By Busta Brown
âI once asked Rosa Parks, I said âMrs. Parks, why didnât you give up your seat and go to the back? You could have been killed, or beaten. Five thousand lives have been lynched.â She said, âI thought about going to the back, but then I thought about Emmett Till, and I couldnât go back,ââ said Rev. Jesse Jackson as he addressed the students, their families and faculty at Bennett Collegeâs 2018 Baccalaureate Service this past Friday, May 4.
The Annie Merner Pfeiffer Chapel on the campus of Bennett College was standing room only to hear Rev. Jackson speak, and he didnât disappoint the crowd, especially the Bennett Belles.
âEvery time I visit North Carolina A&T, I have so much love for them. I appreciate the role we played in social justice. In 1960, four young men sat down in Woolworthâs, but if the girls of Bennett would have just stood and not fought back, it would have been just blowing in the wind,â Jackson said.
Jackson paused, tilted his glasses, looked directly at the Bennett College graduates and said, âStrong women keep on coming.â
The graduates and crowd roared for nearly 10 minutes! It was a powerful and much needed moment for young black women, because the mainstream media seems to ignore their voice and presence. Rev. Jackson continued to inspire the Bennett Belles.
âWhen Emmett Till was killed, his mother was the face for justice. At his funeral, she had an open casket. That image in that casket was seen by the world, and exposed America because of his motherâs courage. Strong women keep on coming.â
Rev. Jackson explained to the graduates that a degree is not enough. âYou must think beyond the zone of ordinary. Weâve globalized capital, technology, athletics; we also globalized human rights, women rights and children rights. Itâs not enough to have done this in the past; we must fight the Right Now fight. Right now, itâs not enough to have a degree if you donât have enough money when you have a job, we must demand better paying jobs for every American.â
The founder of The Rainbow Coalition shared with the crowd that Right Now, most black people make less than $50,000, and the rest of them are credit card slaves, spending more than they make. He then had the graduates to repeat after him: âIf I spend more than I make, thatâs a recipe for suicide. I must do better.â
Once again the Bennett Belles and crowd gave Jackson a thunderous applause. He shared that Right Now, 4 million blacks in the South arenât registered, and 2 million are registered but did not vote, âWe must fight the Right Now fight.â As Jackson closed, he reminded the audience that the fight for justice and equality is not over. âWe fought and got our freedom, and we went from being an asset, to being a threat. So we must continue to fight the Right Now fight, and donât give up,â Rev. Jackson said.
He looked around the room, and then at the graduates, and gave them a warm and comforting smile, and then softly said, âYouâre a Bennett Belle, youâre a whole person, youâre special, and youâre strong women. If [Donald] Trump can become president, thereâs nothing you canât do.â The crowd gave Rev. Jackson a standing ovation.
After the ovation, Bennettâs president, Dr. Phyllis Worthy Dawkins; N.C. Sen. Gladys Robinson (D-28th District); and Dr. Julianne Malveaux, 15th president of Bennett College and president of PUSH Excel, presented Jesse with an honorary Doctorate Degree. He joked, âI always wanted to be a Bennett Belle, and I am.â