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 Rosa Parks was loved all over the world. She visited Canada in 
              1998 and was given an honorary degree from Mount St. Vincent University 
              in Halifax, Nova Scotia.  Parks became the first woman in U.S. history to lie in the Capital 
              Rotunda, joining a select few – including presidents and war heroes 
              – given a public viewing in the historic venue. Her memorial service 
              was held at the St. Paul AME Church in Montgomery. It is significant that the AME stands for African Methodist Episcopal 
              and was the church of Paul Robeson, Harriett Tubman and other African 
              American freedom fighters. Parks also has the distinction of being 
              recognized by both the civil rights and Black power movements. While 
              the corporate media has highlighted Parks’ role in the civil rights 
              movement, they are unable or unwilling to discuss the fact that 
              she also supported the more radical wing of the African American 
              liberation struggle. Parks actually spoke at the funeral of Robert 
              F. Williams, the black revolutionary from Monroe, North Carolina 
              who was forced to flee to Cuba and China after being falsely accused 
              of kidnapping a Euro-American couple during a confrontation with 
              a racist mob. At Williams’ funeral on October 22, 1996, Parks told 
              the congregation at a Monroe church that she and those who walked 
              alongside Martin Luther King Jr. in Alabama had "always admired 
              Robert Williams for his courage and his commitment to freedom. The 
              work that he did should go down in history and never be forgotten." 
 Parks died of natural causes at the age of 92 at her home in Detroit. 
              She was arrested in 1955 for refusing to give up her bus seat to 
              a white man. Parks was born Rosa McCauley in Tuskegee, Alabama. 
              When she was still a young child, her parents separated and she 
              moved with her maternal grandparents and her younger brother, Sylvester. 
              Montgomery, Alabama, was hardly a hospitable city for blacks in 
              the 1920s and 1930s. As she grew up, Parks was shunted into 
              second-rate all-black schools, such as the Montgomery Industrial 
              School for Girls, and she faced daily rounds of laws governing her 
              behavior in public places. Alabama, like all places on earth, has produced working class heroes, 
              revolutionaries, buffoons, sell-out and idiots. Along with Parks, 
              Angela Davis, Carl Lewis, Alma Powell (wife of former Secretary 
              of State Colin Powell) and Condoleezza Rice are all products of 
              the Yellowhammer State. Parks and Rice are both daughters of Alabama 
              and are a perfect example of the class struggle taking place among 
              African Americans. The passing of Parks gave Rice another opportunity to discuss U.S. 
              racism openly, as quoted by the Toronto Star during her visit to 
              Canada. Rice referred to Birmingham as "Bombingham." She 
              went to great lengths to celebrate her past when she toured her 
              native Alabama with British Foreign Secretary Jack Straw. The two 
              attended the Alabama-Tennessee football game, and Rice also showed 
              Straw her roots in segregated Birmingham. She told the story of 
              her "granddaddy" from Eutaw, Alabama, who was a poor sharecropper 
              who went on to become the first "colored person" to get 
              formal college "book learning" in the family. And she 
              spoke of the racism she confronted, including the death of a young 
              friend in the notorious church bombings in that city in 1963. "Despite of my fond memories of Birmingham as a place where 
              I was, as a child, secure, I also remember a place called 'Bombingham' 
              – where I witnessed the denial of democracy in America for so many 
              years," she said. "It was, after all, the city of Bull 
              Connor and the Ku Klux Klan, where blacks were haunted by rebel 
              yells and terrorized by nightriders and accused of burning their 
              own homes…. And of course, it was the city where my friend 
              Denise McNair, and three other little girls, were blown up one Sunday 
              morning while they were going to Sunday school at the 16th Street 
              Baptist Church." In an interview with the BBC, she said an African American woman 
              would one day be elected president, but again said she had no interest 
              in running. 
 While Rice can now openly sound off on racism, don’t hold your 
              breath waiting to hear her speak out against the "free market" 
              system. The last stage of capitalism is imperialism. We are living 
              in the age of imperialism. Many, including myself, have always 
              said that there would come a time when imperialism would need black 
              faces in high places. Rice is just what the doctor ordered. 
              Rice is of African origin. She is a woman. She is bright. However, 
              she is still a mouthpiece of the neo-liberal project and the chief 
              spokesperson for the Babylon system. Since taking the job of Secretary of State, Rice has traveled 278,944 
              kilometers, visited 39 countries and spent 357 hours and 27 minutes 
              in the air before making the 90 minute hop to Ottawa for two days 
              of meetings recently. Rosa Parks and Condoleezza Rice are from the same bowl of grits. 
              However, history will judge both differently. Parks stood with the 
              oppressed of the world and Rice stood with the oppressor. Toronto-based journalist and radio producer Norman (Otis) Richmond 
              can be heard on Diasporic Music, Thursdays, 8 p.m.-10 p.m., Saturday 
              Morning Live, Saturdays, 10 a.m.-1 p. m. and From a Different Perspective, 
              Sundays, 6-6:30 p.m. on CKLN-FM 88.1 and on the internet at www.ckln.fm. 
              He can be reached e-mail at [email protected]. |