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Subject:
From:
Ams Jallow <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
The Gambia and related-issues mailing list <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Mon, 7 Feb 2005 20:49:21 EST
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Culled From  democracynow
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____________________________________
Actor and civil rights activist Ossie Davis died Friday in Miami Beach. He 
was  87 years old. For half a century, Davis led a distinguished career as an 
actor,  playwright and director. Along with his wife, Ruby Dee, he was a 
renowned civil  rights activist and an unforgettable figure in the African American 
struggle for  equality. We spend the hour remembering Ossie Davis: From his 
eulogies to  Malcolm X and Martin Luther King to his opposition to the war in 
Iraq. We hear  from actor Danny Glover and journalist Herb Boyd and we play a 
commentary by  death row prisoner, Mumia Abu Jamal. [includes rush transcript]   
____________________________________
 Actor and civil rights activist, Ossie Davis has died. He was found in a 
hotel  room in Miami Beach Friday, where he was making a movie. He was 87 years 
old.  
For five decades, Ossie Davis had a distinguished career as an actor,  
playwright and director. Along with his wife, Ruby Dee, he was a renowned civil  
rights activist and an unforgettable figure in the African American struggle for  
equality.  
He performed in some 80 movies, including six with director Spike Lee. Two  
months ago, he and Ruby Dee, were honored at the Kennedy Center for their  
lifelong contributions to theater, television and film, as well as for being  
models of courage and grace in the long struggle for equality in the United  
States.  
Ossie Davis was born Dec. 18, 1917, in Cogdell, Georgia. His given name was  
meant to be Raiford Chatman Davis, but the registrar of births recorded what  
were supposed to be the initials, "R.C.," as "Ossie" and it remained his name  
ever since.  
He grew up in the segregated south amid racism and the Ku Klux Klan. As a  
young man, he hitchhiked to Washington, D.C., to attend Howard University. He  
dropped out at the end of his junior year and moved to Harlem in New York City. 
 In 1942, he was drafted into the Army where he spent much of World War II as 
a  surgical technician in an Army hospital in Liberia.  
After his discharge in 1945, he began career on the stage in New York where  
he met fellow actor, Ruby Dee. They married in December 1948 and were  
inseparable for the next 56 years.  
In addition to their acting careers, Ossie Davis and Ruby Dee had prominent  
roles on the nation's political stages. They participated in marches for 
racial  equality throughout the South and participated in the 1963 March on 
Washington.  
After Malcolm X was assassinated at a Harlem rally in 1965, Ossie Davis wrote 
 and delivered a eulogy at his funeral. In 1968, he eulogized the Rev. Dr. 
Martin  Luther King.  
Despite being blacklisted briefly in the 1950s McCarthyism era, Davis often  
traveled to Washington to speak before congressional committees about the arts 
 or about opportunities for people of color in Hollywood.  
In 1992, Davis wrote a novel and in 1998 published an autobiography with his  
wife titled, "With Ossie and Ruby: In This Life Together." Davis continued 
his  activism up until his death, most recently protesting the war in Iraq.  
    *   Ossie Davis, speaking at Riverside Church in New York City, March  
27, 2003.
 
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AMY GOODMAN: We're going to begin with a speech he gave at Riverside  Church 
days after the launch of the U.S. invasion of Iraq. This is Ossie Davis.  
OSSIE DAVIS: I am indeed Ossie Davis. I say that so that those whose  duty it 
is to report my behavior back to the proper authorities. I am not as  smart 
as Miss Condoleezza Rice, though she is yet my sister, nor so faithful  unto 
death as General Colin Powell, though he is yet my brother. They have  their 
sense of duty; I have mine. They are loyal to their commander-in-chief,  and I am 
loyal to mine. My commander-in-chief is Martin Luther King, Jr., and  more 
than 30 years ago, he stood in these sacred halls and gave me my marching  
orders.  
Though I was predisposed to peace-mongering long before I met Dr. King, it  
started for me with a jolt on that day, August 7, when the atomic bomb was  
dropped on Hiroshima, and I was with a soldier, 28 years old, faced with the  
brutal consequences of what my country had done. It was a period that left me  in 
depression, trying to find an answer, because I knew the quandary, into  
which these acts had led us. I fully understood that our technology and our  
humanity were in full balance. Which one would lead us to the future was the  
question.  
I watched in horror when I left the service as my country used the atomic  
bomb as the center of its foreign policy, how the march away from colonization  
in Africa and other places was affected by that concept of ourselves which  
under the aegis of Mr. Churchill and also Mr. Truman set out to establish  their 
vision of a world where we had a second class place and were implored to  
remain in that position. I saw the struggle for people to be free. I saw the  
stand we took in 1954 when France was faltering as she tried to re-impose  
colonialism in Southeast Asia, and when France faltered Dien Bien Phu, I saw  her 
step in and take over. I saw, even then, that we were on a course that  could 
well lead to destruction. And much later, in the war that came  subsequent to 
that, I saw the country engaged in what Dr. King told us on that  night was 
adventures based on militarism, racism, and poverty, which it was  more 
constrained to pursue than peace and justice and equanimity all over the  world. I 
became that night as many of you did, citizens who were also drum  majors for 
justice, drum majors for justice second class, glad to be  recruited.  
I thought with the pain and anguish of Vietnam that my country had learned  a 
lesson, that we had decided that there was an end to our reliance on  
technological tricks and gimmickry. But I see today that I have been mistaken.  As I 
read once again the magnificent words of Dr. King upon that occasion and  saw 
how easily we might this very night transpose the word Vietnam for Iraq,  and 
the document would still be an eloquent cry for sanity and for peace.  
I have never looked upon myself as a magician. I was not sent by the  
almighty to solve all of the problems of the world at one fell swoop. I am not  
morally arrogant. I accept the fact that maybe this generation was not the one  
designed by fate to bring peace to the world. But I also believe that it is  
necessary to stay on the march, to be on the journey, to work for peace  wherever 
we are at all times, because the liberty we cherish, which we would  share 
with the world, demands eternal vigilance. And democracy is no easy  path, but 
those of us who believe in it must be prepared to sacrifice in its  cause more 
willingly than those who are prepared to die in the wars of  aggression. We, 
too, must be dedicated to the cause of freedom. So, tonight,  I'm happy to join 
once again with those of you who see the cause as I do. I  say to my 
commanding officer, “Martin, here we are. Ossie, Ruby, our children  and grandchildren, 
all our house, all of us joined with millions from one end  of creation to 
the other. Martin, we report for duty, sir.” Thank you. 
AMY GOODMAN: Ossie Davis, speaking a week after the invasion of Iraq  began. 
He was speaking on March 27, 2003, at an event sponsored by WBAI Pacifica  
Radio at the historic Riverside Church.  
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