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The hidden life of Rosa Parks - Riché D. Richardson

  • 0:08 - 0:13
    In 1944, 11 years before her fateful
    decision on a Montgomery Bus,
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    Rosa Parks was investigating
    a vicious crime.
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    As an emissary for the National
    Association
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    for the Advancement of Colored People,
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    she had traveled to rural Alabama
    to meet with Recy Taylor,
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    a young woman who had been
    sexually assaulted by six white men.
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    It would be difficult enough to convince
    an Alabama court
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    that even one of these men was guilty,
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    but Rosa was undeterred.
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    She formed a committee to defend
    Recy in court,
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    flooding the media with testimony and
    sparking protests throughout the South.
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    When a jury failed to
    indict the attackers,
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    Parks demanded the governor assemble
    a new grand jury.
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    She wrote, “I know that you will not fail
    to let the people of Alabama know
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    that there is equal justice
    for all of our citizens.”
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    Throughout her life, Parks repeatedly
    challenged racial violence
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    and the prejudiced systems protecting
    its perpetrators.
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    But this work came at an
    enormous risk – and a personal price.
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    Born in 1913, Rosa was raised by her
    mother and grandparents in rural Alabama.
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    But outside this loving home, the fear
    of racial violence cast a long shadow.
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    The Ku Klux Klan frequently drove
    past their home,
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    and Jim Crow laws segregated
    public spaces.
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    At 19 she settled in Montgomery
    and married Raymond Parks,
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    a barber who shared her growing fury
    at racial injustice.
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    He was involved with the local chapter
    of the NAACP;
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    a role many avoided for
    fear of persecution.
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    At first Raymond was eager
    to keep Rosa safe
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    from the potential dangers of activism.
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    But as she grew more incensed at the
    limitations imposed on African Americans,
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    she could no longer stand by.
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    When she officially joined
    the NAACP in 1943,
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    Parks and Johnnie Rebecca Carr were
    the only women in the Montgomery chapter.
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    She began keeping minutes for their
    meetings,
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    and soon found herself elected
    secretary of the chapter –
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    formally beginning her secret double life.
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    By day, Rosa worked as a seamstress
    to support her mother and husband.
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    By night, she researched and documented
    numerous civil rights cases,
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    from local policy disputes to high-profile
    murder cases and hate crimes.
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    As secretary, she prepared public
    responses
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    on behalf of the Montgomery chapter,
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    battling the harsh sentencing,
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    false accusation and smear campaigns
    frequently used against African Americans.
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    In addition to her legal work, Parks
    was a brilliant local strategist.
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    As advisor to the NAACP youth group
    council,
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    she helped young people navigate
    segregated systems
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    including voter registration and
    whites-only libraries.
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    Through the cover of the NAACP,
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    Parks strived to bring clandestine civil
    rights activities into the open.
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    She advocated for civil disobedience
    training
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    and spoke out against racial violence,
    particularly the murder of Emmet Till.
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    In 1955, her refusal to move to the
    back of a segregated bus
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    helped ignite the grassroots movement
    she had hoped for.
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    Parks was arrested and jailed for her
    one-woman protest,
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    where she was visited by local activists.
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    Together they planned a twenty-four
    hour bus boycott.
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    It lasted for three hundred
    and eighty-one days.
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    Park’s simple act had transformed
    nascent civil rights activism
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    into a national movement.
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    In 1956, the boycott ended when
    the Supreme Court
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    ruled in favor of desegregating
    public transport.
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    But this victory for the movement
    had come at a great cost.
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    Rosa had been receiving vicious death
    threats throughout the campaign,
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    and was unable to find work in Montgomery
    because of her political reputation.
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    In 1957, she moved to Detroit to continue
    working as a seamstress,
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    until being hired by Congressman
    John Conyers
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    to help support his burgeoning
    civil rights campaigns.
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    Ever vigilant in the fight against racial
    inequality,
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    Parks remained active for
    the next 40 years.
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    She wrote several books,
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    traveled across the country giving talks
    to support other activists,
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    and established an institute for the
    education of young people
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    in her late husband’s memory.
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    Today, Rosa Parks is remembered
    as a radical spirit
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    who railed against the most powerful
    people and policies.
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    Her call to action continues to resound:
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    “knowing what must be done
    does away with fear.”
Title:
The hidden life of Rosa Parks - Riché D. Richardson
Speaker:
Riché D. Richardson
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TED-Ed
Duration:
04:39
lauren mcalpine approved English subtitles for The hidden life of Rosa Parks
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Tara Ahmadinejad edited English subtitles for The hidden life of Rosa Parks

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