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Dear John,
Now is the time for listening and learning from Black voices.
There are many who have guided our organization — and countless more whose voices deserve to be amplified. Today we are paying tribute to one: Bayard Rustin.
Bayard Rustin was the chief architect of the March on Washington — and a beloved board member of the International Rescue Committee. He was a proud Black man, a proud gay man, a master organizer, a public intellectual, a tireless resister, teacher and enactor of change.
His entire life was spent confronting injustice and refusing to accept the status quo.
Bayard Rustin was born in 1912 to a single mother, and learned the tenants of activism through his grandmother's Quaker faith. As a young man he campaigned against racial discrimination — including labor inequality and segregation in the military — while laying plans for boycotts, early Freedom Rides, and the March on Washington years before they took effect. |
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