9 People Other Than MLK Jr. Who Sacrificed Their Lives to Fight for Black Liberation

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    9 People Other Than MLK Jr WhoSacrificed Their Lives to Fight ForBlack LiberationFebruary 5, 2014 | Posted by Tracy

    Black history has been celebrated in America throughout the month of February since 1976, and50 years prior in Negro History Week. During this time, classrooms across America typically

    engage in activities from plays and artwork to writing assignments that highlight thecontributions of Black people.

    Despite its nearly 100-year history, Black History Month often excludes the contributions of

    African and Caribbean-born leaders and even some American-born leaders, who get buried

    beneath staples such as civil rights activists Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and Rosa Parks. Theseleaders and activists have earned their rightful place in history, however a disservice is done to

    countless other leaders from around the world who too fought for Black liberation.

    Patrice Lumumba, 35 (July 2, 1925Jan. 17, 1961)

    Patrice Lumumba was the first democratically elected leader of what is now known as the

    Democratic Republic of the Congo. Lumumba was a Pan-Africanist who spoke boldly and

    bravely against the atrocities of colonialism and passionately about a united Congo with fullpolitical and economic independence.

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    The Congo, considered then to be Africas richest country, had been a colony of Belgium since

    the late 1800s, which ruled over it with brutality while plundering its natural resources.

    Lumumbas vision for making the Congo the pride of Africa through true political andeconomic independence was a threat to the Belgians and the United States who were not

    prepared to relinquish full control of the countrys resources and labeled him a communist.

    The CIA, acting under the orders of U.S. President Dwight Eisenhower, conspired but failed to

    assassinate Lumumba via poisoning. Instead, the United States and Belgium covertly funneled

    cash and to aid rival politicians headed by Joseph Dsir Mobutu, who seized power and arrestedLumumba.

    According to Amy Goodman ofDemocracy Now, on Jan. 17, 1961, after being beaten andtortured, Lumumba was shot and killed by a firing squad along with his newly appointed

    ministers Maurice Mpolo and Joseph Okito.

    Stephen Bantu Biko, 30(Dec. 18, 1946Sept. 12, 1977)

    Steve Biko, regarded as an icon in the anti-apartheid movement, founded several organizations in

    an effort to mobilize Black people against the racist apartheid regime in South Africa. Biko co-

    founded the South African Students Organization in 1968, an all-Black student organizationfocusing on the resistance of apartheid. He later founded the Black Consciousness Movement

    (BCM), which would empower and mobilize much of the urban Black population, and co-

    founded the Black Peoples Conventionin 1972.

    The BCM gained the most ground as it not only called for resistance to the policy of apartheid

    and more rights for South African Blacks, but also helped to instill Black pride among Blackpeople in the country.

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    Biko was arrested many times for his anti-apartheid activism. On Sept. 12, 1977, Biko died in

    police custody from injuries he sustained from the arresting officers. In 1997, five officers

    confessed to killing Biko after reportedly filling an application for amnesty to the Truth andReconciliation Commission.

    Thomas Sankara, 37(Dec. 21, 1949Oct. 15, 1987)

    Thomas Sankara, known as Africas Che Guevara, became head of Burkina Faso in 1983 after

    leading a coup dtat against the corrupt government. Formerly called Upper Volta, Sankararenamed his country Burkina Faso, meaning Land of Upright People.

    Sankara was a Pan-Africanist who fought to create a self-sufficient and economically thrivingpopulation by eliminating rampant corruption through the countrys political ranks, and relieving

    the nation from dependence on its former French colonial power and on other foreign aid.

    According to Sankaras biography, His foreign policies were centered around anti-imperialism,

    with his government eschewing all foreign aid, pushing for odious debt reduction, nationalizingall land and mineral wealth, and averting the power and influence of the International Monetary

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    Fund and World Bank. His domestic policies were focused on preventing famine with agrarian

    self-sufficiency and land reform, prioritizing education with a nationwide literacy campaign, and

    promoting public health.

    Other Sankara achievements include environmental protection and reforestation of the Sahel, and

    promoting women rights by outlawing female genital mutilation, forced marriages andpolygamy. He also appointed women to high governmental positions.

    Sankara along with 13 other officials were assassinated in a hail of bullets in October 1987 in acoup dtat masterminded by his former close ally, Blaise Compaor, who was backed by the

    French.

    Medgar Wiley Evers, 37 (July 2, 1925June 12, 1963)

    Medgar Evers was an African-American civil rights activist from Mississippi, who would

    become the first field secretary of the NAACP in the state, and help to integrate the University ofMississippi.

    Evers helped organize boycotts and set up new local chapters of the NAACP. He became a

    bigger target for white supremacists after he began investigating the murder of Emmett Till andexpressed his support of Clyde Kennard, a student who tried to attend the then-segregated

    Mississippi Southern College.

    Several attempts were made on Evers life, including on May 28, 1963, when a Molotov cocktail

    was thrown into the carport of his home; and on June 7, 1963, when he was nearly run down by acar after he emerged from the Jackson NAACP office.

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    Finally, in the early morning of June 12, 1963, Evers reportedly pulled into his driveway after

    returning from a meeting with NAACP lawyers. Emerging from his car carrying NAACP T-

    shirts that read Jim Crow Must Go, Evers was struck in the back with a bullet fired from anEnfield 1917 rifle. He was pronounced dead at the hospital.

    Prince Louis Rwagasore, 29(Jan. 10, 1932Oct. 13, 1961)

    Rwagasores reign as the prime minister of Ruanda-Urundi was short-lived. Ruanda-Urundi at

    the time was under Belgian and Germany rule and populated by the Twa, Hutu and Tutsi

    peoples.

    According to rwagasore.com, Rwagasore was an emblematic figure of the anti-colonialstruggle and directly linked to the independence of Burundi through the formation of the multi-ethnic unity party, Union for National Progress (UPRONA). UPRONA urged the local

    population to boycott Belgian stores and refuse to pay taxes.

    The country claimed complete independence on July 1, 1962, and legally changed its name from

    Ruanda-Urundi back to Burundi. Two weeks later, Rwagasore was assassinated in a plot

    organized by a Belgian-supported rival to the throne.

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    Rwagasore believed the Belgian colonial rule pitched the Hutus and Tutsis against each other. In

    an effort to play down the ethnic divisions between the groups, Rwagasore married a woman

    many believed was Hutu.

    Harry Moore, 45(Nov. 18, 1905Dec. 25, 1951) and Harriette Moore, 50(June 19, 1902

    Jan. 3, 1952)

    Harry and Harriette Moore were a husband and wife team of civil rights activists and teachers

    who founded the NAACP in Brevard County, Fla.

    In the early 1940s, Harry Moore became an unpaid executive secretary for the NAACP.According topbs.org, [Moore] began churning out eloquent letters, circulars, and broadsidesprotesting unequal salaries, segregated schools and the disenfranchisement of Black voters.

    Harry Moore continued his political activism and reportedly investigated every lynching case inFlorida until his death.

    He also led the Progressive Voters League. Between 1944 and 1950, he succeeded in increasingthe registration of Black voters in Florida to 31 percent of those eligible to vote, markedly higher

    than in any other Southern state.

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    Moore would later become a full-time organizer for the NAACP after both he and his wife were

    fired from their teaching jobs.

    In 1951, the Moores were killed when their home was bombed by the Ku Klux Klan. The

    Moores were reportedly the first NAACP members to be murdered for their civil rights activism.

    Moore has been called the first martyr of the 1950s-era civil rights movement.

    Center

    Ruben Um Nyob, 45(1913Sept. 13, 1958)

    Ruben Um Nyob, known as the father of Cameroons independence was a freedom fighter andan anti-imperialist leader.

    He was a key figure in the creation the Cameroons People Union (UPC) in 1948, which engagedin armed struggle to obtain independence and reunification of both the British and French

    Cameroons.

    On April 22, 1955, the UPC published the Proclamation Commune or Common

    Proclamation, which was considered by French authorities to be a provocation and a unilateral

    declaration of independence.

    French colonialists banned and exiled members of the UPC and over the next decade key

    members of the armed struggle were assassinated.

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    Nyob was killed by the French army in 1958. Felix Moumi, president of the UPC at the time,

    was poisoned in Geneva in October 1960, by the French secret service. The UPC continued its

    armed struggle until the arrest in August 1970 of Ernest Ouandi, who was shot six months laterin January 1971. Meanwhile another leader of UPC, Osend Afana, was killed in the southeast in

    March 1966.

    Walter Rodney, 38(March 23, 1942June 13, 1980)

    Walter Rodney was a prominent Guyanese historian, political activist and preeminent scholar,who fervently believed that intellectuals should make their skills available for the struggle and

    emancipation of the people. Rodney remained true to his beliefs after earning a Ph.D. with

    honors in African History at the School of Oriental and African Studies in London, at the

    age of 24.

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    Rodney would go on to teach at the University of Dar es Salaam in Tanzania and at the

    University of the West Indies in Jamaica. He actively rallied for Black liberation, debated against

    capitalism, and argued for a socialist development template for the Caribbean and Africa.

    Rodney returned to his birthplace of Guyana in 1974 to accept a position as a professor at the

    University of Guyana. The government blocked the appointment and Rodney returned to hispolitical activist roots.

    According toguyanacaribbeanpolitics.com, Rodney remained in Guyana and emerged as theleading figure in the resistance movement against the increasingly authoritarian PNC

    government.

    In 1979, Rodney and seven others were arrested and charged with arson. The following year he

    was assassinated by a bomb in the middle of Georgetown.