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[r.i.p. coretta scott king 1927-2006]
*Statistik*
post Feb 1 2006, 10:58 PM
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QUOTE
The woman who kept the dream alive

First lady of civil rights is dead at 78

By CORKY SIEMASZKO
DAILY NEWS STAFF WRITER

Coretta Scott King, who selflessly carried on her husband's fight for racial equality from the day he was assassinated in 1968, has died at age 78. She suffered a debilitating stroke in August, and a family spokesman revealed yesterday that the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.'s brave widow was suffering with terminal ovarian cancer and seeking alternative treatment at a controversial clinic in Mexico.

"Today our nation lost a beloved, graceful, courageous woman who called America to its founding ideals and carried on a noble dream," President Bush said in paying tribute to the first lady of the civil rights movement in his State of the Union address last night.

"We are comforted by the hope of a glad reunion with the husband who was taken from her so long ago, and we are grateful for the good life of Coretta Scott King," Bush said.

After her husband was gunned down in 1968, King declared: "I'm more determined than ever that my husband's dream will become a reality."

And for nearly four decades years, that's exactly what she did.

She worked steadily to bridge the racial divide so the U.S. could become the nation that Dr. King envisioned - where people are not "judged by the color of their skin but by the content of their character."

Coretta Scott King became the chief defender of her husband's legacy and the prime mover behind the drive to make the Rev. King's birthday a national holiday, first celebrated in 1986.

In the process, she emerged from her husband's huge shadow and became a civil rights icon in her own right.

"She wore her grief with grace; she exerted her leadership with dignity," the Rev. Joseph Lowery, a co-founder of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, said.

Coretta King also reportedly died with dignity - of respiratory failure - at a controversial holistic clinic in Mexico.

"She was considered terminal by physicians in the United States. She and the family wanted to explore other options," a spokeswoman said.

She only checked in last Thursday and her daughters, Bernice and Yolanda, were with her when she died late Monday night.

"She lived a graceful and beautiful life, and in spite of all of the difficulties, she managed a graceful and beautiful passing," former Atlanta Mayor Andrew Young told NBC's "Today" show.

Born April 27, 1927, in rural Alabama, King picked cotton as a child and waited tables to make ends meet while she studied music at the New England Conservatory of Music in Boston.

In 1951, a pal introduced her to a dashing young Baptist minister studying at Boston University named Martin Luther King. He was smitten instantly.

"You know, you have everything I ever wanted in a woman," the future civil rights leader said on their first date. "We ought to get married someday."

Eighteen months later they did. Two years after that, they moved to Montgomery, Ala., where a historic bus boycott sparked by the defiance of another recently deceased civil rights icon - Rosa Parks - propelled them to the forefront of a historic struggle for America's soul.

King was by her husband's side during his greatest triumphs - when he received the Nobel Peace prize in 1964, and on the voters' rights march from Selma, Ala., to Montgomery in 1965.

She was not with him when sniper James Earl Ray took his life in Memphis, but her heartbreak did not keep her from marching days later.

"I think you rise to the occasion in a crisis," she said after she and her four children marched with thousands of mourners through the city. "God was using us - and now he's using me, too."

In 1969, King founded The King Center for nonviolent Social change in Atlanta as a tribute to her husband and used her moral clout to protest apartheid in South Africa. She also became an outspoken critic of film and television companies that promote violence - and she opposed the Iraq war.

Last August, King suffered a serious stroke and vanished from sight. About three weeks ago, she made her first public appearance in more than a year at an awards dinner in Atlanta. But she was too ill to attend the King holiday celebration at the center two weeks ago.

King's children drew a veil on their mom's struggles in recent days and checked her into the Hospital Santa Monica, a holistic healing center just across the border from San Diego.

"She came here with half her body paralyzed," said Dr. Rafael Cedeno. "She was in really bad condition."

Funeral plans are still pending, and King's body was to be returned to Atlanta this morning. Georgia Gov. Sonny Perdue ordered flags at all buildings to be flown at half-staff and offered to allow King's body to lie in state at the State Capitol.


rest in peace to a great woman who was the first lady of the civil rights movement..I hope she meets her husband in heaven looking down to our country right now.. *pours out some liquor*

Can we please have a moment silence? (______)

As day comes and night falls...For the rest of our life we'll miss y'all...And even though life must go on, we'll still mourn...While wishin' y'all were home

And can we please have a moment to mourn? For MLK and CSK 'cause through us they live on.. goodbye cry.gif
 
*salcha*
post Feb 1 2006, 11:12 PM
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Bah, I was about to make this topic, but yeah sad.gif
RIP CSK
 
sprezzatura
post Feb 1 2006, 11:15 PM
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Peggy.
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Anyways, RIP. Her husband did contribute a lot to the civil rights movement.
 
Hiphop d[-_-]b
post Feb 1 2006, 11:25 PM
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Bay Area YadadaDiiiig.
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I was going to make this topic yesterdaaaaay when my friend Nicole told me about it. But I couldnt find an article on it when i searched google. I just found a lot of biogpraphies.

Rest In Paradise.
 
Teesa
post Feb 1 2006, 11:32 PM
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crushed.
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What a wonderful and beautiful woman. Rest in peace.
 
fameONE
post Feb 2 2006, 02:08 AM
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^_^
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Co-sign.

Good thread, Jason.

While most of the country was watching the State Of The Union, I was reading up on her contributions to the Civil Rights Movement and whats she's done to carry on her late (great) husband's wishes.
 
DaTru KataLYST
post Feb 2 2006, 02:12 AM
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白人看不懂 !!!!
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RIP
 
*Zatanna*
post Feb 2 2006, 02:23 AM
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I really don't have the words - only honor and respect. May we all strive to have even the smallest amount of Coretta Scott King in us.
 
Gerifan04
post Feb 2 2006, 02:30 AM
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I'm happy, are you?
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Oh the poor dear. That's really sad. But I've heard how hard it is to carry on after a stroke. I'm just glad she's painless now. Such a strong woman at the forefront of the civil rights movement. I know Martin is the most well known of the family but I wouldn't doubt for an instant that she didn't fight too. R.I.P sad.gif
 
Tribal J_Rome
post Feb 2 2006, 04:41 AM
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wut wut in the butt?
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Rest in PEACE
 
EddieV
post Feb 2 2006, 06:26 AM
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I heard this on the news on the morning radio. Rest in Peace.
 
Levy2k6
post Feb 2 2006, 06:52 AM
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Word.
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i first heard of this in the beggining of Bush's speech the other night...

sigh.
 
_sarcastic_
post Feb 2 2006, 06:56 AM
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<3
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R.I.P Coretta Scott King
 
bad_girl
post Feb 2 2006, 09:38 AM
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Apr 24 '05* 1000 posts!
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RIP

(i didnt kno she was still alive b4)
 
ecargnmyst
post Feb 2 2006, 11:03 PM
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yeah i just found out she was the aunt of my english teacher...

my english teacher came into school on tuesday late, very worn out and sad and he said he got a call at 1:10 AM from his cousin saying that his aunt had passed away

the next day was wednesday and the principal had us have a moment of silence for coretta scott king...and i was wondering why...later in the day...my english teacher explained to us..that Martin Luther King Jr. was his uncle and that Coretta was his aunt.

i was like..wow..and then he went into detail about how Coretta affected him..and before this woman was just another name in history...but after hearing her impact/influences first hand from my teacher, her nephew..

ive come to appreciate her more

RIP
 
*mona lisa*
post Feb 4 2006, 11:40 AM
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RIP
Her contributions to society will never be forgotten, along with MLK Jr.
 
*jooleeah*
post Feb 4 2006, 10:40 PM
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R.I.P.

What an amazing woman.
 
silver-rain
post Feb 4 2006, 10:42 PM
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hi. call me linda.
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RIP. She will never be forgotten.

I found out that she was the aunt of my english teacher and that she meant a lot to him.
 
*jooleeah*
post Feb 4 2006, 10:44 PM
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QUOTE(silver rain @ Feb 4 2006, 10:42 PM)
silver rain  Posted Feb 4 2006, 10:42 PM
  RIP. She will never be forgotten.

I found out that she was the aunt of my english teacher and that she meant a lot to him.


QUOTE(ecargnmyst @ Feb 2 2006, 11:03 PM)
yeah i just found out she was the aunt of my english teacher...

my english teacher came into school on tuesday late, very worn out and sad and he said he got a call at 1:10 AM from his cousin saying that his aunt had passed away

the next day was wednesday and the principal had us have a moment of silence for coretta scott king...and i was wondering why...later in the day...my english teacher explained to us..that Martin Luther King Jr. was his uncle and that Coretta was his aunt.

i was like..wow..and then he went into detail about how Coretta affected him..and before this woman was just another name in history...but after hearing her impact/influences first hand from my teacher, her nephew..

ive come to appreciate her more

RIP
*

Whoa. Both of you guys have to have the same english teacher right? Ironic.

I really wish I met her. Or had some sort of connection to her, anyway.
 
*Programmer*
post Feb 6 2006, 08:21 AM
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R.i.p ... _dry.gif
 

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