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February 5th, 2010
Today, Sojourn to the Past was honored to be featured in the same media outlet and by the same reporter who has brought truth to the surface of countless civil rights cases. Jerry Mitchell, who is one of the speakers on the Sojourn journey, has dedicated his life and career to uncovering the truth and today we were humbled by his words and praises on his ‘Journey to Justice’ blog on the Clarion Ledger’s website. If you would like to read the blog, click on the image below.

Tags: civil rights, clarion ledger, discrimintation, education, field trip, history, jeff steinberg, jerry mitchell, san francisco, sojourn, sojourn to the past Posted in Uncategorized | No Comments »
December 11th, 2009
 Wade Henderson greets other guests of the Commission program
In his acceptance speech, Henderson made mention of the man for whom the award is named, “Neil Alexander was a tireless and largely unsung champion of civil and human rights. Our city and the struggle for equal justice benefited immensely from his legal expertise and his leadership in enforcing the District’s human rights law.”
He also used his speech to draw attention to two issues that The Leadership Conference is spearheading actions toward: 1.) the lack of voting rights for DC residents, and 2.) reforming the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights. He articulated the innate connection between civil rights and human rights, and his vision and aim of the organization for which he works so tirelessly, “The Leadership Conference itself was founded in 1950 at the dawn of the modern civil rights movement just two years after the adoption of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights… [it] has worked to help America take that walk in the bright sunshine of human rights.”
Tags: civil rights, civil rights education, sojourn, sojourn to the past Posted in Current Events, Uncategorized | No Comments »
December 10th, 2009
There’s no question that the entire nation is going through a time of economic decline. Empty storefronts, foreclosed homes, and long unemployment lines are visuals that serve as just a fraction of the evidence of of tough times in the economy. However, as some prominent black lawmakers and now the Rev. Jesse Jackson would like to address – the African American communities have been disproportionately affected in the time of the recession. Obama has resisted the idea that the administration should use racial- or ethnic-based qualifiers in determining where the aid is needed most, saying:
“The most important thing I can do for the African American community is the same thing I can do for the American community, period, and that is get the economy going again and get people hiring again.”
Jackson, a self-stated Obama supporter, expressed his concern that civil rights leaders were not as involved in the recent jobs summit as he thought they ought to be. The Obama-Jackson relationship has been tedious at times, with Jackson questioning whether Obama has shown enough concern in his past legislative duties towards the issues uniquely facing the black community; however, since Obama’s election, Jackson’s criticisms have been quelled. Since Obama’s election, though, he has not directly met with Jackson.
 Rev. Jesse Jackson
Jackson – who recently celebrated the 25th anniversary of his own run for the White House – has, independently of the White House, requested a meeting with Treasury Secretary Timothy F. Geithner to discuss his ideas and the administration’s intention for economic aid for depressed minority communities across the nation – like the suffering Detroit and Milwaukee for example. A meeting has not yet been set.
Turning around a nation in an economic recession is certainly no easy task, and won’t happen overnight nor will it be decided by anything less than a large team of minds working together. What say you, Sojourn to the Past blog readers? Should extra attention be paid to communities and cities that have suffered the effects of the recession the most? Should the demographics of those communities be taken into account so that relief can be community-specific? Or should the government be blind to those characteristics?
Tags: civil rights, civil rights education, sojourn, sojourn to the past Posted in Current Events, Uncategorized | No Comments »
December 9th, 2009
The accomplished widow of noted civil rights leader Whitney M. Young Jr, Margaret Buckner Young, has died at age 88. Among the long list of her contributions, talents, and achievements, were authoring children’s books about African-American history, writing biographies of prominent African-Americans for Parent Magazine, and serving as a long-time educator.
Additionally, Young also served a capacity on the U.S. delegation to the United Nations. Vernon Jordan, noted civil rights leader who advised President Bill Clinton and was head of the National Urban League after Whitney Young spoke fondly of her,
“She was a loving mentor to me,” he recalled, “She always had sound advice, such as ‘Think about this,’ “
 Whitney Young, who was Margaret's husband, died in 1971.
In the 50’s, Margaret was a professor in the psychology departments at Spelman College in Atlanta, GA. When her husband drown in 1971 in Nigeria, she then became the executive director of the Whitney M. Young Jr. Foundation – named for her late husband – an organization that helped academics studying in the arena of race relations, and promoted equal opportunity. In the New Rochelle, NY public school system, she helped parents make the transition when their children’s schools integrated.
In the 1980’s, Margaret was active in both the arts and in business; she was on the board of NY’s Metropolitan Museum of Art, Lincoln Center, and the Dance Theater of Harlem – and also was one of very few African-American women to serve on corporate boards (NY Life Insurance Co & the Philip Morris Co.).
Margaret was a 1942 graduate of Kentucky State, and a member of Alpha Kappa Alpha sorority.
Both the unfortunate loss of her husband nearly 40 years ago, and Margaret’s passing are deeply felt losses to the civil rights community. What these people contributed to the fight for equality in society, education, and beyond for the future African-Americans is beyond what words can describe. Sojourn students can only hope to be lead by the footsteps the Youngs blazed on their brave paths.
Tags: civil rights, civil rights education, civil rights history, sojourn, sojourn to the past Posted in Current Events, Uncategorized | No Comments »
December 8th, 2009
Before the Civil Rights Movement in the United States in and around the 1960’s, much of the prejudice that was being addressed by activism groups, and consequently by the government, was the injustices that African-Americans were facing in the US in that era.
However, with the diversifying population of the country, and increasing immigration numbers, in a post-9/11-America, there is on the the rise other groups towards whom discrimination is being aimed. Today, the Council on American Islamic Relations announced through their statistics that from 2006-2008, they saw an 11% rise in civil rights complaints against these said citizens.
The full report, the US Muslim Civil rights report, documents civil rights discriminatory instances, anti-Muslim violence, and harassment.
While the journey that students embark on through Sojourn to the Past highlights the key benchmarks of the Civil Rights Movement that happened long before any of these students were born, it’s important to note the goals and mission of our organization. It is our aim that through teaching students about past wrongs and injustices that were allowed to carry on far too long in our great nation of freedom, that they can become active members of their communities to proactively and nonviolently confront injustices off all kinds – be they rooted in race, religion, ethnicity, national origin, or any identifying characteristic that should not only be accepted in our society, but embraced as uniquely American.
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December 7th, 2009
Only a few weeks ago, the San Francisco Chronicle reported that “The Lowell”, The Lowell High School student newspaper, published, inadvertently, an ad for a website promoting white supremacy.
The ad was funded by a group that seeks to “campaign to inform, awaken and radicalize our White American youth.” The ad itself was seemingly nondescript – the text simply said “Free Music Downloads” – but the link leads to www.victoryforever.com, a site that very clearly promotes a Hate Group-like mentality. The ad, which cost only $30, reportedly didn’t raise any eyebrows when it was first submitted, and that the web link looked drastically different from the time it was submitted to the time that it ran. The newspaper’s faculty advisors never even looked into the Website, because they took the “deceptive and misleading” ad at face value. Purportedly, the creators of the ad intentionally tried to deceive the newspaper faculty and students through the course of the transaction. District spokesperson Gentle Blythe said that the remaining copies of the paper were pulled, and the mail-out subscriptions will not go out.
A separate anonymous e-mail to The Chronicle [that appears to originate at a computer at Idaho State University], stated, “San Francisco was selected because it has long suffered the ravages of liberal insanity, vile degeneracy and criminal vicitmization of it’s citzens by the very ‘diverse’ populations it seeks to embrace.”
The next week – just after the flare-up around the San Francisco incident was starting to subside – a second school paper was duped. Parents of students at Carmel High School outside of Indianapolis were warned via mass voicemail about the compromise of their student paper, HiLite, by the same white power hate group, Victory Forever. Using an e-mail address on the site, IndyStar reports that a response came from a person identifying as ‘Mike Shields’ and claims to be a spokesperson for the group, which is in the midst of a campaign to recruit “white youth all across America to fight for the survival of the white race,” chose that particular high school because it is one of the largest in the state and its paper is widely read and respected, and that combination gave the group “a great opportunity to spread [their] message”.
Parent Marc Allen says, “These neo-Nazis are pathetic excuses for human beings. Their message is so poor they have to dupe young people into visiting their Web site.” His daughter, Lauren, 18, said she doesn’t think the group would find many converts among her high school classmates, “I don’t think anyone really looks at the ads, to be honest. I don’t think anyone I know would go to the site and say ‘Cool, I’m going to look more into this.’”
Quotes like the one from the above student give promise to all of us working with Sojourn to the Past that discrimination and inequality are on their way to becoming a thing of the past, but incidents like these two, and the people who are behind dishonestly placing these messages in the reading material of impressionable students strengthen our resolve and remind us regularly of the importance of our mission.
Tags: civil rights, civil rights education, sojourn to the past, student rights Posted in Current Events, Uncategorized | 3 Comments »
November 24th, 2009
After an international premiere at the Cannes Film Festival, it was announced on Sunday that Soundtrack for a Revolution was one of the nominees on a 15-film short list for the Best Documentary Film category consideration for the annual Academy Awards.
Music featured in the work includes musical artists the Roots, the Blind Boys of Alabama, John Legend, and Wyclef Jean. And the film tells the story of the civil rights movement, focusing on how music played a role in the struggles.
Directors Bill Guttentag and Dan Sturman have partnered on the project.
Tags: civil rights, civil rights movement, sojourn, sojourn to the past Posted in Current Events | No Comments »
November 23rd, 2009
As we tweeted last Wednesday, James Armstrong, the Birmingham barber and Civil Rights leader who iconically carried the American flag to lead the 1965 Selma-to-Montgomery voting rights march, has died of heart failure. The United States Civil Rights community has truly lost one of its pivotal, historic members in his passing.
 James Armstrong, pictured here at the 40th anniversary re-enactment of the Selma Voting Rights March to Montgomery, known as Bloody Sunday.
One of his most notable and long-standing actions was that Armstrong was the catalyst in initiating the 1957 class-action lawsuit to integrate area schools after wanting to enrolls his sons in the all-white Graymont Elementary school. Speaking to his dedication to the cause, and to his persistence in the fight for equal rights, when interviewed at one of the anniversary marches that he regularly attended in Selma that commemorate the now-famous march, he’s quoted as saying “I’ll keep coming back as long as I can walk. One day, I may even come in a wheelchair.”
Armstrong was a WWII army veteran – having been drafted to fight at age 18 – but his greatest fight may have been right here on American soil. He ran his own business, the barber shop that boasted the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. as a loyal customer, was beneficial to conduct sit-ins and other demonstrations without fear of retribution from an employer.
Perhaps his biggest disappointment – per Shirley Gavin Floyd, the business manager for the Civil Rights Activist Committee in Birmingham – was that he had to cancel his trip to DC this past winter for the inauguration of President Barack Obama, whose election he saw as a culmination of his efforts.
Tags: civil rights, civil rights history, civil rights movement, James Armstrong, sojourn, sojourn to the past Posted in Current Events, Uncategorized | No Comments »
November 19th, 2009
Back in September, we wrote a blog about Jerry Mitchell and his amazing story about how he’s been devoting much of his career to tirelessly reporting on unresolved Civil Rights crimes from decades past. For said work, he was this year awarded one of the prestigious MacArthur Foundation ‘Genius Grants’.
In case anyone missed it, we just wanted to make sure we made mention of his appearance on Comedy Central’s Colbert Report last month. This was just absolutely wonderful exposure for the results of so many years of hard work, due to the humorous, tongue-in-cheek pundit’s large national following.
Watch the video online at Colbert Nation:
Tags: civil rights, civil rights history, civil rights movement, sojourn, sojourn to the past Posted in Current Events | 1 Comment »
November 18th, 2009
 Director Lee Daniels
Coming off of directing Precious, what could very possible be an Oscar-contender this year, it’s been released that director Lee Daniels is in “advanced negotiations” to direct Selma – a film about the 1965 march in Dallas County Alabama that essentially embodies the height of the Civil Rights movement. While Precious was based on a Novel – Sapphire’s “Push” – the Selma script is the product of Paul Webb (who has long-been involved on Steven Spielberg’s Lincoln which is still not yet finished).
As if you need even more reasons to excitedly anticipate this project, the film’s producer is Christian Colson, who most recently won an Oscar for the international stand-out film Slumdog Millionaire. Additionally, Plan B – the production company belonging to Brad Pitt, Dede Gardner, and Jeremy Kleiner – is coming onto the project to co-produce. Though, no cast or budget has been released yet.
From the people involved alone, this is a work that is bound to be as impressive as it is moving. As the guys at Collider note, “It doesn’t take a genius to tell this project is being set up for some serious awards consideration in 2010 should it complete production and hit theaters next year.” They continue that it should, “have some support not only because of its subject matter, but because of the success of Precious both critically and at the box office.”
Here’s to hoping that a film that caliber of Slumdog generates not only attention from the press, but is an inspiration to high-profile celebrities and viewers alike to get involved in the continuing fight for equal Civil Rights for all.
Tags: civil rights, civil rights movement, Selma, sojourn, sojourn to the past Posted in Current Events, Uncategorized | 4 Comments »
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