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Thursday, February 2, 2006

Proposed black museums need black money

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By

"The great force of history comes from the fact that we carry it within us ... and that history is literally present in all that we do."

Author James Baldwin, quoted by Lonnie G. Bunch, founding director of the Smithsonian's National Museum of African American History and Culture, in Museum News.

Time, sistahs and brothas, to put your money where your memory is.

As we call the roll today of the great civil rights stalwarts, another icon will not answer.

Coretta Scott King, the genteel Southern beauty who must go down in the history books as more than a grieving widow, deserves a place in history's halls in her own right. The 78-year-old civil rights maven took up the mantle and fought the good fight for freedom for as many years as her husband, Martin Luther King, was alive.

However, in what history halls will future generations know of these valiant freedom fighters who forced the great American documents of liberty and justice for all to live up to their promise and guarantees? "Coretta King is due the justice of being remembered for her own extraordinary work," said D.C. Delegate Eleanor Holmes Norton, a longtime friend.

It should not be lost on any American, most especially a black American, that the day after Mrs. King died in a Mexico hospice, the Smithsonian Institution's Board of Regents selected the most prominent of four proposed sites to build the National Museum of African American History and Culture.

Kudos to the board for giving the museum a deserved seat, front and center, on the Mall. At the corner of 14th Street and Constitution Avenue Northwest, it will stand proudly just a stone's throw from the Reflecting Pool where King gave his seminal "I Have a Dream" speech during the 1963 March on Washington.

"It is crucial to remember that we are all made better by embracing the inspirational stories and lesson of African-American culture," Mr. Bunch said in his speech printed in Museum News late last year. "The black past is a wonderful but unforgiving mirror that reminds us of America's ideals and promise." What a significant way to jump-start Black History Month 2006.

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