Last
week, a fighter for equality, civil rights, and justice
for all in every sphere of American life died at the age
of 72.
Ron
Walters, a political activist, scholar, and expert in American
political life started his involvement in a broad range
of issues at an early age.
He
told an interviewer last year: “I am an NAACP baby. Born
in the struggle to desegregate the Dockum Drug Store in
Wichita, Kansas,
in 1958, two years before the Greensboro sit-in, as a leader of the NAACP Youth
Council.” He was 19 at the time.
Brother
Ron’s action in Wichita may not have received the publicity
that the 1960 Greensboro, N.C., drug store sit-in received
- either at the time or in the history books - but it was
a pattern to be repeated throughout his life: It did not
matter whether the action was popular at the time or whether
what he did would be prominent in history books; if it was
right, he did it.
One
characteristic of Ron Walters, repeated by many who knew
him, was that no matter how important or unimportant an
individual or group were to others, if they asked him for
help and their cause was just, he gave of himself freely,
drawing on his vast experience in study and practical work,
to help out.
Others
already have noted the vast range of his scholarly achievements,
the honors, and the thanks of a vast array of activists
and leaders from around the country, some describing him
as the “tallest tree” in the forest.
But
the wisdom of his years of service to others was something
that everyone who knew him or knew of him never should forget.
Included
in Brother Ron’s store of wisdom was a warning. Here’s what
he said in a radio interview just 14 months ago:
“Well,
some of us believe that we are free because we have achieved
the material trappings of success. But,
I remember billionaire Bob Johnson wanting to start up an
airline only to have mysterious problems and I remember
his wife, Sheila, also a billionaire, having problems opening
up a spa in hunt country Virginia. But, most of all, I remember Michael Jackson in this hour,
an heroic but also a tragic figure who eventually became
a captive of the success he engendered to the point that
it killed him.”
Deep
in this “great recession,” he also always thought about
the people who were barely scraping-by, people who always
were just getting-by. What happens to them and how does
a nation ensure that the people who are at the low end of
the economic scale become able to live a decent and humane
life?
These
are problems that he thought about and tried to solve, including
his involvement in the national electoral process, working
in Jesse Jackson’s campaigns in the 1980s to win the Democratic
nomination for president. That campaign brought with it
the Rainbow Coalition and its efforts to see that all Americans
were provided health care and jobs and the campaign also
greatly increased working-class voter enrollment. In fact,
he pointed out, no one linked the issues of race and class
as well as the Jackson
campaigns in the ‘80s.
In
everything, every endeavor, he was a teacher, as well as
an analyst and worker. And, when he had studied an issue
or problem, analyzed it, and come up with a potential solution,
he shared it with those who might not see a solution.
Always
seeking to find ways to consolidate and institutionalize
gains made toward equality and justice, Brother Ron was
adamant that working to organize in the local communities
was of vital importance, whether it was a local issue or
a overarching national issue. That’s why he had such great
respect for community organizers and the groups that emanated
from their work.
But,
he was especially concerned in this time of great economic
distress, when so many black Americans are suffering in
impoverished communities and so many are imprisoned or in
the justice system.
“In
this economic recession,” he said in 2009, “I most often
wonder about those who were broke and busted before it began;
they are now at the back of the line once again, facing
the prospect of having to start the game of life way back
behind the newly poor, the newly unemployed, and the newly
un-housed. With an unemployment rate approaching 20 percent,
many blacks will have to climb a long way back to achieve
economic parity with the rest of the nation.”
May
the thousands or tens of thousands whom he taught and led
and counseled over the decades be ready to carry the heavy
workload he carried, and may they never forget his advice.
We never met, but we often worked in the same or similar
fields and it was good to have appeared in the pages of
Black Commentator with him for a time.
Rest
in peace, Brother Ron Walters.
Click
here
to send a condolence message to the family of Ron Walters
BlackCommentator.com
Columnist, John Funiciello, is a labor organizer and former
union organizer. His union work started when he became a
local president of The Newspaper Guild in the early 1970s.
He was a reporter for 14 years for newspapers in New
York State.
In addition to labor work, he is organizing family farmers
as they struggle to stay on the land under enormous pressure
from factory food producers and land developers. Click here
to contact Mr. Funiciello.
|