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Peter Dreier

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The Man Behind the March: Remembering Bayard Rustin

Posted: 06/08/2012 9:30 am

Bayard Rustin, the trailblazing civil rights activist, was a pacifist, a radical, black and gay. Controversy surrounded him all his life. But this year -- the 100th anniversary of his birth and 25 years after his death -- his name is back in the news. Some of this new visibility is due to the fact that a number of civil rights and gay rights groups are honoring Rustin with conferences, museum exhibits and other events. And part of it is due to the fact that in the wake of President Barack Obama's support for same-sex marriage, the issue of homosexuality within the black community -- including the civil rights movement and the black church -- is triggering controversy. As a human rights pioneer, Rustin may finally be getting the recognition he deserves, but some opponents of gay rights within the black community are also taking his name in vain.


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Photo via WikiMedia: Ras67


Last month, after the NAACP endorsed same-sex marriage, a handful of local leaders resigned from the nation's oldest and largest civil rights organization. A number of black churches have lost congregants after their ministers, including Reverend Oliver White of the Grace Community United Church of Christ in St. Paul, announced their support for same-sex marriage. Many civil rights and gay rights activists have recently been upset that Alveda King, a right-wing preacher who happens to be the niece of Martin Luther King, recently made the false claim that Rustin, a close advisor to King, tried to get King to embrace the "homosexual agenda" as part of the civil rights movement. And in a new book, The Fan Who Knew Too Much, historian Anthony Heilbut describes the pervasive influence of gays within gospel music and accuses some black Christians of hypocrisy for opposing same-sex marriage while relying on gays to create the church's sacred music.

From the 1940s through the '60s, Rustin marshaled his considerable talents -- as an organizer, strategist, speaker and writer -- to challenge the economic and racial status quo. Always an outsider, he helped catalyze the civil-rights movement with courageous acts of resistance. Rustin was a key aide to King and the lead organizer of the 1963 March on Washington -- a job he seemed to have prepared for his entire life. Rustin was a brilliant thinker and strategist, but given his political liabilities as a gay, black, radical pacifist, he also relied on his incredible charm to win converts to the causes of peace and civil rights. A remarkable tenor, he frequently sang gospel and blues songs for his audiences. Had he not become an organizer, he could have become a popular entertainer.

Given the growing use and misuse of Rustin's name and memory, we're fortunate that he has been the subject of several authoritative biographies as well as a new book, I Must Resist: Bayard Rustin's Life in Letters, edited by Michael G. Long and published by City Lights Books.

The youngest of eight children, Rustin was raised by his grandparents in West Chester, Pennsylvania. Although they attended his grandfather's African Methodist Episcopal church, Rustin was strongly influenced by the Quaker faith of his grandmother, who was an early member of the NAACP. Some NAACP leaders, including W. E. B. DuBois, stayed with the Rustins when they were on speaking tours.

Rustin was a gifted student, an outstanding athlete, a skilled orator and poet, and an exceptional tenor. Early in his life he revealed a strong social conscience. In high school he was arrested for refusing to sit in the West Chester movie theater's segregated balcony, nicknamed "Nigger Heaven."

Rustin attended two black colleges (Wilberforce University and Cheyney State) before moving to New York City in 1937. He enrolled briefly at the City College of New York, where he got involved with the campus Young Communist League. He was attracted by their antiracist efforts -- including their fight against segregation in the military -- but he broke with the Communist Party after a few years.

Rustin sang in nightclubs to earn money, and once appeared with Paul Robeson in the Broadway musical John Henry, but he found other ways to channel his prodigious energy, his outrage against racism and his growing talent as an organizer.

He found two mentors who shaped his philosophy and employed him as an organizer. One was A. Philip Randolph, a socialist who founded of the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters, the first African-American labor union. Randolph was the nation's most militant civil-rights leader. The other mentor, A. J. Muste, was a radical minister and former union organizer. Time magazine called him the "No. 1 U.S. pacifist." He introduced Rustin to the teachings of Gandhi. Rustin's commitment to Gandhi's principles, along with his Quaker beliefs (he officially joined the church in 1935), shaped his activism for the rest of his life.

Randolph hired Rustin in 1941 to lead the youth wing of the March on Washington, designed to push President Franklin Roosevelt to open up defense jobs to black workers as the United States geared up for World War II. After FDR agreed to issue an executive order forbidding racial discrimination in defense industries, Randolph called off the protest, angering Rustin and opening a temporary breach between them.

Then, under Muste's guidance, Rustin began a series of organizing jobs with the Fellowship of Reconciliation (a Christian pacifist group), the American Friends Service Committee, and the War Resisters League. These were small, mostly white organizations that provided Rustin with a home base, a title, a newsletter, and a network of activists around the country. A charismatic speaker, Rustin kept up a hectic travel schedule, preaching the gospel of nonviolence and civil disobedience on campuses, in churches, and at meetings of fellow pacifists. Rustin viewed nonviolent resistance as a "way of life" -- not just a policy. Wherever he spoke, Rustin inspired at least a handful of students to join his cause; that is how he recruited the next generation of civil-rights and antiwar activists.

As a Quaker and conscientious objector, Rustin was legally entitled to do alternative service rather than military service during World War II. But on principle, objecting to war in general and the segregation of the armed forces in particular, he refused to serve even in the Civilian Public Service. "War is wrong," he wrote to his draft board in 1943. "Conscription for war is inconsistent with freedom of conscience, which is not merely the right to believe but to act on the degree of truth that one receives, to follow a vocation which is God-inspired and God-directed."

In 1944 Rustin was convicted of violating the Selective Service Act and served two years in federal prisons in Kentucky and Pennsylvania. In Kentucky he protested the pervasive segregation within prisons, facing violence from prison guards and white prisoners. In Pennsylvania, prison officials kept Rustin away from other inmates so he wouldn't influence them with his radical ideas. As Rustin wrote after his release in June 1946:

We were there by virtue of a commitment we had made to a moral position; and that gave us a psychological attitude the average prisoner did not have.... We had the feeling of being morally important, and that made us respond to prison conditions without fear, with considerable sensitivity to human rights.... It was by going to jail that we called the people's attention to the horrors of war.

After leaving prison, Rustin rejoined the Fellowship of Reconciliation and resumed his career as a peripatetic organizer. In April 1947 he led the group's interracial Journey of Reconciliation, engaging in nonviolent acts of civil disobedience through four southern and border states. These demonstrations served as a precursor to the Freedom Rides of the early 1960s. He and others were arrested in Chapel Hill, North Carolina, and Rustin spent twenty-two days on a chain gang.

The Journey of Reconciliation was not without controversy, even among civil-rights groups. Thurgood Marshall, who led the NAACP's legal division, warned that the "disobedience movement on the part of Negroes and their white allies, if employed in the South, would result in wholesale slaughter with no good achieved."

In 1948 Rustin went back to work for Randolph in order to push President Harry S. Truman to enforce and expand FDR's antidiscrimination order. They organized protests in several cities and at the 1948 Democratic National Convention. Their work paid off: Truman desegregated the military and outlawed racial discrimination in the federal civil service later that year.

In the late 1940s and early '50s, while still working for the Fellowship of Reconciliation, Rustin visited India, Africa and Europe, where he made contact with activists in various independence and peace movements. Increasingly, he viewed the struggle for civil rights in the United States as part of a worldwide movement against war and colonialism.

It was at this time that Rustin's homosexuality became a public problem for him. In 1953 he was found having sex with a man in a parked car in Pasadena, Calif., and was arrested for "public indecency." Although Rustin was unusually open with his friends about his homosexuality, this was the first time it had become public. Gay sex was a crime in every state. Muste fired him for jeopardizing the Fellowship of Reconciliation's already controversial reputation. But Randolph got him a similar job with the War Resisters League, a pacifist group founded in 1923, where Rustin worked for the next twelve years.

Over the next decade, Rustin receded from public view, but he continued to play a critical behind-the-scenes role as an organizer within the civil-rights movement. At Randolph's behest, he went to Montgomery, Alabama, in 1955 to help local leaders organize a large-scale bus boycott. There Rustin began advising Martin Luther King Jr., who had no organizing experience, on the philosophy and tactics of civil disobedience. Rustin was "the perfect mentor for King at this stage in the young minister's career," observes John D'Emilio, author of Lost Prophet: The Life and Times of Bayard Rustin. Over "the ensuing months and years," D'Emilio writes, "Rustin left a profound mark on the evolution of King's role as national leader."

Much of Rustin's advice would be given from a distance, in phone calls, memos and drafts of articles and book chapters he wrote for King. He had to cut short his first visit to Montgomery because, as a gay man and a former Communist, he was a political liability. Just at the moment when Rustin might have helped lead the mass movement for which he'd been working his entire adult life, he had to retreat to the shadows.

At the end of 1956, the Supreme Court ruled that Montgomery's segregated bus system was unlawful. The victory could have remained a local triumph rather than a national bellwether, but Rustin, along with Ella Baker and Stanley Levinson (another King adviser), had an idea for building a "mass movement across the South" with "disciplined groups prepared to act as 'nonviolent shock troops,'" as Rustin put it. This was the genesis of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference -- conceived by Rustin and founded with King as its first president -- which would catapult King to the national stage. Baker was hired to build the organization, and Rustin became King's strategist, ghostwriter, and link to northern liberals and unions.

To many Americans, the civil rights movement was a confusing mosaic of organizations -- NAACP, SNCC, CORE, the Urban League, SCLC -- all competing for attention, each with a different approach. But in 1963, Randolph, as the elder statesman of the movement, pulled together the leaders of the major civil-rights, labor, and liberal religious organizations and laid out his plan for a march on Washington. Randolph envisioned a march that would push for federal legislation, particularly for the Civil Rights Act. President John F. Kennedy had proposed that law, but it had stalled in Congress. The event would emphasize jobs as well as civil rights, which reflected Randolph's long history as a union organizer and champion of racial justice. Its name would be the March for Jobs and Freedom. And Randolph wanted Rustin to run it.

The leaders Randolph gathered endorsed the plan. But NAACP president Roy Wilkins objected to putting Rustin in charge of the march, because of his radicalism and his homosexuality. Randolph outmaneuvered Wilkins by announcing that he would be its director and choose his own deputy: Rustin, of course.

Kennedy tried to dissuade them from holding the march, contending that it would undermine support for the Civil Rights Act. But Randolph would not be cowed. Nor would he be bullied by other civil-rights leaders who voiced objections to Rustin's role.

Three weeks before the August 28 march, Sen. Strom Thurmond, a South Carolina segregationist, publicly attacked Rustin on the floor of the Senate by reading reports of his Pasadena arrest for homosexual behavior a decade earlier -- documents he probably got from FBI director J. Edgar Hoover. Randolph bravely defended Rustin's integrity and his role in the march, but, as biographer John D'Emilio noted, thanks to Thurmond, "Rustin had become perhaps the most visible homosexual in America."

The march was a huge success. It was not only the highlight of Rustin's career but perhaps the high point of the movement itself. More than 250,000 people attended. King delivered his "I Have a Dream" speech. Ten months later, in the aftermath of Kennedy's assassination, Congress passed the Civil Rights Act.

The final 24 years of Rustin's life was something of an anti-climax. He continued his organizing work within the civil-rights, peace and labor movements. He was still in demand as a public speaker, and he was still valued for his strategic brilliance. But he never again had the same influence he did when organizing the Washington march. King -- whose opponents were planting stories that he was under the influence of Communists -- continued to rely on Rustin's advice, but always at a safe distance, fearful the movement would be tarnished by Rustin's liabilities.

After Congress passed the Voting Rights Act in 1965, Rustin wrote a controversial article, "From Protest to Politics," in the then-liberal magazine Commentary. In that piece he argued that the coalition that had come together for the March on Washington needed to place less emphasis on protest and focus on electing liberal Democrats who could enact a progressive policy agenda centered on employment, housing, and civil rights. Rustin drafted a "Freedom Budget," released in 1967, that advocated "redistribution of wealth." His ideas influenced King, who increasingly began to talk about the importance of jobs and wealth redistribution.

Rustin's ideas, however, were controversial among the young Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) radicals. They did not trust the unions or the Democratic Party. The group had become a major advocate of "black power," an idea Rustin opposed because it undermined his commitment to coalition politics and racial integration.

But the two biggest obstacles to Rustin's program were the war in Vietnam, which drained resources and attention away from LBJ's Great Society and War on Poverty, and the urban riots that began in 1965 in Los Angeles and triggered a backlash against the civil rights movement. Rustin was among the first public figures to call for the withdrawal of all American forces from South Vietnam, but as LBJ escalated the war, Rustin muted his criticisms. He wanted to avoid alienating LBJ, key Democrats and union leaders who supported the war -- and who funded the A. Philip Randolph Institute, which had been created in 1964 to provide Rustin with an organizational home. When King announced his opposition to the war in 1967, it caused a rift between the two men. As a result, Rustin -- who had for decades been one of the nation's most important pacifists -- was absent from the antiwar movement, which cost him credibility among New Left student activists.

Ironically, Rustin's homosexuality became a centerpiece of his final few years. He had been wary of the burgeoning gay rights movement, which exploded after the Stonewall riot in New York City in 1969. But at the end of his life, when he was involved in a stable relationship, he began speaking publicly about the importance of civil rights for gays and lesbians. Thanks in part to a 2002 documentary, Brother Outsider, Rustin has become an icon for gay rights activists.

In 1986, a year before he died of a burst appendix, Rustin was asked by Joseph Beam, a writer and gay-rights activist, to contribute an essay to a volume on the experience of gay black men. Rustin declined. But his reply to Beam provides an eloquent summary of the foundation of his life's work.

My activism did not spring from my being gay, or, for that matter, from my being black. Rather, it is rooted fundamentally in my Quaker upbringing and the values that were instilled in me by my grandparents who reared me. Those values are based on the concept of a single human family and the belief that all members of that family are equal.... The racial injustice that was present in this country during my youth was a challenge to my belief in the oneness of the human family. It demanded my involvement in the struggle to achieve interracial democracy, but it is very likely that I would have been involved had I been a white person with the same philosophy. Needless to say, I worked side-by-side with many white people who held these same values, some of whom gave as much, if not more, to the struggle than myself.

Peter Dreier's book, The 100 Greatest Americans of the 20th Century: A Social Justice Hall of Fame, will be published later this month by Nation Books. Rustin, A. Philip Randolph, Thurgood Marshall, A.J. Muste, Ella Baker, and Lyndon Johnson, and Martin Luther King are among those profiled in the book. Dreier teaches politics and chairs the Urban & Environmental Policy Department at Occidental College. A version of this article originally appeared in the June issue of Commonweal magazine.

 
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Bayard Rustin, the trailblazing civil rights activist, was a pacifist, a radical, black and gay. Controversy surrounded him all his life. But this year -- the 100th anniversary of his birth and 25 ...
Bayard Rustin, the trailblazing civil rights activist, was a pacifist, a radical, black and gay. Controversy surrounded him all his life. But this year -- the 100th anniversary of his birth and 25 ...
 
 
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10:09 PM on 06/11/2012
Not only was this person a perverted gay, he was also a communist like most black leaders including the patron saint of blacks, MLK.

http://www.spartacus.schoolnet.co.uk/USArustin.htm

But, at least I have no evidence he was a thief like MLK who embezzled.
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LeftRightCenter
Imagine a world w/no hypothetical situations...
05:32 PM on 06/11/2012
he was brilliant & light years ahead of his times
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ms.understood
pro-choice | liberal | womanist
11:18 AM on 06/11/2012
just think, Rustin was the driving force behind the March of Washington, and King really didn't want him to speak because he was gay. but that's the man so many streets and holidays are named after.
01:24 PM on 06/12/2012
Rustin was a good organizer, King was the driving force, don't get it twisted. There was no need to have him speak, he wasn't marching for gay rights, Rustin was marching for the COLOR of his SKIN. Besides, Rustin to speak before Dr. King, one of the most dynamic speakers of our time?? It is or was, no one's business, what Rustin did privately. No one would have wanted to hear a gay man speak anyway, for what????
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ms.understood
pro-choice | liberal | womanist
02:23 PM on 06/12/2012
you need to dig up King and ask him why Rustin's gayness disqualified him to speak. after all, Rustin was 1) black and ) faced the same discrimination he did. perhaps he felt the same level of disdain for gays that you do. Rustin organized this march as well as others. it's quite easy for someone to take credit as a "driving force" if they're a great orator. speaking well certainly isn't the only attribute that should be celebrated when speaking of the great ones.
04:14 PM on 06/12/2012
i realy apprecitate your ethan cole, i couln't have put it more elequently myself. thanks for your intelligence.
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drdrepublican
Believe in something or fall for anything
12:15 AM on 06/11/2012
Now you Democratic Liberals and sellout African Americans bring out Bayard Rustin to foster your quest to justify people of color embracing the Gay and Lesbian Lifestyle but it will not work. Before Obama flip-flopped on this issue, Rustin was a forgotten soul in the dustbin of history..This is shameful..

We people of color will not be the scapegoats of a catastrophic Biblical calamity because you liberals sell outs think we should sanction something God has forbid. We people of color will not follow the golden calf of Obama and disreguard the 1st Commandment. We people of color will not put the idolotry of this Godless president in front of the Biblical guidance that has sustained us since we have been here... Our line in the sand stands....
04:36 AM on 06/11/2012
if you are saved does it make a difference if God starts a biblical calamity because of liberal Christianity? If you make images of a cross is that false idolatry?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Contact1972
BigGayInc
06:19 AM on 06/11/2012
GLBT's don't have 'lifestyles'-we have LIVES!

Ignorance and homophobia is a lifestyle.
09:14 AM on 06/11/2012
Exactly! Another attempt by the anti-gay establishment to marginalize us as if "lifestyle" is a new showcase model to "choose"
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MsG7
Know Jesus..don't leave here without Him!!!
08:56 PM on 06/10/2012
Wait..so what are people doing now?...just because my president "evolved" now folk want to dig up (no pun intended) every Black gay man there ever was; well the ones who fought for something, that is....Geez what is wrong with people...

Would this article have come up if Pres. Obama hadn't evolved?....I'm just saying...

Just because the POTUS said what he said everybody is going crazy now.....IMO this man (Rustin) just happen to be Black, happen to be gay, but decided he was going to be a Civil Rights activist....the only similarites of the two "Rights" is that it was and still is.. A Fight....Black people fight for what we want and Gay people fight for what they want....Ok who will they dig up next?
04:23 PM on 06/12/2012
after reading some of these comments, yours included, it's more than obvious a lot of folks really do not know who and what Bayard Rustin was and who and what he stands for today. please read! it's fundamental.
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MsG7
Know Jesus..don't leave here without Him!!!
07:09 PM on 06/12/2012
Please don't insult me...I do read...and I know it's fundamental....I did read the article; not only did I read the article, I searched info about him through various sites. Still, I stand by my comments.
07:41 PM on 06/10/2012
Isn't it a shame his comments more than 40 years after his death are still relevant "the coalition that had come together for the March on Washington needed to place less emphasis on protest and focus on electing liberal Democrats who could enact a progressive policy agenda centered on employment, housing, and civil rights."
06:20 PM on 06/10/2012
His being a homosexual is not important.
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angelcakesinc
Silence is death
07:12 PM on 06/10/2012
It isn't? He's routinely ignored and not talked about in most mainstream history discussions of the civil rights movement... specifically because he's gay. It also shows that, even back then, a gay man could do something amazing and important. What's more, his presence as such an important figure in the movement makes the link between black and gay civil rights all the stronger.
07:29 PM on 06/10/2012
He's ignored because he didn't contribute as much as you think.Also there is not link between black and homosexual rights.
04:45 AM on 06/11/2012
he's made it to mainstream now...
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Hoodooman
Non-Aggression Principle
01:11 AM on 06/11/2012
True; A good, rational human being would be a sufficient description. Skin color, ancestry, or who one choses to love only matters to the most shallow amongst us.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Puzzlr
thegrouphugdotorg
05:25 PM on 06/10/2012
Well, its about time he got some recognition.
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Gaaltero
Conscious Black Man
09:04 AM on 06/11/2012
He's always been recognized. Where you been?
04:25 PM on 06/12/2012
that's what i'm screaming!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Puzzlr
thegrouphugdotorg
03:17 AM on 06/13/2012
Did you read the article? He was asked to take a second banana role because he was gay.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
gussom
On the message
05:23 PM on 06/10/2012
Bayard Rustin could be said to be a man of his time, and I would say he qualifies to be one of the greatest and most influential americans to have lived.
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MsG7
Know Jesus..don't leave here without Him!!!
08:29 PM on 06/10/2012
Are you saying this just because he was gay? just asking...seriously.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
gussom
On the message
03:28 AM on 06/11/2012
It really doesn't matter he was a great american.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Contact1972
BigGayInc
06:23 AM on 06/11/2012
Well to be gay and African American in his time was rather dangerous on several levels.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Owlwriter16
Check out www.Twitter.com/Owlwriter16
04:24 PM on 06/10/2012
As a teenager I often saw Bayard Rustin walking about the city. His bushy grey Afro, patrician nose and conservative dress made him a standout. He always carried a fancy-looking walking stick. Years later it was discovered that the cane's staff unscrewed to reveal a hidden short sword or long knife. This eventually led to a police charge of carrying a concealed weapon. Given that was during NY's high crime era, it made perfect sense that an elderly gent was prepared to defend himself against muggers and other miscreants.
08:59 AM on 06/11/2012
I'm just saying.....if true, doesn't that go against his non-violent beliefs? Did Gandhi conceal a knife under his sheets?
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Owlwriter16
Check out www.Twitter.com/Owlwriter16
04:41 PM on 06/15/2012
Isn't there a difference between falling victim to street crime and non-violent protest for racial equality? And I have no idea what Ghandi concealed under his loin cloth but unfortunately he died at the hands of an assassin who was easily able to approach this Man of Peace in a public place and shoot him point blank.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
missmixing
"Those who stand for nothing fall for anything."
03:12 PM on 06/10/2012
Rest in Peace good and faithful soldier your march for civil rights will always be appreciated. I hope that many soldiers old and new continue this march for civil rights and justice for all. So many today do not understand what your purpose was and why Al Sharpton and Jessie Jackson continue this much needed march.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Ms. Lou
10:01 PM on 06/10/2012
That was beautiful. Thank you so very much.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
jimmyblantonlives
01:40 AM on 06/10/2012
Bayard actually taught MLK the true meaning of non-violent protest. He visited India in the 50s to study Ghandi's methods and brought those ideas to MLK. Bayard was a real hero who has not received his due recognition in 3 major movements: anti-war, civil rights, and gay rights.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
dbmyers
Everyone's rights are diminshed when one's is.
07:57 PM on 06/08/2012
This man is a hero in the civil rights, anti-war and gay rights movements - or should be. His recognition is way over due. His Quaker roots guaranteed his involvements in all of these human rights movements. Bravo to him and to HuffPost Gay Voices for telling his story.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Contact1972
BigGayInc
06:25 AM on 06/11/2012
It amazes me that even today there are some people who refuse to believe he was a gay man. Baffling.
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Gaaltero
Conscious Black Man
09:05 AM on 06/11/2012
Every Black Historian knows he was gay. What you talkin about?