June 16, 2011 - Issue 431 |
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Clara Luper, a
Name Within a Name,
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To
the insistence of Clara Luper, from the state
of Afterward,
I was given a tour of what was left of the Building that was bombed by
an American Citizen-turned-terrorist that we came to know as Timothy McVeigh,
and the park that was dedicated as a memorial to the victims. She then
took me back to her home, followed by the Martin Luther King, Jr. center
where she also gave me a personal in-depth tour, complete with her saying
that civil and human rights was a continuing movement! She repeatedly
spoke of all her years, which consisted of most of her life, spent fighting
for the least of God’s children for the greater good in every arena that
she could imagine. Fresh in my memory, as though it occurred today, it
happened more than a decade ago while on my first visit to Like many other people whose names we will never know, Clara Luper is the personification of the pillars on which, I maintain, we all have our foundation. She not only paved the path but in the process of her journey set the example that we have a responsibility to emulate. As I remember, Ms. Luper spoke softly but carried a large stick while changing the community around her and in doing so, changed the world for the greater good of humanity. Countless people sat at her feet and learned, as she was a master teacher. As I remember Clara Luper, I am reminded of what the poet Sam Walter Foss tried to convey rhetorically to the world when he just simply requested to a higher power, “Let me live in my house by the side of the road, where the races of men go by- They are good, they are bad, they are weak, they are strong, Wise, foolish - so am I. Then why should I sit in the scorner's seat, or hurl the cynic's ban? Let me live in my house by the side of the road, and be a friend to man." BlackCommentator.com Guest Commentator, The Reverend
D. D. Prather, is a noted Civil/Social Justice Activist, and a native
of |
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