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      • 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
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Pivotal Events of the American Civil Rights Movement
A Virtual Living Legacy Pilgrimage

Our 4th Sunday speaker series, Pivotal Events of the American Civil Rights Movement: A Virtual Living Legacy Pilgrimage will introduce you to some of the amazing veterans of the Civil Rights Movement in Alabama and Mississippi.

This series will begin with a focus on the inspiring music of civil rights, then and now, and then take you on a journey through time from draconian Jim Crow laws, into Mississippi to understand the tragedy and triumph of Freedom Rides and Freedom Summer, and finally, to Selma, Alabama, and the Selma to Montgomery March for Voting Rights. 

We hope you hop aboard our virtual bus and take a journey through history and into today’s new movement for civil and voting rights. 

Celebrate! The Music of Civil Rights

Speaker Program 1: Jan. 24, 2021,  2:30 pm PST, 3:30 pm MST, 4:30 pm CST, 5:30 pm EST. Program is one hour. ​
Musicians: Crys Matthews, Melanie DeMore, and Sparky and Rhonda Rucker
The first program, which will lead off both our Speaker and Music series, features Crys Matthews, one of the brightest stars of the new generation of social justice music makers, Melanie DeMore, vocal activist and preservationist of the African American Folk Tradition, and Sparky and Rhonda Rucker, civil rights activists and folk singers. These amazing artists will share music of the Civil Rights Movement, then and now, and provide context and understanding of the role music played and continues to play in justice movements. Come sing along!  
WATCH IT HERE

Dr. King and the Montgomery Bus Boycott

​​Speaker Program 2: Feb. 28, 2021,  2:30 pm PST, 3:30 pm MST, 4:30 pm CST, 5:30 pm EST. Program is one hour. 
​Speaker: Dr. Shirley Cherry
In this program, Dr. Shirley Cherry, retired Tour Director at Dexter Parsonage Museum, will tell stories about the parsonage where Martin Luther King, Jr. lived with his family and about the kitchen where Dr. King had the most profound spiritual experience of his life. No one tells these stories like Dr. Cherry! 

In addition, hear Dr. Cherry's personal story--how a child growing up in segregation, barred from public libraries and schools, became an award-winning teacher, librarian, and educator. While Dexter Pasonage Museum tour director, visitors from all over the world came to learn from Dr. Cherry about the "Kingian Legacy" of peace, agape love, courage, justice, non-violence, and commitment. 

You won't want to miss meeting Dr. Cherry and hearing her inspiring stories! 
MORE INFORMATION

Freedom Rides and Freedom Summer: The Movement in Mississippi

Speaker Program 3: March 28, 2021,  2:30 pm PST, 3:30 pm MST, 4:30 pm CST, 5:30 pm EST. Program is one hour. ​
Speakers: Mr. Hezekiah Watkins and Ms. Angela Lewis
This program will focus on the Civil Rights Movement in Mississippi from 1961 to the present. We'll be joined by Hezekiah Watkins, 
the man dubbed "Mississippi’s youngest Freedom Rider" and Angela Lewis, the daughter of civil rights activist, James Chaney, who was murdered in Neshoba County, Mississippi, in 1964. 

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Mr. Watkins and Ms. Lewis will share incredible stories of courage in the struggle for justice and how the movement in Mississippi changed the course of history. 
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More Information

The Selma Voting Rights Movement

Speaker Program 4: April 25, 2021,  2:30 pm PST, 3:30 pm MST, 4:30 pm CST, 5:30 pm EST. Program is one hour. ​
Speaker: Ms. Joanne Bland

By the time Joanne Bland was a teenager, she had been arrested countless times in Selma, Alabama, fighting for equality and voting rights for African Americans. In 1965, she participated in the Bloody Sunday March, the day police attacked peaceful protestors on the Edmund Pettus Bridge. She worked with SNCC (The Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee) to organize people in her home community to demand the right to vote and end police violence. And all throughout her life, she has stood up against injustice wherever she sees it. 
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In this program, Joanne Bland will take us to the Edmund Pettus Bridge on Bloody Sunday and will talk about how what happened in Selma has relevance for today.
 

More Information

DONATE
Donations are welcome to support the phenomenal guest speakers participating in the series and the ongoing work of the Living Legacy Project. Suggested donation is $15 per program. Please give as you are able -- more if you can, less if you can't.

​Living Legacy Project, Inc. is now a 501(c)3 tax-exempt organization. 
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