Spend Nine Minutes and 29 Seconds to Make a Difference

And in those times, just imagine the courage it took, the determination it took for the sons and daughters, grandsons and grand-daughters, of our enslaved ancestors, to aspire to a college education.
FLORIDA COURIER –  (Source: www.blackpressusa.com) –  By Like many historically black colleges and universities, TSU was born in the crucible of the age of segregation. It was born at a time when our forefathers and foremothers were escaping from the throes of the Ku Klux Klan.

And in those times, just imagine the courage it took, the determination it took for the sons and daughters, grandsons and grand-daughters, of our enslaved ancestors, to aspire to a college education.

And in those times, just imagine the courage it took, the determination it took for the sons and daughters, grandsons and grand-daughters, of our enslaved ancestors, to aspire to a college education.

I had the honor of delivering the commencement address at Tennessee State University.

Like many historically black colleges and universities, TSU was born in the crucible of the age of segregation. It was born at a time when our forefathers and foremothers were escaping from the throes of the Ku Klux Klan.

They were escaping from the pandemic of lynching which was sweeping the South. If they lived in the 1870s, 1880s, and 1890s, they may have had a chance to vote. A chance to hold public office.

A chance to own property. Then in the late 1896, the Supreme Court ruled in Plessy v. Ferguson that legal segregation did not violate the U.S. Constitution. For the sons and daughters of enslaved ancestors, that represented a great betrayal.

And in those times, just imagine the courage it took, the determination it took for the sons and daughters, grandsons and grand-daughters, of our enslaved ancestors, to aspire to a college education.

Legacy of HBCUs

That entire generation, faced with this betrayal, didn’t cover and they didn’t quit. They created great, historically Black colleges and universities. They created the NAACP and the organization I’m proud to lead, the National Urban League.

They created the Alphas, the Kappas, the Omegas, the AKAs, the Deltas, Zeta Phi Beta, and all the rest. They created organizations of Black doctors, and nurses, and lawyers. And they were determined to strive against those difficult times.

What does that have to do with today? Well in 2020, the year just ended, our lives were upended by an invisible virus, an enemy we couldn’t see, and we couldn’t touch. But it could see us, it could touch us, it could infect us, and it did kill us.

A new flame

And our lives were upended, by nine minutes and 29 seconds of a knee on the neck of our brother George Floyd in Minneapolis. Nine minutes and 29 seconds that ignited a new flame of activism.

All of this presents a question to the Class of 2021 – a class that has withstood a year of virtual instruction, a massive wave of job loss, interacting from behind masks at a distance of six feet.

The class of 2021 has seen family members and friends fighting for their lives on ventilators. The class of 2021 has overcome this invisible virus, and the challenge of those nine minutes and 29 seconds.

And that question is: What will you do now? Will you become spectators, or will you seize the moment?

Time to fight

My charge to the class of 2021 is to commit to nine minutes and 29 seconds each day to the fight for social justice and civil rights in this country.

Nine minutes and 28 seconds spent urging the United States Senate to pass the George Floyd Justice in Policing Act.

Nine minutes and 29 seconds spent telling states like Georgia: we will not be silent while you suppress our votes. Nine minutes and 29 seconds a day reaching back to your high school or community, serving as a role model and a guide for another young person.

Nine minutes and 29 seconds, every day, to honor the memory of George Floyd and all the men and women who have lost their lives to racially motivated police violence.

To honor the memory of the lives lost to structural racism in our health-care system during this awful pandemic.

Whether we graduated this week or 50 years ago, we all stand on the shoulders of the brave men and women who came before us, the men and women who built great universities in the crucible of Jim Crow, men and women who had the audacity to seek a college education against all odds.

We all should remember their courage and carry it with us as we work to build a nation without racism, without poverty, and without bitter division.

Marc Morial is president and CEO of the National Urban League.

The post Spend nine minutes and 29 seconds to make a difference appeared first on Florida Courier.

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