The civil rights community has lost one of its greatest champions and elder statesmen with the passing of Julian Bond.
Bond, 75, who passed after a brief illness, left an indelible mark
on the nation’s landscape through his bold activism and advocacy, his
struggle against injustice and his critique of white supremacy.
What was most impressive about Mr. Bond was his role as a pioneer, a
man of many firsts. A student at Morehouse College, Bond helped found
the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee, where he served as its communications director for a number of years and provided leadership
in a movement that successfully pushed for landmark legislation. Bond
also led protests and sit-ins against Jim Crow segregation policies and
led campaigns to register black voters, and was involved in the 1963
March on Washington. He and others such as current U.S. Congressman
John Lewis left SNCC in the wake of the Black Power movement, when
whites were ejected from the organization.
In 1965, following the passage of the Voting Rights Act, Bond was one of eleven blacks elected to the Georgia House of Representatives,
but was barred from taking his seat by white lawmakers due to his
anti-Vietnam War stance. After winning a Supreme Court victory, he took
his seat in 1967. After serving in the Georgia state House, he later
served six terms in the state Senate,
from 1975 to 1986. In 1968, Bond became the first black nominated for
vice president by a major party, though he had to decline because he
did not meet the constitutional age requirement.
Bond also helped found the Southern Poverty Law Center in 1971, an
organization which is fights hate and bigotry and seeks justice for the
vulnerable in society. He served as the president of SPLC, and as a
board member. “With Julian’s passing, the country has lost one of its
most passionate and eloquent voices for the cause of justice. He
advocated not just for African Americans, but for every group, indeed
every person subject to oppression and discrimination, because he
recognized the common humanity in us all,” the SPLC’s Morris Dees said in a statement. “Not only has the country lost a hero today, we’ve lost a great friend.”
Moreover, Bond established his leadership at the NAACP,
where he was charwoman from 1998 until Rosalyn Brock succeeded him in
2010. Also a professor, Bond taught at American University, Drexel
University, Williams College, the University of Pennsylvania, Harvard University and the University of Virginia.
A champion of gay rights and marriage equality, Bond said in a 2005
speech that “African Americans … were the only Americans who were
enslaved for two centuries, but we were far from the only Americans
suffering discrimination then and now…. Sexual disposition parallels
race. I was born this way. I have no choice. I wouldn’t change it if I
could. Sexuality is unchangeable.”
Further, Julian Bond was an effective communicator, not only through his role at SNCC, but as host of the public affairs television program, America’s Black Forum,Eyes on the Prize,
and commentator for various news programs. “If this was another
movement, they would call him the PR man, because he was the one who
wrote the best, who framed the issues the best. He was called upon time
and again to write it, to express it,” said Eleanor Holmes Norton, who
worked with Bond at SNCC, told the Washington Post.
“Julian Bond was courageous and had an uncompromising sense of
justice,” Peter Gamble–publisher of BlackCommentator.com, where Bond
was an editorial board member–told theGrio. Gamble, a veteran journalist, also co-founded America’s Black Forum.
“We first met when Julian was in Washington DC and I was a radio news
reporter there, covering various aspects of the civil rights and
anti-war movements in the late 60s and early 70s. Over the years, he
gave me several interviews, during which time we came to realize our
common ground in the struggle for social justice, economic justice and
peace. He could be counted on to provide a strong quote about whatever
issue was in the news,” Gamble said.
Gamble also noted that Bond was known for his wit. He recalled a 2003 cartoon
that BlackCommentator.com published about Janice Rogers Brown, who was
nominated by then-President Bush to be a federal judge on the United
States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit. “Senator
Orin Hatch, who was then the Chair of the Senate Judiciary committee,
became very upset during Brown’s appointment hearing. We had called Ms.
Brown a female Clarence Thomas, and had requested our cartoonist,
Khalil Bendib, illustrate Brown as Thomas in a dress and fright wig,”
Gamble added.
“During the hearing, Hatch repeated the name of our website very
slowly, several times and displayed a huge blowup of the cartoon,
cautioning, ‘Don’t go to BlackCommentator.com!’ Julian was watching the
hearing on CSPAN and dashed off a note to me saying, ‘I don’t know how
much you’re paying Orin Hatch for PR, but it’s worth every nickel,’”
Gamble noted.
“Justice and equality was the mission that spanned his life,” President Obama said in a statement, calling the civil rights leader a hero. “Julian Bond helped change this country for the better.”
Friends and family remember Bond as one of the people behind the Black Lives Matter movement
long before the days of hashtags and social media. Although he is no
longer with us in bodily form, his long legacy serves as a blueprint
for us to follow, as we fight the civil rights battles of a new
generation.
This commentary also appears in TheGrio.com
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