What the Hell am I doing?

It’s time for a roll call

August 28, 2008 · 5 Comments

Taken by Steve Rhodes

Taken by Steve Rhodes

The delegates at the Democratic Convention ended their roll call when they agreed to nominate Barack Obama as the party’s presidential candidate by acclamation. But they left some unfinished business.

Some names need to be spoken.

In his seminal book on African religion and cosmology, the great scholar John Mbiti explained that the ancestors are not completely dead until their names are forgotten. So I’m taking this moment to call the names of our ancestors on the day that Barack Obama became the first African-American to win a major party nomination.

Call it a libation.

Aaron Henry, Fannie Lou Hamer, Victoria Gray Adams, Ed King, and Annie Devine, and other the delegates of the Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party who insisted that the convention unseat the all-white state delegation at the convention in 1964.
Medgar Evers, the fearless NAACP field secretary who was assassinated in his driveway in front of his family.
Herbert Lee, who was murdered because he chauffeured civil rights workers around Amite County, Mississippi during Freedom Summer, 1964.
James Chaney, Andrew Goodman and Michael Schwerner, who were murdered during Freedom Summer, 1964 for daring to register African Americans.

We will never forget you. You taught us that the race is not given to the swift, but to those who continue. And we vow to run on, and see what the end will be.

Update: Two of my readers have added names of their own to this list.  Therefore, I’m asking others to add to the libation: Call the names of  ancestors – whether in blood, example, or spirit – who should be remembered and honored.

Categories: Uncategorized
Tagged: , , , , , ,

5 responses so far ↓

  • Roldo Bartimole // August 28, 2008 at 1:26 pm

    All good names but don’t forget Jackie Robinson. I said elsewhere that Obama reminds me of Robinson, a boyhood hero of mine, because he had to take a lot but he was tough and he showed that toughness when the time was right.
    I expect the same of Obama.

  • mango mama // August 28, 2008 at 8:29 pm

    I’d like to add the name of my grandmother, Veronica Nelson, an alternate delegate for both the 1984 and 1988 Democratic National Conventions. She set for me, the exemplary example of civic engagement.

    Wonderful post!

  • aoscruggs // August 28, 2008 at 10:59 pm

    This one from Natalie Y Moore: Ella Baker.
    Baker was the executive director of the Southern Christian Leadership Council, and a mentor to students who later found SNCC, the Student Non-violent Coordinating Committee.

  • Harry Allen // August 29, 2008 at 5:56 am

    Malcolm X, because he lived, with courage, up to his convictions.

    David Walker (*Appeal*), ditto.

  • Kesha Boyce // September 3, 2008 at 6:04 pm

    Ida B. Wells Barnett, Septima Clark, Shirley Chisolm, Barbara Jordan, Rosa Parks, Betty Shabazz, Coretta Scott King, Martin Luther King, Yolanda King

Leave a Comment