106-year-old Atlanta woman basks in Obama tribute (AP)

Obama introduced the world to a woman who “was born just a generation past slavery; a time when there were no cars on the road or planes in the sky; when someone like her couldn’t vote for two reasons — because she was a woman and because of the color of her skin.”

“Tonight, I think about all that she’s seen throughout her century in America — the heartache and the hope; the struggle and the progress; the times we were told that we can’t, and the people who pressed on with that American creed: Yes we can,” he said.

Cooper first registered to vote on Sept. 1, 1941. Though she was friends with elite black Atlantans like W.E.B. Du Bois, John Hope Franklin and Benjamin E. Mays, because of her status as a black woman in a segregated and sexist society, she didn’t exercise her right to vote for years.

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Maya Angelou: It’s time to lift America’s spirit

Maya Angelou

…you have to continue to prepare yourself, continue to build yourself, continue to elevate yourself and be a benefit, be a blessing rather than a curse, and things will get better. And they have, so when I think of Dr. King and Malcolm, Fannie Lou Hamer, Medgar Evers, I also think of Chief Albert Luthuli, one of the first Africans to earn the Nobel Prize.I mean that after Chief Luthuli, apartheid was so rigid, unbreakable that men had to carry their IDs on plastic cards that were too large for any suit, so they flapped, reminding them constantly who they were. It was my blessing to meet Nelson Mandela before he went into prison and I’ve seen him many times since. He knew this day would come, and to be able to stay in prison for 27 years, knowing that the day would come.

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Marian Wright Edelman on Dr. King’s Legacy in Today’s Political Landscape

Marian Wright Edelman

Highlights:

Tavis: When you think of Dr. King now and having lost him 40 years ago – let me ask it a different way. How often do you think of him in your work now, 35 years later, and what do you think?

Edelman:  He would be very pleased to see that we’ve got a possibility of a Black president of the United States and all the Black middle class folk and all the folk who are sitting up in Fortune 500s and in the cabinet. But he would not be pleased to see all the poor children and the big bottom that has grown in America, and the fact that we’ve got the largest gap between rich and poor we’ve ever had since we began to keep this data.

And he warned us about buying into the valleys of a burning house. And he would not be pleased that a lot of folk who are presiding over the policies that are hurting Black and poor people and that are militaristic are Black folk and we threw out our spiritual baby in the bathwater of American materialism

Tavis:  …what do you make of these prima fascia comparisons between Obama and King and the t-shirts and the hats and all that? What do you make of that in this moment?

Edelman: Well, I think we’re all standing on Dr. King’s shoulders, okay? And I think that I try to take these as an affirmation that there was a great prophet that came and set the stage for all of us, that some parts of his dreams are being fulfilled. And I think that he would be very proud of Barack Obama.

Now the issue is, how do we build the citizens, though? Because a President Obama or a President McCain – none of these are going to be able to do what we need to have done in our country in resetting our moral compass and in resetting our priorities without a citizen’s movement and without accountability, so that our job is not only get out and vote and make sure that we get the best person who we could get out of our choices today, but then we’ve got to make sure that we put forth Dr. King’s dream, which is ending poverty in America..

See entire interview here.