Newark Mayor: Hamer鈥檚 Advocacy Should be Inspiration to Students

Professor of Music Beverly Vaughn and her choir, the Freedom Singers, performed Fannie Lou Hamer's favorite gospel songs at the start of the 22nd annual Human and Civil Rights Symposium on Tuesday, Oct. 7.
Galloway, N.J. 鈥Fannie Lou Hamer, an activist for voting and civil rights during the Civil Rights Movement in the 1960s, is known famously for saying the words, 鈥淚鈥檓 sick and tired of being sick and tired.鈥
However, during Oct. 7鈥檚 Human and Civil Rights Symposium bearing her name, this year鈥檚 keynote speaker Newark Mayor Ras Baraka shed light on a lesser-known quote of hers when sharing her story.
鈥淔annie Lou Hamer said that the flag is soaked with our blood,鈥 Baraka said. 鈥淪he was a sharecropper from Ruleville, Mississippi, who was evicted because the plantation owner told her she had to withdraw her voter registration. She refused and was later arrested and beaten in jail under the orders of the State Highway Patrol.
鈥淭his is what it looked like for us,鈥 Baraka continued. 鈥淭his is what we had to go through in order to be part of this democracy, to actually build one here in this country.鈥
According to Baraka, Hamer鈥檚 powerful advocacy should serve as inspiration to the next generation of scholar-activists sitting in 番茄社区app鈥檚 Performing Arts Center, saying that while today鈥檚 current climate is challenging, it also 鈥減ales in comparison to what others endured.鈥

鈥淚t pains me how we get so used to inequity, and that it's become how we justify and rationalize what is happening today,鈥 Baraka said. 鈥淗ow have we become averse to sacrifice when we wouldn't be in this room without what others had to deal with? We belong in these rooms, schools and places. Why? Because somebody already paid the price for you to be here.鈥
Baraka concluded his speech by sharing the story of how his grandfather boarded a train from the Carolinas to Newark to escape the South鈥檚 Jim Crow laws, where he became a shoe shiner in a barbershop.
鈥淗e shined shoes until he became a social worker. And his son became a renowned and international poet, writer, essayist and thinker. And his grandson became the mayor of the city of Newark,鈥 Baraka said. 鈥淲hen I ran for governor, I would often think of his story, because he would have never imagined, as a boy in the Jim Crow South, that his grandson would actually be a contender for the governor of the state of New Jersey.
鈥淭his is not a sad story; this is a story to rejoice,鈥 Baraka continued. 鈥淲hat I鈥檓 saying is that we rise from ashes and out of fire, and that no matter how difficult and ugly the situation is, we advance ourselves anyway.鈥
Shortly before Baraka鈥檚 electrifying keynote, the symposium began with a variety of performances, including a gospel choral performance of Hamer鈥檚 favorite songs by Stockton Professor of Music Beverly Vaughn and the Freedom Singers and a jazz dance by major Kiana Bryan, who owns and operates Black Essence Performing Arts.
Christina Noble, an alumna of Stockton鈥檚 program, and Lee Bryant, assistant dean for Stockton鈥檚 , performed an interpretive dance and dramatic reading of 鈥淲ise I鈥 by Amiri Baraka.
When welcoming the audience to the program, Shane Moore, president of the , encouraged the audience to acknowledge the sacrifices made and the courage shown by activists like Hamer, which allowed students the freedom and opportunities they currently have.
鈥淎s we gather here, let's reflect on the progress that we have made since her courageous activism during a time when Black Americans were denied the right to vote, access to quality education and opportunities for advancement. Without the strength and perseverance of Fannie Lou Hamer and many others before us, we would not be in the position we are today,鈥 said the Health Sciences major. 鈥淪o, I encourage everyone, if you haven't already, to go register and make sure you go vote. That is something that we take for granted, and we need to take advantage of that, especially with the election coming up soon.鈥
In his remarks, Stockton President Joe Bertolino echoed Moore's sentiments and challenged the audience to remain engaged in the local community to honor Hamer's legacy, calling it 鈥渁 responsibility.鈥
鈥淰oting is how we honor the sacrifices of those who marched, organized and refused to be silenced,鈥 Bertolino said. 鈥淓lections aren鈥檛 abstract. The choices we make at the polls shape our neighborhoods, education systems, environment and our future.
鈥淲e gather each year to honor the extraordinary legacy of Fannie Lou Hamer, a woman who refused to accept injustice as normal and believed that ordinary people could do extraordinary things when they acted with faith and courage. She reminds us that democracy is not guaranteed, but that it must be nurtured, protected and, when necessary, fought for,鈥 Bertolino continued.
鈥 Story by Loukaia Taylor
鈥 Photos by Mark Melhorn
Activist Ndaba Mandela Inspires Students to Take Action
October 10, 2024

Galloway, N.J. 鈥 The first time met his grandfather, he was 7 years old and had just completed a 12-hour trip from Johannesburg to the Eastern Cape of South Africa.
The 21st keynote speaker for the annual Fannie Lou Hamer Human & Civil Rights Symposium at 番茄社区app was told by his parents that his grandfather 鈥 Nelson Mandela, an internationally recognized activist and opponent of South African apartheid 鈥 was under house arrest.
As a child, he didn鈥檛 understand the reason behind his grandfather鈥檚 captivity or that he was in trouble at all 鈥 just that the nice mansion that he was currently resting and being fed in after a long trip had a kind man who undoubtedly spoiled him.
Who could blame the child for turning to his parents and quipping, 鈥淲hen I grow up, I want to go to jail too.鈥
This story was just one of many that Ndaba Mandela shared about his grandfather during the Oct. 8 event. A couple of years after that fateful visit, Ndaba Mandela鈥檚 father started taking university classes and decided to leave the boy in Nelson's care. He proved to be an at-times strict but ultimately very caring parental figure for him.
The audience laughed as Ndaba Mandela described a time in which he shirked one of his responsibilities and was subsequently sent to the front lawn with a blanket for a night under the stars, only to be ushered back into the house just before nightfall.
60 years ago, to this day, Fannie Lou Hamer traveled from Ruleville, Mississippi, to Atlantic City and stood before the Democratic National Convention to challenge the all-white delegation representing her home state.
Her bravery was met with jeering, vitriol and even censorship as television broadcasts quickly cut off her from reaching the homes of the convention鈥檚 constituents. However, her plea for justice and civil rights still resounded all over the world, especially when she in order to protest the 1964 Mississippi House election in which she and the rest of the state鈥檚 Black population were barred from voting in.