Today is Martin Luther King Jr. Day in the U.S. So I wanted to revisit an interview I did nearly 30 years ago with a woman whose actions helped propel Dr. King to national prominence.
In December 1955, a young woman named Rosa Parks was on her way home after a long hard day at work. She was on a bus in Montgomery, Alabama, when she was ordered to the back of the bus so a white man could have her seat.
She refused to move, and was arrested and jailed.
Her arrest sparked outrage in Montgomery’s black community, and soon they organized a bus boycott, which lasted for more than a year.That boycott was led by a young preacher named Martin Luther King Jr.
I had the opportunity to interview Rosa Parks in 1992, after she had written a book for young readers.
So here now, from 1992, Rosa Parks.
Congress has called her “the first lady of civil rights” and “the mother of the freedom movement.”
Rosa Parks died in 2005. She was 92.
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