing what must be done does away with fear.”