While many people were opening presents, eating, and enjoying the company of family this Christmas, one organization was making the holidays better for the less fortunate. Hosea’s Feed the Hungry and the Homeless Christmas dinner, held in Atlanta, served 20,000 people this Christmas. The Feed the Hungry dinner began in […]
Author: Gabriel Taylor
Life of St. Martin activist still inspires island
Joseph H. Lake Sr. was a pioneer journalist, publisher, politician, labor organizer, orator and patriot. On July 1, 1959, he founded the Winward Islands Opinion newspaper to improve the Windward Islands. He did so by advocating against the causes of injustice and oppression. Lake’s writing exposed government neglect and corruption; […]
March unites Dayton community
The significance of marching has more emphasis than protesting; it helped to fulfill a dream. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. had a dream that all people, regardless of lineage or persuasion, would unite as one race, the human race. In 1986, the celebration, commemoration, and reflection of King’s efforts and […]
Activists recall local civil rights activism
During her days as a student civil rights activist on FAMU’s campus, Patricia Stephens of Miami was not a stranger to the inside of the Tallahassee jail. Yet, the numerous arrests and jail sentences only strengthened her dedication. “When I get out,” she once boldly declared while serving time for […]
Sheltered student discovers King
Who is Martin Luther King? This is a question that I, a 20-year-old college student, cannot answer properly. Of course I know who King is. I am not educated on is what his purpose was. I’m ashamed to say that the extent of my knowledge of this man and his […]
Civil disobedience is not always an option
This month, as the nation and the African-American community celebrate the birth of Martin Luther King Jr., perhaps one of the most influential social leaders of the ’60s, the methods through which he affected positive change can still, in my opinion, be called into question. King influenced legislative and social […]
Garvey club fights community apathy
Marcus Garvey struggled with the charge of liberating states, liberating minds and liberating races. Today, FAMU’s Marcus Garvey Club works diligently with the purpose of liberating the state of consciousness in the FAMU community, encouraging its young African Americans to unite and press forward in a world where the struggle […]
I Have a Dream…
Five score years ago, a great American, in whose symbolic shadow we stand signed the Emancipation Proclamation. This momentous decree came as a great beacon light of hope to millions of Negro slaves who had been seared in the flames of withering injustice. It came as a joyous daybreak to […]
Student says segregation OK
I know this is the MLK issue of the Famuan, and I know Dr. King fought and died for integration, but I have to be honest. When I applied for college back in 1999, only HBCUs were on my list. I chose to attend Florida A&M because the white population […]
King’s former church restored
There is a church in Atlanta that has been standing for 79 years. Today, it serves as one of the most visited tourist attractions in the nation. This church is known as Ebenezer Baptist Church, and Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. was a member. King was baptized there, he sang […]