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Rosa Parks’s America: In Nearly 75% Black Birmingham, AL, Public Buses Feature Victims Of Black On Black Violence …

By Paul Kersey

02/13/2023

Earlier: Birmingham, AL, Air Force Special Operations Surgical Team Trains For War-Time Deployment On The “Surge Of Black Gun Victims At Hands Of Black Suspects

During Black History Month, let’s celebrate Rosa Parks’s true legacy… the death of public transportation in America. And on its carcass rests a reminder of who killed it.

MAX Transit, Birmingham Moms Unveil Black History Month Bus Wrap, Birmingham Times, February 8, 2023

After battling with “major depression” for the past three months, Felicia Morgan got a much-welcomed lift on Tuesday, she said.

Morgan, whose 20-year-old Sanquez Morgan was killed in May 2019, joined nearly a dozen other mothers as a new Birmingham Jefferson County Transit Authority/MAX bus featuring the faces of those whose children have been murdered was unveiled on Tuesday afternoon.

Each February, MAX unveils a bus wrap design in honor of Black History Month.

The 2023 bus design depicts the heartbroken mothers with hands extended, revealing a red painted palm with a heart in its center — a symbolic gesture urging the public to stop the violence in the name of love.

For #BlackHistoryMonth, @BJCTAMAX unveiled the 2023 bus design with heartbroken mothers with hands extended, revealing a red painted palm with a heart in its center — a symbolic gesture urging the public to #stoptheviolence in the name of love.@aldotcom https://t.co/dbIk0bkAPs pic.twitter.com/cIJtO7LWdM

— TheBirminghamTimes (@BhamTimes) February 8, 2023

“Today’s event was very touching and powerful for me because I had been in major depression for three months,” said Morgan, member of What About Us, a Birmingham-based nonprofit organization that provides support services for those who have experienced the loss of a child.

“To get here and see all of the faces to support this cause lifted me up tremendously,” Morgan said. “No one really cares how much you know until they know how much you care. The city showed that today,”

Charlotte Shaw, executive director and CEO of the BJCTA, said she wanted to make a statement with the bus that might awaken the community.

“Our MAX buses pass through Jefferson County and each of our 99 neighborhoods,” said Shaw. “Appealing for non-violence and love on one of our buses in the month of February felt like the perfect gesture.”

Many of the mothers who came to the unveiling were members of “What About Us”, founded by Sheree Kennon, whose son Detraio Whorton was killed on Feb. 25, 2021. Another mother in the group, Wytangy Peake-Finney’s son Calvin Arthur Foster, was killed on August 9, 2016. Peake-Finney is Senior Director of Planning at the BJCTA.

“It meant a lot to us to have one of our own who has been through this situation and that made it even more important to our director Charlotte Shaw,” Sam South, communications director for BJCTA told CBS42. “She came to us and said this is the perfect time with the recent issue and the recent deaths. This is the time to raise our hands and just say stop.”

Last year, Birmingham had 142 homicides, the most since 1933, when the city recorded 148 slayings.

Mothers in attendance at Tuesday’s unveiling included Morgan, Kennon, Peake-Finley, Catrina Carey, Frieda Truss, Pamela Davis, Rose Johnson, Kimyatta Henry, Theta Johnson, and Connie Dismukes.

The mothers dressed in red for the unveiling of the bus.

“We’re out here fighting for our kids’ lives,” Kennon told AL.com. “We’re tired of burying our kids. We should be able to give each other love and respect. It’s just a tragedy that we have to deal with this every single day.”

Darryl Cunningham Sr. Director of BJCTA/MAX, said, the bus wrap “is a way to publicly and visibly allow people to see a soft message, but a loud message … that is part of the healing process.”

“[The mothers] benefited from it greater than anyone because some of the mothers suffer in silence,” he said. “They feel that they are all alone, or that their loved ones have been forgotten. So to see a group like that today, honor them, make them aware of the people are still grieving, and supporting and praying for them. They really needed that,” he said.

As the bus rolls through the city, Cunningham hopes it catches the attention of young people. “That’s the whole objective, to make them aware that what has happened is not new, [gun violence] destroys people’s lives and they [young people] can be a part of the healing process and prevention … To have that bus with that message on it, with their [mother’s] hands and a heart is powerful.”

For those paying attention, almost every homicide in Birmingham, Alabama (a nearly 75 percent black city) has a black suspect. Those tragically dying have nothing to do with implicit bias / structural racism / heat islands / shade equity / white supremacy, but the ever-persistent reality of black crime.

[Comment at Unz.com]

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