Living Legacy Project
  • Home
  • Living Legacy Pilgrimages
    • 2025 Sep Alabama Pilgrimage
    • 2025 Oct Mississippi Pilgrimage
    • LLP Blog
    • LLP Photo Tour
  • Virtual Programs
    • 2025 Spring Education Series >
      • 2025-05-21 Highlander 2
      • 2025-04-16 Highlander
      • 2025-3-19 Lies
    • 2024 Education Series >
      • 2024 Pauli Murray
      • 2024 Gwendolyn Zoharah Simmons
      • 2024 Bayard Rustin
    • 2023 Fall Education Series: Make Freedom Rise! >
      • Family Revealed: From Slavery to Hope
      • The Movement Made Us with David Dennis, Sr.
      • Civil Rights Activism from Yesterday to Today
    • 2023 Spring Education Series >
      • Reflections on the Movement with Dr. Steve Schwerner
      • The State of Voting Rights Today
      • The Music of the Labor Movement
    • 2022 Speaking Truth: Countering Disinformation About Racial History >
      • Critical Race Theory
      • The 1619 Project
      • Medical Racism
    • 2022 Spring Music & History Series >
      • A View from the Bridge
      • Wharlest and Exerlena Jackson
      • Gullah Geechee Culture in Song and Story
    • 2021 Two Routes >
      • Pivotal Events of the American Civil Rights Movement >
        • Speaker 1: The Music of Civil Rights
        • Speaker 2: Montgomery Bus Boycott
        • Speaker 3: Freedom Rides and Freedom Summer: The Movement in Mississippi
        • Speaker 4: Selma Voting Rights Movement
      • Ain't Gonna Let Nobody Turn me 'Round: Music of Civil Rights and Social Change >
        • Music 1: ​We Shall Overcome: Music from Civil Rights Movement Mass Meeting
        • Music 2: Soundtrack of Social Change: Writing Songs of Protest and Justice
        • Music 3: Protest Music: Songs in Action
        • Music 4: Sankofa: The Musical Legacy of Protest
    • 2020 Voting Rights: The Struggle Continues
  • Donate
  • Resources
    • Marching in the Arc of Justice >
      • Workshops and Special Presentations
    • Reading
    • Films
    • Links
  • About LLP
    • Leadership
    • Org History
    • Contact Us
    • Participant Agreement

Some amazing women

10/12/2012

0 Comments

 
By the Rev. Dawn Cooley
Today is day 7 of the UU Living Legacy Pilgrimage. And today, I am thinking about the women of the civil rights movement, and the various roles women played.

I would guess that Rosa Parks is the first woman most people think of when they think of women in the civil rights movement. Her courageous seated protest on the Montgomery bus inspired much that came after.  More...

0 Comments

What can emerge when we come together   

10/11/2012

0 Comments

 
By the Rev. Dawn Cooley

Today was day 6 of the UU Living Legacy Civil Rights Pilgrimage. And boy, at this point I can barely remember what day it was and which towns we visited. Living out of a suitcase has gotten old. I am a bus-riding expert. I long for my family, my bed, my routine. And I hate all these unsolved (or long delayed) cases of murder or assassination (We visited the Medgar Evers House Museum today…more on that in another post I suspect. I will leave it that he was an amazing man whom most of us should know a lot more about.)  More...

0 Comments

How things circle back

10/10/2012

0 Comments

 
By the Rev. Dawn Cooley
This morning started with a trip to the Civil Rights Memorial in Montgomery, AL. This powerful monument, created by Maya Lin (creator of the Vietnam Veterans Memorial in Washington, DC), has the names of 40 people (black and white) who were killed from 1955 to 1968 in the South in civil rights related murders.

While we were there, Morris Dees came and spoke to us about the important work of the Southern Poverty Law Center, and the different efforts they are focusing on right now. One that he mentioned was the school-to-prison-pipeline. Remember that, because I will come back to it. More...

0 Comments

A role for everyone

10/9/2012

0 Comments

 
By the Rev. Dawn Cooley
Today, I walked through the parsonage that the Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr. and his family lived in when he was the minister of Dexter Baptist Church here in Montgomery, AL. The tour guide knew her stuff, and at the end of the tour through the house (which included the table at which the SCLC was formed), we got to the kitchen. She kept the lights off, and told us the story of MLK’s kitchen table epiphany. He had been struggling, and gotten home late. Everyone was asleep. The phone rang and it was someone telling him his house was going to be bombed. He definitely couldn’t sleep after that (who could?) so he went and sat at the kitchen table. And he prayed. And in his prayers, he heard a voice, and it comforted him, and took away all his fears. He knew he was on the right path. More...
0 Comments

Selma

10/9/2012

0 Comments

 
Picture

By the Rev. Dawn Cooley
At Brown Chapel AME, there are two different places where martyrs to the Civil Rights Movement (or “The Movement”) are honored: four people who died in service to the cause in 1965: Jonathan Daniels, James Reeb, Jimmie Lee Jackson, and Violet Liuzzo. This is the church that was the hub for mass meetings in Selma. It was where all three marches started from (Bloody Sunday, Turnaround Tuesday, and the finally-successful Selma to Montgomery March). I have seen pictures of Martin Luther King, Malcolm X, and Fred Shuttlesworth speaking at the pulpit.

When I walked in, I had an almost overhwleming urge to lay my body out on the floor in front of the communion rail and weep. More...

0 Comments

    Author

    This blog is written by the staff and participants of the Living Legacy Pilgrimage.

    Archives

    August 2021
    January 2021
    June 2020
    May 2020
    March 2020
    October 2019
    June 2019
    May 2019
    December 2018
    October 2018
    January 2017
    November 2016
    September 2013
    October 2012
    February 2009

    Categories

    All
    2009 LLP
    2012 LLP
    2012 LLP
    2013 LLP
    2016 LLP
    2019 LLP
    Birmingham
    Current Topics
    Living Legacy Project News
    Marion
    Montgomery
    Racial History
    Selma
    Testimonial
    Voter Disenfranchisement
    Voting Rights
    Voting Rights
    Women

    RSS Feed

Living Legacy Project, Inc.: Learning from the past to build for the future
© 2010-2025. Living Legacy Project. All Rights Reserved.