#rev. yolanda
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blondebrainpowered · 3 months ago
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Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., his wife Coretta, daughter Yolanda & Martin Luther III sit together as they play piano in their living room in Atlanta in the 1960s. 
Photo Credit: Donald Uhrbrock/Getty Images
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megsmithwriter · 2 months ago
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Yolanda and Rev. Clyde Talley talk about Yes We Care, their nonprofit based at Belmont Zion A.M.E. Church in Worcester, Mass. Part of my article, “What is a Christian?” which drops April 17 at worcestermag.com and April 18 in the Worcester Magazine print edition, available in the Telegram & Gazette newspaper.
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higherlearningtvshow · 4 months ago
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Resources from the West Side Minister's Coaltion Networking Meeting! (actual meeting listed below)
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As Host of this monthly meeting for the last couple decade, (under the leadership of the late Rev. Louis Flowers) now under the hardest working woman behind-the-scenes of WMC, Dr. Phalese Binion. we bring you resources and information to share with your community.
Before bringing this speaker on, I shared with the audience that I am grieving the loss of so many relatives. This month, it's the Life Celebration of my little brother/cuzn Darryl Frierson. (scroll down to see info) She could tell I was still in grief mode.
Ms. Malisha Porter of GraceAndMercyfs.com spoke on Grief, reminding us that GRIEF is just a journey, not a destination.
Please call her if you need more information. 773-956-4000
Officer Capers of 15th District shared information
Feb. 19th
Chilli and Conversation 11am-7pm
5301 W. Madison Ave.
Chicago Police Dept.
Feb. 23rd - Chicago Police Dept. 100 N. Central Park Ave.
Youth Cooking Classes 4-7pm more info at ChicagoPolice.org
Click on EVENTS!
Pastor Perry shared Car Charging Opportunities
With all the new electric vehicles now available to the general public, financial opportunities exist for those interested!
773-332-8540
Congressman Danny Davis Office Town Hall Meeting
5450 W. Glady's 3-5pmCST
FREE! Open to the Public!
Office 773-533-7520
Feb. 22nd Domestic Violence Resources
2100 N. Kildare 12pm-3pmCST
TEENS FREE MOVIES!
Sarah's Inn Resources Available
Feb.. 27th
Teen Awareness Summit 10am- 2pm CST
Mechelle Clark High School
(Dating, Bullying, Violence Prevention, etc)
March 14th Women's HERstory Month
Honoring Women in Chicago Making A Difference!
118 N Clark Stree 5th Floor 9am
March 21st
Activist Yolanda Carter Speaks
Blue Door 2551 w. Cermak
10am -2pm CST
Church Shoes Available!
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rembertko · 8 months ago
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Good Sunday Morning! It’s Gospel Music Time with K.O. Rembert! Y’all be blessed!
Sunday, October 20, 2024 Playlist
Walking In The Light - The Georgia Mass Choir
New Life - Rev. Timothy Wright & The NY Fellowship Mass Choir
When I Rose This Morning - The Mississippi Mass Choir
Climbing Up The Ladder - Michael Boone
I Thank You Jesus - Roy & Revelation
Church Doors - Yolanda Adams
Go wherever you go to buy your music & support these Gospel artists!
Follow K.O. Rembert:  https://linktr.ee/rembertko and send in your requests for Gospel Music Time every Saturday. God bless you.
Gospel Music Time Donations/CashApp: $DJKO9291
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thetarotman · 1 year ago
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TINY DESK Contest- Rev. Yolanda www.Yolanda.net/audio
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ano07 · 6 years ago
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Photographing Ron B’s No Boundaries Up Close and Personal show with the bokeh master, Sigma 105mm f/1.4 lens.
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twixnmix · 8 years ago
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Martin Luther King Jr. and Coretta Scott King with their daughter, Yolanda Denise King at Dexter Avenue Baptist Church in Montgomery,1956.
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yylarchive · 5 years ago
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The Vacation
Photographer: Yolanda Y. Liou
Stylist: Miko Sarmiento
Make-up Artist: Snowkei Lan
Hair: Miti Kondo
Model: Connie Robinson
Model: Maja @premiermodels
REVS, 2016
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inthemarginalized · 3 years ago
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We today have that same power if we but choose it, but choose it we must. What makes each of us unique is the individual choices we make. There will always be doubters, those who prefer inaction. I have heard it all, but I am still a believer in the dream. I choose to believe. - Yolanda King (November 17, 1955 – May 15, 2007)
She was an activist and first-born child of Coretta Scott King and civil rights leader Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. She was known also for her artistic and entertainment endeavors and public speaking.
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sleepysera · 3 years ago
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1.15.22 Headlines
WORLD NEWS
Kazakhstan: Death toll rises to 225 in days of protests (AP)
“A top law-enforcement official in Kazakhstan said Saturday that 225 people died during the violent demonstrations that shook the country this month, a significantly higher number than previously announced. Serik Shalabayev, head of the criminal prosecution service in the general prosecutor’s office, said 19 police officers or servicemen were among the dead, news reports said. More than 4,300 people were injured, he said. The previous official death toll was 164.”
Covid: Expect more worrisome variants after omicron, scientists say (AP)
“Every infection provides a chance for the virus to mutate, and omicron has an edge over its predecessors: It spreads way faster despite emerging on a planet with a stronger patchwork of immunity from vaccines and prior illness. That means more people in whom the virus can further evolve. Experts don’t know what the next variants will look like or how they might shape the pandemic, but they say there’s no guarantee the sequels of omicron will cause milder illness or that existing vaccines will work against them.”
India: Hindu extremists are calling for genocide against Muslims (CNN)
“Her words and calls for violence from other religious leaders were met with a roar of applause from the large audience, a video from the three-day conference in the northern Indian city of Haridwar shows. But across India, people were outraged. Nearly a month on, many are still furious at the lack of government response or arrests over the comments, which they say highlights a worsening climate for the country's Muslims. After mounting pressure, India's top court intervened on Wednesday, asking for a response from state and federal authorities within 10 days.”
US NEWS
Tsunami Advisory: Volcano erupts in Pacific, West Coast under tsunami advisory (AP)
“An undersea volcano erupted in spectacular fashion near the Pacific nation of Tonga on Saturday, sending large tsunami waves crashing across the shore and people rushing to higher ground. A tsunami advisory was in effect for Hawaii, Alaska and the U.S. Pacific coast, with reports of waves pushing boats up in the docks in Hawaii. Beaches and piers were closed across Southern California as a precaution but the National Weather Service tweeted there were “no significant concerns about inundation.” Strong rip currents were possible, however, and officials warned people to stay out of the water.”
Martin Luther King Jr: King family to rally in Arizona for voting bills for MLK Day (AP)
“As the nation prepares to mark the birthday of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr., some members of his family are spending it in conservative-leaning Arizona to mobilize support for languishing federal voting rights legislation. Martin Luther King III; his wife, Arndrea Waters King; and their daughter Yolanda Renee King, 13, will take part Saturday in an on-the-ground campaign for voting rights in Phoenix. They will march with local activists and supporters from Pilgrim Rest Baptist Church, a predominantly Black church, and speak about the importance of “no celebration without legislation.””
Covid: Americans now have access to free at-home Covid-19 testing kits (CNN)
“Starting Saturday, many Americans can get home Covid-19 tests at no cost through their private insurance. They can obtain the tests from pharmacies, retailers and online vendors. The program is part of the Biden administration's effort to increase access to testing around the US. It will also distribute free home tests, which will be available to order starting next Wednesday.”
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redhairedwolfwitch · 5 years ago
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Stargirl and Black Canary III Part 2: Blue Valley, Nebraska
Origins
You woke up at sunrise the next day, excitement rushing through you as you hurried to pack the belongings you were taking to Nebraska.
You were going to stay in an apartment above a cafe, down the street from a gym and across the road to a new mechanics shop.
“You sure you’re going to be okay in Nebraska on your own?” Your grandmother asked, her hands on your shoulders to stop you from climbing into the taxi that would take you to the airport.
“I didn’t fancy driving from Washington to Nebraska, so I’m flying there, all my stuff is going to be there when I arrive and there is internet so I will call you when I get there.” You assured her with a soft smile, your hands on her wrists comfortingly.
Your grandmother nodded, watching you climb into the taxi.
Chewing your lip, your fingers ran over the straps of the backpack next to you, tugging it closer as the files and notepads of research came into view. Your face went blank as you zipped up the backpack, watching as Starling City faded and the airport approached.
///
The plane took you 25 miles north of Blue Valley, in Sioux City, South Dakota, meaning another taxi ride that eventually dropped you off in Blue Valley, at 10pm...
Blue Valley was different to Star City. Day and night.
It was quiet but not in an eerie, crime ridden way. It was peaceful quiet, one of those towns that screamed American Dream... probably because it was being developed by a company literally called The American Dream.
You let out a breath of relief as the taxi pulled up outside the cafe. The lights were still on but the sign said closed from what you could tell as you approached with your suitcase and backpack.
///
You were sat in the window, trying to work on your suit when you saw a glow from the corner of your eye.
“What is it? What do you see?” A blonde girl in a red, white and blue get-up whisper-shouted to a glowing stick. You raised an eyebrow at this, watching her floating in the middle of the street.
“A cafe? Really, it’s 4am and you’re wanting to go to a cafe?” The girl exclaimed, being jerked forwards by the stick which seemed to have a life of its own.
“Wait...” You whispered in realisation, hurrying over to the files that your grandmother had stored up in the attic until you found the one with the thing you recognised.
“The Cosmic Staff. Originally Starman but clearly, not anymore... looks like we’ve got Stargirl in Blue Valley...” You hurried over to your notes, scrawling on a post-it note to add to your theories.
You pretended like you didn’t see Stargirl hovering closer to your window to look in.
“Who are you?” Stargirl whispered, the staff hovering closer and closer to the window so that she could see in before you turned around, closing the curtains as Stargirl managed to hover out of sight.
“We’ll come back in the day... I think she’s important.” Stargirl whispered to the Cosmic Staff which made a buzz of agreement as they hurried away from your apartment building to return back home.
///
“Why are we going to a cafe? I thought we were going to track down more of the ISA?” Yolanda Montez asked as she followed Courtney Whitmore into the same cafe that Stargirl had hovered infront of the previous night.
“The staff dragged me out here, to show me a certain person and she had all these theories and some JSA files. Either she’s part of the IJA or she could help us.” Courtney whispered, dragging Yolanda over to the booth by taking her wrist.
Courtney smiled as Beth Chapel and Rick Tyler walked in separately but approaching the same booth.
“What’s so special about this cafe, anyway?” Rick asked, glancing around.
A revving caught the attention of the four teenagers as they turned their heads to the motorbike approaching the cafe parking.
“Is that a Harley-Davidson? Damn, those are rare in Blue Valley.” Rick remarked before Yolanda shushed him as the motorbike’s owner walked into the cafe, the chime of the bell ringing through the space.
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You let out a grin as your bike was dropped off after the rest of your belongings to the apartment, the desire to ride it around the town overwhelming you as you slipped on your helmet and hurried over to it.
As the cafe came into view, you slowed down to pull up, dismounting from the bike after you parked and turned the engine off, the keys in your pocket as you walked over to the cafe door, removing your helmet as the bell chiming caught the attention of everyone inside.
Your eyes drifted across the cafe’s customers before a snap of fingers in your face made you look over to the counters.
“Lance, I need you to mop the floors and take some orders whilst I sort something out, okay?” You stared at them for a moment before hesitatingly nodding, your jaw hanging open momentarily before you heard the teenage whispers.
“Lance? Is her name Lance?”
“Could be a surname.”
“We need to get upstairs and look at those files she has-”
You shook your head as you went to grab the mop, scowling slightly as you rinsed it out to mop the floor of the cafe, leaving wet floor signs in your wake before turning to grab a pad and pen.
“I don’t even work here.” You muttered under your breath as you walked over to the table of the four teenagers who had watched you the entire time.
“You four want anything or-?” You began, tapping the pen on the wad of paper.
“Your name would be a good start.” The blonde began but you just raised an eyebrow.
“Funny. I meant cafe food and drink,” you deadpanned, rolling your eyes as one of the other girls gave the blonde a warning look as the blonde gave you a sheepish smile.
“Sorry...”
You just shook your head, scrawling down the order to pass over the counter as a snapping of fingers made you turn around.
“I’m back, thank you, you can go now.” You nodded, passing them the pad and pen before you hurried behind the counter towards the door up the stairs.
“Dammit.”
“We’ll just have to try when she’s not in, maybe someone could distract her then someone else could sneak up?”
///
You were sat on your bed with your biker jacket and some leftover fishnet fabric from your grandmother’s Black Canary suit when you heard a crash and the sound of metal being clawed at.
“Wildcat?” You whispered under your breath, standing up to glance through the curtains as you spotted four figures lurking outside.
The JSA files you took from your grandmother were hidden in the corner in a box that Wildcat’s claws could easily cut through.
“Screw it.” 
Scrambling for your jacket and the rest of your suit, you quickly changed into your Black Canary attire.
You’d managed to put your grandmother’s mask on after a little bit of tailoring and were now waiting for the four heroes outside of make a move.
///
“So what’s the plan?” Wildcat enquired as she, Stargirl, Hourman and Dr Mid-Nite arrived on the street of the cafe.
“Not be seen, distract her if she’s inside, sneak in, take the files she has and see if there’s anything about who she is.” Stargirl whispered, gesturing at Wildcat for the distraction.
“We could just ask Chuck-” Dr Mid-Nite began but a screeching metal sound echoed through the passage.
“Dr Mid-Nite, is she in there?” Stargirl whispered, ignoring her squeals of excitement of being acknowledged by her superhero name in the process.
“Infra-red shows two people inside but-”
“But, what?” Wildcat whispered before she was thrown against the very dumpster she’d clawed by an unknown force.
///
You let out a sigh, staring down at the four figures from where you stood, a birds eye view for a canary. The roof, you were on the roof. You deadpanned to yourself with an eyeroll before blowing a kiss, a silent, smaller canary cry at Wildcat before her claws made any more noise.
“What the hell?” Was all you heard as you slipped back to avoid Stargirl flying up to the roof on the Cosmic Staff.
You barely made it down the fire escapes to the ground when you were cornered by Wildcat, Dr Mid-Nite and Hourman.
“Who are you?” A hovering Stargirl asked, your eyes flicking over all four of the teenagers before you spoke.
“The justice you can’t run from.” You snarked, releasing a sonic scream to send them all flying back, but not permanently deafen.
///
“Soundwaves recognised-” the AI within the Dr Mid-Nite goggles began to analyse the soundwaves blasted at the new JSA.
“Hey, Chuck’s analysing the sound blast... apparently one of the original JSA members had the same ability, it was called... the Canary Cry.” Beth Chapel explained, hearing Rick growl under his breath.
“What the hell is a Canary Cry?” 
“A genetic mutation enabling the JSA member, known as the Black Canary, to produce high pitch screams that could vary in power to attack, apparently, the original Black Canary was called Dinah Drake-Lance... records show she had two daughters, one has barely any information on her, then the younger daughter, who had a child herself... that’s strange...” 
“What?” Hourman growled, noticing how you had disappeared as Dr Mid-Nite’s goggles began to analyse you.
“There’s contradicting birth records, two dates of birth, years apart for the same person, temporal anomalies, Chuck says, whatever that means.”
“Who are you!?” Wildcat shouted as you appeared behind them, watching.
“The Black Canary.” You deadpanned, frowning as you heard what sounded like rockets behind you.
S.T.R.I.P.E. had arrived.
The New Justice Society of America
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blackkudos · 5 years ago
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Yolanda King
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Yolanda Denise King (November 17, 1955 – May 15, 2007) was an African American activist and first-born child of civil rights leaders Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr. and Coretta Scott King. She was also known for her artistic and entertainment endeavors and public speaking. Her childhood experience was greatly influenced by her father's highly public and influential activism.
She was born two weeks before Rosa Parks famously refused to give up her seat on a public transit bus in Montgomery, Alabama, she occasionally experienced threats to her life, designed to intimidate her parents, and became a secondary caregiver to her younger siblings and was bullied at school. When her father was assassinated on April 4, 1968, the 12-year-old Yolanda King was noted for her composure during the highly public funeral and mourning events. She joined her mother and siblings in marches, and she was lauded by such noted figures as Harry Belafonte, who established a trust fund for her and her siblings.
In her teenage years, she became an effective leader of her class in high school and was given attention by the magazines Jet and Ebony. Her teenage years were filled with even more tragedies, specifically the sudden death of her uncle Alfred Daniel Williams King and the murder of her grandmother, Alberta Williams King. While in high school, she gained lifelong friends. It was the first and only institution where King was not harassed or mistreated because of who her father was. However, she was still misjudged and mistrusted because of her skin color, based on perceptions founded solely upon her relationship with her father. Despite this, King managed to keep up her grades and was actively involved in high school politics, serving as class president for two years. King aroused controversy in high school for her role in a play. She was credited with having her father's sense of humor.
In the 1990s, she supported a retrial of James Earl Ray and publicly stated that she did not hate him. That decade saw King's acting career take off as she appeared in ten separate projects, including Ghosts of Mississippi (1996), Our Friend, Martin (1999) and Selma, Lord, Selma (1999). By the time she was an adult, she had grown to become an active supporter for gay rights and an ally to the LGBT community, as was her mother. She was involved in a sibling feud that pitted her and her brother Dexter against their brother Martin Luther King III and sister Bernice King for the sale of the King Center in Atlanta, Georgia. King served as a spokesperson for her mother during the illness that would eventually lead to her death. King outlived her mother by only 16 months, succumbing to complications related to a chronic heart condition on May 15, 2007.
Early life
Early childhood: 1955–1963
Born in Montgomery, Alabama to Coretta Scott King and Martin Luther King, Jr., she was only two weeks old when Rosa Parks refused to give up her seat on a bus. Even in her infancy, Yolanda was faced with the threats her father was given when they extended to his family. In 1956, a number of white supremacists bombed the King household. Yolanda and her mother were not harmed. She and her mother, at the time of the bomb's detonation, were in the rear section of their home. Despite this, the front porch was damaged and glass broke in the home. She kept her father busy when walking on their home's floors. While her mother liked her name, her father had reservations about naming her "Yolanda" due to the possibility the name would be mispronounced. During the course of her lifetime, King's name was mispronounced to the point that it bothered her. King's father eventually was satisfied with the nickname "Yoki," and wished that if they had a second daughter, they would name her something simpler. The Kings would have another daughter almost eight years later named Bernice (born 1963). King recalled that her mother had been the main parent and dominant figure in their home, while her father was away often. Decision-making towards what school she would attend in first grade was done primarily by her mother, since her father expressed disinterest to her early in the decision making.
Martin Luther King III described his role as the second-born of their family as having made Yolanda jealous, and that she was always overcommitted but "still found time to get to the things that were most important to her". Her mother referred to her as being a confidant during the time following her husband's assassination. She complimented her mother on her achievements and her mother spoke of her in a positive light, as well. When asked by a young boy what she remembered most about her father, she admitted that her father was not able to spend much time with her and the rest of her family. When he did, she would play and swim with him. King cried when she found out her father had been imprisoned. Her father admitted that he had never adjusted to bringing up children under "inexplicable conditions". When she was 6 years old, she was saddened by classmates' remarks that her father was a "jailbird". An important early memory was that she wanted to go to Funtown, a local amusement park, with the rest of her class, but was barred from doing so due to her race. She did not understand, and asked her mother Coretta why she was not able to go. When she replied "Your father is going to jail so that you can go to Funtown." after numerous attempts to explain the issue to her, Yolanda finally understood. After having not seen her father for five weeks while he was in jail, she finally was able to meet with him alongside both of her brothers for less than half an hour.Her father also addressed the issue himself. He told her that there were many whites who were not racist and wanted her to go but there were many who were and did not want her to go. However, her father reassured her as she began to cry that she was "just as good" as anyone who went to Funtown and that one day in the "not too distant future" she was going to be able to go to "any town" along with "all of God's children".
Assassination of John F. Kennedy and Nobel Peace Prize: 1963–1964
On November 22, 1963, when U.S. President John F. Kennedy was assassinated, she learned of his death at school. When she returned home, she rushed to confront her mother about his death and even ignored her grandfather, Martin Luther King, Sr., to tell her mother what she had heard and that they would not get their "freedom now." Her mother tried to debunk this, insisting that they would still get it. She predicted at that time that all of the "Negro leaders" would be killed and the non-leading African-Americans would agree to segregation. Her mother started to realize that Yolanda had become more aware of the possibility that her father could be killed as well. For Christmas 1963, King and her siblings accepted a sacrificial Christmas as appealed by their parents and only received a single gift. King and her brother Martin III bragged about their selflessness at school. In 1964, upon learning her father would receive the Nobel Peace Prize, she asked her mother what her father was going to do with the money he was receiving in addition to the award. After she suggested that he would most likely give it all away, King laughed with her mother.
Enrollment at Spring Street Elementary School and last years with father: 1965–1967
King and her brother Martin Luther King III were enrolled in the fall of 1965 to Spring Street Elementary School. In 1966, she listened to a speech her father gave when he was addressing a rally. At the age of eight after writing her first play, she enrolled in the only integrated drama school of that time. The head of the school was Walt Roberts, father of the actress Julia Roberts. She began speaking at the age of ten and even filled in for her parents on occasion. Her memories of her father prompted her to state that he "believed we were all divine. I have chosen to continue to promote 'we're one, the oneness of us, and shine the spotlight,' as my father did." Coretta King wrote in her memoirs, My Life with Martin Luther King, Jr., that "Martin always said that Yoki came at a time in his life when he needed something to take his mind off the tremendous pressures that bore down upon him."
Father's death: 1968
On the evening of April 4, 1968, when she was 12, Yolanda returned with her mother from Easter-dress shopping when Jesse Jackson called the family and reported that her father had been shot. Soon after, she heard of the event when a news bulletin popped up while she was washing dishes. While her siblings were trying to find out what it meant, Yolanda already knew.She ran out of the room, screamed "I don't want to hear it," and prayed that he would not die. She asked her mother at this time, if she should hate the man who killed her father. Her mother told her not to, since her father would not want that. King complimented her mother as a "brave and strong lady," leading to a hug between them. Four days later, she and her brothers accompanied their mother to Memphis City Hall on her own terms, as she and her brothers had wanted to come. King flew to Memphis, Tennessee with her brothers and mother and participated in leading a march in Memphis with sanitation workers and civil rights leaders.
King was visited by Mrs. Kennedy before her father's funeral. After the funeral, she was visited by classmates from Spring Street Middle School with flowers and cards. At that time, she was also called by Andrea Young, whose own father had insisted that she should. The two were the same age. Bill Cosby flew to Atlanta after the funeral and entertained King and her siblings. King and her siblings were assured an education thanks to the help of Harry Belafonte, who set up a trust fund for them years prior to their father's death.
In regards to the possibility that her father could have been saved, King said she doubted that her father could have lived much longer given all the stress he had during his tenure as a leader of the Civil Rights Movement. She did admit that, had he lived or he been listened to more, "we would be in a far better place." King openly stated years later that she did not hate James Earl Ray.
Teenage years and high school: 1968–1972
At Grady High School, King was president of her sophomore and junior class, and vice president of her senior class. She ranked in the top 10 percent of her class. She was active in student government and drama. She made lifelong friends while in the institution that would collectively be called the "Grady Girls". She was also on the student council. At that time, King still did not know what she wanted to do with her life, but acknowledged that many wanted her to be a preacher. Her inclinations were driven to be artistic, which did not suit the political aspects of her father's life. Of the King children, Yolanda was the only one to attend Grady High School, as her siblings would go to different high schools following her graduation.
During the family's interview with Mike Wallace in December 1968, Yolanda was introduced by her mother and revealed her role in keeping the family together. Being the oldest, she had to watch her three younger siblings; Martin Luther King III, Dexter King and Bernice King and referred to the three as independent when she watched them whenever their mother went out of town. Sometime after Martin Luther King's assassination, King told her mother "Mom, I'm not going to cry because my dad is not dead. He may be dead physically, and one day I am going to see him again".
On July 21, 1969, King's uncle and father's brother Alfred Daniel Williams King was found dead in the swimming pool of his home. His youngest two children, Esther and Vernon, were vacationing with King and her family in Jamaica when they heard of his death. On April 4, 1970, the second anniversary of her father's death, she and her sister Bernice attended their grandfather Martin Luther King, Sr.'s silent prayer for their father at his gravesite. The practice of going to her father's grave on the anniversary of either his birth or assassination became an annual ritual for the King family to mourn his death.
In her teenage years, King preferred to go by her nickname "Yoki." As she said during an interview, "I prefer Yoki. Maybe when I'm older I won't be able to stand Yoki, but Yolanda sounds so formal!" She felt teenagers were confused and were using drugs as a method to escape their problems.
At 15 she was subject to controversy when she appeared in the play "The Owl and the Pussycat" with a white male lead. Though her mother kept her naïve to the controversies so she could "fulfill [her] objective, which was to do the play", that did not stop her from learning of the negativity implemented from her role years later. Her grandfather Martin Luther King, Sr. initially was not going to go to her performance due to opposition by locals, but changed his mind afterward. During a Sunday visit to Church, King was forced to stand before the congregation and explain her actions. In response to her role in the play and her own response to the role, a man wrote to Jet predicting that she would marry a white person before she was eighteen. Despite statements such as these, King did not become aware of the public discomfort with her role until years later, citing her mother's involvement in her knowledge of the criticism.
When King was 16 she received attention in Jet in 1972, where she talked about what her father's famous name was doing for her life. In the interview with the magazine, She related how people expected her to be "stuck up" and referred to it as one of the "handicaps" of being Martin Luther King's child. She recalled having met a friend that was scared of being acquainted with her, because of her father's identity and expressed her thoughts in the colleges she wished to attend. King would ultimately attend Smith College in Northampton, Massachusetts after graduating from high school.
King called her father's name and having to live up to it a "challenge" and recalled a friend when she first met a friend of hers, who believed she could not say anything to King but after beginning to know her, realized that she was "no worse than my other friends" and she "could say anything" to her. King also voiced her dislike of the assumption that she would behave just like her mother and father, and the difficulty of being perceived as not being someone others could talk to. When asked what kind of world she would like to live in, King said she wished "people could love everybody". Despite this wish, she acknowledged that this was of no ease and expressed happiness that her father had changed many things, and even made some people gain self-esteem.Positive reception came to this interview, and Yolanda was even called the "leader of the 16-year-olds" for her "calmness, her concern," and "her vision".
Early adulthood
College: 1972–1976
After graduating from high school, she went to Smith College. She took classes taught by Manning Marable and Johnnella Butler, and became satisfied with her choice of a college. But after finishing her sophomore year and returning home so she could work over the summer, her grandmother Alberta Williams King was killed on June 30, 1974. With her death, the only remaining members of King's father's immediate family were her grandfather Martin Luther King, Sr. and aunt Christine King Ferris. She was also subject to some harassment by her classmates, describing it as the "era when students were making demands and many black students were closer to the teachings of Malcolm X, or what they thought were his teachings." The children referred to her father as an "Uncle Tom" and she was scared that he would go down in history as such. She reflected "I had never read his works. I was just someone who loved someone, and I knew he had done great things and now people didn't appreciate it." She proceeded to read his books, and started to believe that her father had been correct all along.
When asked about what pressures emerged from being a daughter of Martin Luther King, Jr., King stated that "as soon as people heard me speak, they would compare me to my father ... My siblings had the same kind of pressure. There was such a need, like they were looking for a miracle." At the time of her turmoil in college, King recalled having not known Malcolm X and "didn't understand daddy, so here I was trying to defend something I thought I knew about but really didn't." On April 4, 1975, King joined her family in placing azaleas over her father's crypt, marking the seventh anniversary of his assassination.
Immediate life after Smith College: 1976–1978
An alumna of Smith College after graduating in 1976, she was the subject of an essay among the "remarkable women" during a celebration during the college's one hundred and twenty-fifth year and she was a member of the Board of Directors of the Martin Luther King Jr. Center for Nonviolent Social Change, Inc. (the official national memorial to her father) and was founding Director of the King Center's Cultural Affairs Program. King became a human rights activist and actress. She stated in 2000 to USA Today, that her acting "allowed me to find an expression and outlet for the pain and anger I felt about losing my father,". Her mother's support helped in starting her acting career. Despite some early opposition to acting that she received during her controversial play in high school, King still tried to get roles and actively tried performing.
She served on the Partnership Council of Habitat for Humanity, was the first national Ambassador for the American Stroke Association's "Power to End Stroke" Campaign, a member of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, a sponsor of the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom, Human Rights Campaign, and held a lifetime membership in the NAACP. King received a Bachelor of Arts degree from Smith College in Northampton, Massachusetts, a master's degree in theater from New York University, and an Honorary Doctorate of Humane Letters from Marywood University. In 1978 she starred as Rosa Parks in the TV miniseries King (based on her father's life and released on DVD in 2005).
Meeting Attallah Shabazz: 1979
In 1979, Yolanda met Attallah Shabazz, the eldest daughter of Malcolm X, after arrangements had been made by Ebony Magazine to take a photograph of the two women together. Both were worried that they would not like each other due to their fathers' legacies. Instead, the two quickly found common ground in their activism and in their positive outlook towards the future of African-Americans. The two were young adults at the time and had a mutual friend who noticed they were both studying theater in New York and arranged for them to meet. A few months after King and Shabazz met, the pair decided to collaborate on a theatrical work, resulting in Stepping into Tomorrow. The play was directed towards teens and focused on the 10th year reunion of six high school friends. Stepping into Tomorrow led to the formation of Nucleus in the 1980s, a theater company which King and Shabazz founded. The theater company was based in New York City and Los Angeles and focused on addressing the issues that their fathers, Martin Luther King, Jr. and Malcolm X, spoke of in their lifetimes.The pair performed in around 50 cities a year and did lectures together, typically in school settings.
Adult life
King holiday, arrests, and return to Smith College: 1980–1989
When presenting herself in 1980 to the GSA staff members, she stated: "Jim Crow [segregation] is dead, but his sophisticated cousin James Crow, Esq., is very much alive. We must cease our premature celebration [about civil rights already achieved] and get back to the struggle. We cannot be satisfied with a few black faces in high places when millions of our people have been locked out." She received a standing ovation afterwards, alongside a thunderous applause. In February 1982, King was a speaker during the centennial of Anne Spencer's birth. In 1984, she was arrested in the view of her mother for having protested in front of the South African Embassy, in support of anti-apartheid views. It was the first time she had ever been arrested. On January 7, 1986, Yolanda, her brother Martin Luther King III and her sister Bernice were arrested for "disorderly conduct" by officers responding to a call from a Winn Dixie market, of which had an ongoing protest against it since September of the previous year.
She showed dissatisfaction with her "generation" on January 20, 1985, and referred to them as being "laid-back and unconcerned", and "forgetting the sacrifices that allowed them to get away with being so laid-back". That same year, she presented the Martin Luther King, Jr. Award for Public Service to Chicago Mayor Harold Washington during the fifth annual Ebony American Black Achievement Awards.
She celebrated her father's holiday on January 16, 1986 and attended a breakfast in Chicago with Mayor Harold Washington. She stated that her father had a "magnificent dream", but admitted that "it still is only a dream." King started Black History Month of 1986 by giving a speech in Santa Ana, which called for the study of African-American history to not "relegated to the shortest and coldest month of the year."After having been a public speaker for over twenty years, Yolanda recalled her talents having "happened very naturally growing up in a house like mine". She also found "great irony" in President Ronald Reagan having signed a bill to make Martin Luther King, Jr. Day a national holiday.
She kicked off Martin Luther King, Jr. Day by starting a weeklong celebration on January 12, 1987 and talked to students about opportunities that they had at that point which their parents and grandparents did not have.On April 8, 1988, King and Shabazz were honored by Los Angeles County supervisors for their "unifying" performance and message on stage at the Los Angeles Theater Center the previous night. Their play Stepping into Tomorrow was praised by supervisors as being "entertaining and enlightening." At the time of the honor, King said that their production company had been approached by organizations seeking to arrange special staging of the play for gang members before May 1, when the show's run would end. Supervisor Kenneth Hahn said to King that he "sensed I was in the presence of a great man when I met your father."She returned to Smith College on January 26, 1989. There, she gave a speech and made references to her past difficult experiences when first coming to the college. King made it clear that while she had not been "endeared" to the institution, she was still "grateful" for her experience. She called for Americans to memorialize those who gave their lives for "the struggle for peace and justice." At this point in her life, King also served as director of cultural affairs for the King Center for Nonviolent Social Change and was tasked with raising and directing funds for all artistic events.
Arizona boycott and James Earl Ray retrial: 1990–1999
On December 9, 1990, she canceled a planned appearance in a play in Tucson, Arizona and ignored a boycott going on at the time by civil rights groups and other activists for Arizona voters rejecting the proposal of Martin Luther King, Jr. Day being celebrated there. King and Shabazz had planned the play months before the voters of the state rejecting the holiday, and King prepared a statement which solidified her reasons for supporting the boycott. Despite this, Shabazz still appeared in the state and performed in the play. On January 17, 1991, Yolanda spoke before a crowd of students at Edmonds Community College, around 200 in number. She debunked complacency in having any role in progression of her father's dream. She joined her mother in placing a wreath around her father's crypt. King stressed in 1992 that love would help people make their mark on the world. That same year, she also spoke at Indiana University. In October, King gave support for a Cabrini-Green family that wants to escape the violence, and a fundraiser for their cause.
25 years after her father's assassination, she went to his gravesite. There, she joined hands with her siblings and mother along with other civil rights activists, singing We Shall Overcome. During July 1993, she agreed to speak at the Coral Springs City Centre for airfare and a fee in January 1994. She originally wanted $8,000, but was negotiated down to $6,500. During said speech, she mentioned that the fact that the poverty line in America among children had nearly tripled and urged people to "reach out" and "do what you can". In October, she uttered her belief that her father's dream of integration was not understood fully.
On February 1, 1994 King attempted to speak before a diverse class of students at North Central College. She stated, "It is entirely appropriate that you would choose to focus on multiculturalism as the opening activity of Black History Month. The only reason why Black History Month was created and still exists is because America is still struggling and trying to come to grips, come to terms with the diversity of its people." In July 1994, after seeing some photographs of her father prior to his death, Yolanda lamented that "this [had] brought back a lot of memories. It's often hard for young people to understand the fear and terror so many people felt and how bold they were to get involved in the marches. But walking through the first part of the exhibit I felt that terror." She honored her father in 1995 by performing in the Chicago Sinfonietta in the play "A Lincoln Portrait", in which she was the narrator. The "commitment" to diverse members in the audience and the play itself, was what represented the opportunities for which King fought.
In the fall of 1995, at age 39, she joined Ilyasah Shabazz and Reena Evers in saluting their mothers as they chaired an attempt at registering one million African-American women to vote in the presidential election of 1996. King joined the rest of her family in February 1997, in supporting a retrial for James Earl Ray, the man convicted of her father's murder, having realized that "without our direct involvement, the truth will never come out." In an interview with People magazine in 1999, she recalled when she first learned of her father's death and stated that "to this day, [her] heart skips a beat every time [she] hear one of those special bulletins." King appeared in the film Selma, Lord, Selma, based on the 1965 Selma to Montgomery marches as Miss Bright. Prior to the film's release, King expressed belief in children of the time only knowing "Martin Luther King Jr. was killed, but when it is time to talk about the facts and the history, there is not a lot of knowledge. They look at me when I'm talking as if this is science fiction."
Final years: 2000–2007
King attended and spoke at the Human Rights Campaign Detroit Gala Dinner of 2000. In a twenty-four-minute-long speech, she brought up the presidential election of that year, and also quoted the words of Bobby Kennedy by recalling his line which he took from George Bernard Shaw, that of "Some men see things as they are and say why? I dream things that never were and say why not?". During a presentation in May 2000, King was asked if the human race would ever become "color blind". In response, she pushed for "the goal" to be "color acceptance." Following the September 11 attacks, King spoke in North Chicago in 2002 and related that her father's wisdom during the crisis would have been of great aid to her. She mentioned the possibility that the event could have been a calling for Americans to put their loyalty towards "their race, tribe and nation", as her father once said. She, her brother Martin Luther King III and Al Sharpton sang We Shall Overcome in front of "The Sphere", which stood atop the World Trade Center prior to the September 11 attacks.
In honor of her father, King promoted a show in Los Angeles entitled "Achieving the Dream" in 2001. During the play, she changed costume numerous times and adjusted her voice and body language when changing roles. King and Elodia Tate co-edited the book Open My Eyes, Open My Soul: Celebrating Our Common Humanity, published by McGraw-Hill in 2003. In January 2004, King referred to her father as a king, but not as one who "sat on a throne, but one who sat in a dark Birmingham jail." While in Dallas in March 2004, King related; "It's only in the past half-dozen years or so that I have felt comfortable in my own skin. I don't have to try and prove anything to anyone anymore." "I struggled with a lot of the legacy for a long time, probably actually into my 30s before I really made peace with it," Yolanda stated in 2005 on "Western Skies", a public radio show based in Colorado. During the fall of 2004 she played Mama in "A Raisin in the Sun" at the Schwartz Center for the Performing Arts at Cornell University.
Mother's death, sibling dispute and final months: 2006–2007
Coretta Scott King began to decline in health after suffering a stroke in August 2005. She also was diagnosed with ovarian cancer. The four children of the civil rights activist noticed "something was happening". King was having a conversation with her mother in her home when she stopped talking. Coretta Scott King had a blood clot move from her heart and lodge in an artery in her brain. She was hospitalized on August 16, 2005, and was set to come home as well. Alongside the physician that took care of her mother, Dr. Maggie Mermin and her sister, Yolanda told the press that her mother was making progress on a daily basis and was expected to make a full recovery. She became a spokesman for the American Heart Association after her mother's stroke, promoting a campaign to raise awareness about strokes.
That year, she and her brother Dexter came to oppose their other brother and sister, Martin Luther King III and Bernice King, on the matter of selling the King Center. King and Dexter were in favor of sale, but their other siblings were not. After Coretta Scott King died on January 30 of the next year, Yolanda, like her siblings, attended her funeral. When asked about how she was faring following the death of her mother, Yolanda responded: "I connected with her spirit so strongly. I am in direct contact with her spirit, and that has given me so much peace and so much strength." She found her mother's personal papers in her home.
She preached in January 2007 to an audience in Ebenezer Baptist Church to be an oasis for peace and love, as well as to use her father's holiday as starting ground for their own interpretations of prejudice. She spoke on Martin Luther King, Jr. Day 2007 to attendants at the Ebenezer Baptist Church and stated: "We must keep reaching across the table and, in the tradition of Martin Luther King Jr. and Coretta Scott King, feed each other,". After her hour-long presentation, she joined her sister and her aunt, Christine King Farris, in signing books. On May 12, 2007, days before her death, she spoke at St. Mary Medical Center, on the part of the American Stroke Association. It would be the last time she would speak on behalf of the association.
Death
On May 15, 2007, King stated to her brother Dexter that she was tired, though he thought nothing of it due to her "hectic" schedule. Around an hour later, King collapsed in the Santa Monica, California home of Philip Madison Jones, her brother Dexter King's best friend, and could not be revived. Her death came a year after her mother died. Her family has speculated that her death was caused by a heart condition. In the early hours of May 19, 2007, King's body was brought to Atlanta, Georgia by private plane belonging to Bishop Eddie Long. A public memorial for Yolanda King was held on May 24, 2007, at Ebenezer Baptist Church Horizon Sanctuary in Atlanta, Georgia. Many in attendance did not know her, but came out of respect for the King family's history of non-violence and social justice. King was cremated, in accordance with her wishes. She was 51. All three of her siblings lit a candle in her memory.
Bernice King said it was "very difficult standing here blessed as her one and only sister. Yolanda, from your one and only, I thank you for being a sister and for being a friend." Martin Luther King III uttered that "Yolanda is still in business. She just moved upstairs." Maya Angelou wrote a tribute to her, which was read during the memorial service. She wrote "Yolanda proved daily that it was possible to smile while wreathed in sadness. In fact, she proved that the smile was more powerful and sweeter because it had to press itself through mournfulness to be seen, force itself through cruelty to show that the light of survival shines for us all." Many former classmates of both Grady High School and Smith College attended to remember her. Raphael Warnock stated; "She dealt with the difficulty of personal pain and public responsibility and yet ... she emerged from it all victorious. Thank you for her voice."
Ideas, influence, and political stances
To the time of her death, King continued to express denial in her father's dreams and ideals being fulfilled during her lifetime. In 1993, she debunked any thought that her father's "dream" had been anything but a dream, and was quoted as saying "It's easier to build monuments than to make a better world. It seems we've stood still and in many ways gone backward since Martin Luther King Jr. was alive.", during a celebration that marked what would have been her father's sixty-fourth birthday.
Despite this, she was quoted in January 2003 of saying that she was "a 100 percent, dyed-in-the-wool, card-carrying believer in 'The Dream'. It's a dream about freedom—freedom from oppression, from exploitation, from poverty ... the dream of a nation and a world where each and every child will have the opportunity to simply be the very best that they can be." The statement was made while she was in the presence of 800 people who gathered to honor her father at the Everett Theatre. She made it clear that month that she was not trying to fill her father's footsteps, noting jokingly that "They're too big" and that she would "fall and break [her] neck". She also advocated for her father's holiday to be used as a day for helping others, and also expressed dissatisfaction on the basis of people relaxing on his day. On January 15, 1997, she spoke at Florida Memorial College and expressed what she believed her father would feel if "he knew that people were taking a day off in his memory to do nothing". She disliked cliches used to define her father and expressed this to Attallah Shabazz, and recalled having seen a play where her father was a "wimp" and carried The Bible with him everywhere.
King was an ardent activist for gay rights, as was her mother, Coretta. King protested many times over gay rights. She was among 187 people arrested during a demonstration by lesbian and gay rights activists. She stated at the Chicago's Out and Equal Workplace Summit in 2006 "If you are gay, lesbian, bisexual or transgender, you do not have the same rights as other Americans, you cannot marry, ... you still face discrimination in the workplace, and in our armed forces. For a nation that prides itself on liberty, justice and equality for all, this is totally unacceptable. Like her parents and siblings, King did not outright go and make any affiliation with a political party publicly. Despite this, she did voice opposition to President Ronald Reagan in his reluctance to sign Martin Luther King, Jr. Day, her father's national holiday.
Legacy
Dexter King said of his sister, "She gave me permission. She allowed me to give myself permission to be me." Jesse Jackson stated that King "lived with a lot of the trauma of our struggle. The movement was in her DNA." Joseph Lowery stated; "She was a princess and she walked and carried herself like a princess. She was a reserved and quiet person who loved acting." January 2008's issue of Ebony, her relationship with Rev. Suzan Johnson Cook was highlighted in an article written by the minister, as she dubbed her deceased longtime friend a "queen whose name was King". On May 25, 2008, her brother Martin Luther III and his wife, Arndrea, became the parents of a baby girl and named her Yolanda Renee King, after his late sister. During a 2009 reunion at her alma mater Smith College, a walk was done in her memory by fellow alumni.
Portrayals in film
Yolanda has mostly been portrayed in films that revolve around her parents.
Felecia Hunter, in the 1978 television miniseries King.
Melina Nzeza as a child and Ronda Louis-Jeune as an adult, in the 2013 television movie Betty and Coretta.
Filmography
King (1978, TV Mini-Series) as Rosa Parks
Hopscotch (1980) as Coffee Shop Manager
Death of a Prophet (1981, TV Movie) as Betty Shabazz
No Big Deal (1983, TV Movie) as Miss Karnisian's Class
Talkin' Dirty After Dark (1991) as Woman #2
America's Dream (1996, TV Series)
Fluke (1996, TV Movie) as Mrs. Crawford (segment "The Boy Who Painted Christ Black")
Ghosts of Mississippi (1996) as Reena Evers
Drive by: A Love Story (1997, Short) as Dee
Our Friend, Martin (1999, Video) as Christine King (voice)
Selma, Lord, Selma (1999, TV Series) as Miss Bright
Funny Valentines (1999) as Usher Lady #2
The Secret Path (1999, TV Movie) as Ms. Evelyn
Odessa (2000, Short) as Odessa
JAG (2000, TV Series) as Federal Judge Esther Green
Any Day Now (2001, TV Series) as Marilyn Scott
Liberty's Kids (2002, TV Series) as Elizabeth Freeman (voice)
The Still Life (2006) as Herself / Art Buyer
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thesearenotphotographs · 7 years ago
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Drag Queen Story Hour at Park Church Co-op
On Sunday, January 21, 2018, Drag Queen Story Hour took place at Park Church Co-op in Greenpoint, Brooklyn.
I photographed the event for BTR Today featuring Rev. Yolanda and the full gallery is now available here and some images appear above.
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thetarotman · 2 years ago
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"SCARY"-Jazz Fusion sounds from Rev. Yolanda with her first band "Yoland...
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ano07 · 6 years ago
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Check out my interview and photo shoot with Rev. Yolanda published in A&U Magazine--America’s AIDS Magazine
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seeselfblack · 7 years ago
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LIFTING UP NEW LEADERS-THE FUTURE OF BLACK WOMEN’S HISTORY All too often, our “history” month turns into a tribute to the past.  And while the past is an important place to lift up it is, indeed, a tributary, a stream that flows into the larger stream of an unbounded future.  The future must always be greater than the present, or there has been no progress.  And, in the words of Frederick Douglas, “progress concedes nothing without a demand”.   
I spend much of Women’s History Month thinking of those who have come before me, the shoulders on whose I stand.  I claim Women’s History Month for Black Women and love to call our roll of luminaries that, for me, includes Dr. Sadie Tanner Mossell Alexander, the first Black woman to get a Ph.D. in economics, Dr. Phyllis Ann Wallace, the first Black woman to get a Ph.D. in economics from Yale, and the first to attain tenure at MIT.  And there are more, but I also want to speculate about the future role of luminaries and reflect on that fact that many Black women have made it possible for us to bask in a new generation of leadership.   The past has laid a foundation, but the future is far more important than the past.   
Thus, Leah Daughtry (who managed the 2016 Democratic convention), Minyon Moore (who had a key role in the Clinton campaign), and Yolanda Caraway (an amazing political operative who has worked for Rev. Jesse Jackson, President Bill Clinton, and candidate Hillary Clinton), put a footprint in the sand for future leadership with their Power Rising conference in Atlanta last month.  They gathered more than a thousand Black women from around the country to develop a “Black Women’s Agenda”, deliberately mixing up the seasoned with the sassy, established leaders with those who are eager to make their mark.    
Symone Sanders, the CNN commentator who made her mark supporting Bernie Sanders, and who does not back down from a fight around principle and issues, led a panel of young women who spoke of the challenges in their work.  
Amanda Brown-Lierman, a new mom and the Political Director of the Democratic National Committee, was among those on another panel about life in politics.  Others on that panel included LaDavia Drane, who led Black outreach for Hillary Clinton and is now chief of staff for Congresswoman Yvette Clark (D-NY) and Boston City Councilor Ayanna Pressley, who is now running for Congress.  These young women aren’t playing!  They are calling out their elders, but also calling out the rules.  They aren’t trying to toe a line, they are trying to make a difference...
Continue reading over at julianmalveaux.com HERE
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