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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsMaya Angelou... Norman Rockwell... 50 Years Tomorrow...

Those three young men represent three hundred thousand young men and women who dared, who had the courage to go to the lions den and try to scrub the lions teeth. People live in direct relation to the heroes and she-roes that they have, always and always. Young people can look at the famous football player, the well-known baseball player, the golfer and say, I want to be like that. Well, we have to have that in the civil rights movement.
Some became famous because of what they said. We have to have the people who became famous for what they did. And I think those three are unmitigated heroes, so we have to lift them up and show them to the world, so that some young man in Philadelphia or Tucson, Arizona, says, I wonder, could I stand up for Right even though it doesnt actually concern me? Not knowing that by standing up for Right, hes actually doing the right thing for himself.
Link: https://www.facebook.com/bradherzogsbooks/posts/10153995162180626
dflprincess
(29,336 posts)And thanks for posting the painting - I don't know how I went 50 years without ever seeing it.
WillyT
(72,631 posts)dflprincess
(29,336 posts)I recall seeing something on TV a long time ago about Rockwell's paintings but they never showed this one. They claimed the only political one he ever did was of the little girl being escorted to school surrounded by U.S. Marshalls.
Pity they didn't use it on the cover. Just as Cronkite saying we should get out of Vietnam changed people's minds, Norman Rockwell's departure from his usual content and style might have reached some people.
WillyT
(72,631 posts)


Peace...
madamesilverspurs
(16,507 posts)And I very much doubt that the assailants' shadows are so weirdly distorted by accident.
Chilling.
WillyT
(72,631 posts)A commenter said on the blog I found it... look at the shadowed ears...
That made my flesh crawl.
sabrina 1
(62,325 posts)were dominating DU. And it occurred to me that all three of them would be old, two of them old white men, had they not been so brutally murdered. Which only goes to show how bigotry takes many forms. And it knows no bounds.
Had they survived, I wonder, where all three would be today? Hatred, it is a disease that we don't seem to be able to cure.
Uncle Joe
(65,079 posts)Thanks for the thread, WillyT.