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Oklahoma Superstar

By Rose Aguilar, AlterNet. Posted August 2, 2005.


Clara Luper was an integral part of the 1950s' civil rights movement. Here, she discusses her sit-in days, going to jail 26 times, and what the Democrats are doing wrong.
Clara Luper

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In 1957, high school history teacher Clara Luper was given the opportunity to escape segregated Oklahoma by spending a few days in New York presenting "Brother President," a play she wrote about Martin Luther King. Luper and the group of students she brought with her were able to go about their day like everyone else and order sodas from non-segregated lunch counters. As their bus journeyed back through the Jim Crow South, Luper vowed to take on segregation and explained how she was going to do it in her book, Behold the Walls:

I thought about my father who had died in 1957 in the Veterans' Hospital and who had never been able to sit down and eat a meal in a decent restaurant. I remembered how he used to tell us that someday he would take us to dinner and to parks and zoos. And when I asked him when was someday, he would always say, "Someday will be real soon," as tears ran down his cheeks. So my answer was, "Yes, tonight is the night. History compels us to go, and let History alone be our final judge.”
Shortly thereafter, Luper and 12 members of the NAACP Youth Council, ages six to 17, walked into the Katz Drug Store in downtown Oklahoma City and ordered 13 Coca-Colas. A typical response from Luper's fellow white customers was, "The nerve of the niggers trying to eat in our places. Who does Clara Luper think she is? She is nothing but a damned fool, the black thing." Thanks to patience and persistence, Katz, a major drug store, eventually desegregated the lunch counters in all of its 38 stores in Oklahoma, Missouri, Kansas and Iowa.

That action led to similar sit-ins in Oklahoma City and across the South. Luper eventually became known as the "Mother of the Civil Rights Movement." Luper is well-known in Oklahoma, but isn't a household name nationwide. Today 82-year-old Luper speaks about her work to groups across the country and is involved with the NAACP, Miss Black Oklahoma and her church. I recently spoke with Clara at her home in Oklahoma City.

AlterNet: Tell me about the work you've been involved with in the past, specifically the sit-ins.

Clara Luper: Well, first off, I'm black. I've known segregation as one of the worst experiences of a person's life. I was born in a segregated area. I went to a segregated school where we'd be reading sometimes on page four and the next page would be ten. I have had the experience of going to the back of the bus, not being able to go to libraries, public accommodations and what have you. I've always hated segregation with a passion. That's why I've been associated with the NAACP.

Did you immediately recognize that segregation was wrong?

I was always taught that segregation was wrong. I came from a family that understood the scars of segregation and they knew it was wrong, but doing something about it was a different story because Oklahoma was primarily at its infancy a Democratic State. In writing the Constitution, the first laws that were passed were segregation laws, so my parents had lived with it. My dad was a veteran of World War I and he believed what Woodrow Wilson said: they were fighting to make the world safe for democracy. My mother was from Texas and she saw a black person burned in Paris, Texas and she was afraid that would happen to anyone who spoke out against segregation. When I would say, why do we have to go to the back of the bus? My mother would say, shut up; my dad would say, someday you'll be able to ride anywhere on the bus. He had a lot of faith in what would happen and what would change in Oklahoma.

When it comes to segregation and racism, most people think of Mississippi and Alabama. What would you say to people who don't know that much about the history of Oklahoma, especially as it pertains to racism and segregation?

Well, they haven't studied Oklahoma history because during the debate on the Civil Rights Bill in 1964, one Senator stated that Oklahoma had the worst segregation laws in the United States, which is true. Our laws were on the books and they stated very clearly that we should be separated. It was written by Bill Murray who hated Catholics, Jews and Blacks. And he wrote it so that all laws would be segregation laws. People just don't know because we are a young state and people have not paid attention to us like they have in other states. We've had lynchings in this state. We've had burnings. In fact, my building was bombed. We've had a lot of things. But one difference between Oklahoma and the other states is that we had a nonviolent movement here.

Tell me about that movement.

In 1957, I wrote as part of a black history program, a play that I call, "Brother President," which was a story about Martin Luther King. I had met Martin Luther King through the NAACP when he received an award in New York City. I'm Baptist and I was so proud to hear a Baptist minister talk about social changes. I wrote this play and for the first time in my life, I took a group of young people to New York City because the NAACP had asked for voices from the South and we went there. Most of my kids had never had the opportunity to go in a restaurant and order Cokes and what have you. We lived at the Henry Hudson Hotel in New York City and the kids really enjoyed it, but on the way back, we came back through segregated Washington DC, which was another experience.

Then I thought that "I cannot leave this area until I take my kids to Arlington Cemetery." That's a heartwarming experience because you just don't realize how many people have died perpetuating what we call democracy. So a 14-year-old girl standing in the Arlington Cemetery says to me: "What can we do? All of these people have died for freedom. What can we do?" We came back through the segregated South where we couldn't eat in restaurants.

To make a long story short, when we came back to Oklahoma City, the NAACP youth council met and wanted to open public accommodations to all and we thought it'd be easy because we are known as the Bible center of America. We thought all we had to do was make our wishes known. I had a friend, who happened to be white, who was so excited about the project. We decided to go to the restaurants together and when we did that, all hell broke out because they would say to the white lady, come in, but Clara Luper, you can't come in.

We did that for 17 long months and after 17 months, the kids made reports and my daughter Marilyn said, let's go downtown and wait. And we selected the stores where most blacks traded. So we decided that night to go to Katz Drug Store. Katz Drug Store not only had drugs, it had a basement with tennis shoes and shirts and what have you. So we went in, 13 of us, and took seats. People that had known us for years began to curse us. They called the police. Policemen came from all directions, but we were just sitting at the counter. We were not arrested. That was in 1958 and we are getting ready to celebrate the 48th anniversary of the beginning of the sit-in movement. We celebrate every year. That's how we got started.

When did the dialogue begin to shift? In the beginning, people were outraged.

People were outraged. We had to sit-in from 1958 to 1964, so they were outraged because we were able to uncover the prejudice that had been quilted into the intellectual fabrics of the whites in this state.

Did you have any white champions? Did anyone have a change of heart and say, 'You're right; segregation is wrong?'

I don't think they had a change of heart. There were a lot of whites that participated in the movement. I told the whites, when you participate in this movement, you're going to suffer discrimination, and they found that. A priest at a local Catholic Church here was abused, and finally he was run out of town. Doctor Yates, who was a young Presbyterian minister who participated, was run out. There were a lot of white people that wanted to see the change. See, white people had a fear in Oklahoma. If they would come out and support us, they would be isolated from their friends and neighbors. There were many business owners that felt if they would come out and support us, they would lose their white customers.

There were jail-ins. I went to jail 26 times. There were read-ins. While we were sitting-in, our kids were preparing to live in the real world, so they were reading. Out of that experience, we got doctors and lawyers. A lot of people have gone to the top. In fact, one of the top brain surgeons in the United States started when we were down there sitting-in. He wanted to be a doctor and I said, if you want to be a doctor, memorize all the bones in the body, the vessels, the veins and the arteries and that is what he did. They were very, very successful. In fact, this year, during the sit-in freedom fiesta celebration, one of the young ladies who was voted the best principal in the United States, who has a master's degree, was our guest speaker. She was one of the kids who had the experience of reading during that time.

Are most of the people involved in the sit-in alive today?

Yes, most of them are alive.

And you're in contact with them?

Yes, they're all over the country.

What's the climate like today? I notice that when I go to churches, they're either all-white or all-black.

The climate today in Oklahoma has changed. The churches are still the most segregated part of Oklahoma. Our school system has changed, the employment picture has changed on the lower level, but we are still the last ones hired and the first ones fired. I think it's a climate of understanding, and credit must not only be given to the NAACP. It must be given to the men that fought in World War II and the Korean War and Vietnam because these guys came back with a different attitude. Things have changed for the better because I know I couldn't even go downtown and now I'm always getting invitations. I got an opportunity not only to work in black schools, but in white schools.

I remember quite vividly one white lady who didn't want her son in my class and had the audacity to come to my classroom and call for her son. At that time, I had to show her that I was the boss of that classroom, so I went out and said, show me some identification because you might be somebody trying to kidnap one of my students. She was nervous and finally pulled out a driver's license. I explained to her, 'You've got to understand that I'm responsible for this classroom,' and her son, who was a junior at that time, was so embarrassed. When I went in and got him, he was angry with his mother. They had quite a fuss and he told his mother, "I'm staying in this class because I'm learning something."

This young man is now president of a company and last year, he called me and asked me to go to lunch. He didn't tell me his mother was going to be present. So I went to lunch with him and he had his mother apologize to me. He said, "This is the lady that changed my life."

I came from low-income people. I couldn't understand kids who had everything, but wouldn't study and wouldn't work. I really produced some great students because of that. I called them my diamonds and explained, "You gotta dig for a diamond. You gotta polish it."

How did the apology make you feel?

In the first place, I have never had the seed of hatred in me. And the white folks that spit on me and cursed me, they were ignorant people. They didn't know my dreams and my aspirations. They didn't know my understanding of America and what it was all about, so I felt sorry for them. I remember one time, I was havin' some fun and I asked one of the segregationists to describe a black person to me. He couldn't do it because we come in so many different colors.

When I ran for the United States Senate and I was down in what is known as Little Dixie, one of the leaders of the community asked me how I felt about interracial marriage. I really hated that he asked me that because I know so many marriages have failed whether they're white and white or black and black. I told him, "I have never seen an elephant having intercourse with an ant and therefore, I believe that anything that God did not want to mate, he made biologically impossible." He didn't like that, but nobody asked me about interracial marriage again. I think people are hung up on the wrong thing.

Like gay marriage?

Yeah, I have nothin' to do with anybody wanting to marry anybody. That's their business.

The type of activism that you were involved with doesn't happen today. There are protests, but a lot of people say it's difficult to make an impact.

We were protesting against the laws. Another way to go about it is through education. That's what we've got to do. The textbooks must be changed. For example, the Oklahoma history books, before 1980, hardly had anything about women and women were the backbone of the state. The more you know about women, the more you know about blacks, the more you know about Indians, the better off you are. History books have been written by white men.

But in terms of activism and actions, people from all over the country took to the streets during the Republican National Convention, hundreds of thousands protested the war, people sign petitions, people volunteered during the election, people call their Senators, but many on the left feel like their actions don't make a difference.

The problem is with the young people between the ages of 18 and 45. Those people have not gotten out and registered to vote. They don't think what happens in Washington affects them. You know I'm anti-war because I see no need to go somewhere to put democracy down somebody else's throat when we don't have it ourselves. Bush has a lot of personality that will make people say ok, ok, ok without thinking. That's what is happening. I'm not tied to any political party. I have friends who are Republicans, Independents and Democrats. I'm only interested in people who believe everybody should have basic rights.

What is your opinion of the Bush administration and what they've done over the past four years?

What have they done over the past four years? I know one thing: One thousand seven hundred of our bright young Americans have died for a cause that I don't understand. Naturally, I'm speaking from a mother's standpoint. I would like to see a war where old men have to go and fight. That would be the kind of war I would like to see. Bush and his group should go over there and send our boys home.

Democrats tend to ignore the so-called "red states" like Oklahoma saying it's not worth spending money here. What do you think about that?

I think it's a mistake. In politics, all states are important.

Why did John Kerry fail to win one county here?

John Kerry didn't come to Oklahoma and connect with the right people. He was not able to get his message out. I voted for him and I think he got most of his votes from the east side of Oklahoma City. The east side is predominantly black.

What can politicians do to get more blacks to vote?

We've got to get them registered and to the polls. A lot of them are still afraid to vote.

What advice would you give to the Democratic party?

I think they should make use of the black media. I'm on the radio. I work for KTLV. We couldn't get Kerry's group to spend any money in the black community. We have black newspapers and black radio programs. They've got to become involved because the day is over when you can have a barbeque and ask people to come out and vote.

They're really struggling with issues like gay marriage and abortion because the Republicans have done such a good job of turning those into wedge issues.

Those aren't our issues. I don't know any black people who are concerned with gay marriages and abortions. Those are somebody else's issues. We're concerned with hospital prices, medicine, jobs, social security, education and all of that.

It's interesting you say that because when we go to black churches, people say they're against gay marriage and abortion, but say they shouldn't be political issues, whereas when we interview people at white churches, those two issues are at the top of the list. They say they like Bush because he's against gay marriage and abortion.

That's a poor reason. I don't have a right to tell you whom you should marry. I don't have a right to take that decision away from you. I was at one black church and the preacher was explaining that those aren't our issues. Those are Bush's issues. He asked preachers, how many of you have married a gay couple? And not one of them had. This is not an important issue in the black community, according to the blacks I've talked to, and God knows I've talked to a lot of them. Unless we wake up, many church people will wake up without health care and social security and other things. Then there will be a crisis in the churches. The Democrats should hit it head on.

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Rose Aguilar is a San Francisco-based journalist gathering stories from people living in states that voted overwhelmingly for George W. Bush. Track her journey at Stories in America.

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What a Woman!
Posted by: beetruetoyou on Aug 2, 2005 5:15 AM   
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Hooray for Clara Luper! She should run for political office. It's wonderful to hear from a woman who has brought good out of the crud of segregation. She speaks wise words that we can all learn from and is another heroine of the American landscape. I would love to meet her some day.

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She should read an Oklahoman's book review of "What's the Matter with Kansas?"
Posted by: maxpayne on Aug 2, 2005 5:36 AM   
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if she really wants to further understand the voters in that state.

Why Brad Carson really went down in flames against a lunatic doctor turned Senator Tom Coburn

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Rose's Father
Posted by: jaw2001 on Aug 2, 2005 7:51 AM   
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Hooray for Rose. Truly a just fighter.

But something that touched me was when she said "my father ... used to tell us that someday he would take us to dinner and to parks and zoos. And when I asked him when was someday, he would always say, "Someday will be real soon," as tears ran down his cheeks"

Racism, segregation may have been what prevented Rose's father from taking out his children, but a father's inability to do these things today still exists.

Women today allow family bonds to be unraveled because the lessons of television dramas and a misguided psuedo-feminists movement that tells a woman to place herself before the family she helps create. Broken families are rampant and systemic in our society today. If that isnt heartbreaking enough, the blunt minded contempt many self-appointed single mothers have for the role of 'father' is frightening especially if you consider the negative impact it is having on our children today.

Rose was obviously a brave and visionary freedom fighter. But equally as important she sounds like a good mother and one who knows what a good father is. Rose would not have been this great woman, without a great father. That is one important lesson we all could take from this interview.

Anticipating the knee-jerk psuedo-feminist response,

A father of daughter (A real feminist).

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» RE: Clara's Father Posted by: izzie
» RE: Clara's Father Posted by: beetruetoyou
I Thank God
Posted by: nakis on Aug 2, 2005 8:54 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I thank God for people like Clara. People willing to live a courageous life day to day to make life better for others.

When I think of a true Christian, Clara is one of those types.

Thank you Clara.

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gay marriage and abortion
Posted by: izzie on Aug 2, 2005 9:02 AM   
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She's right on. They should not be political issues. Democrats could learn and thing or two from this amazing woman. Move the conversation from gay marriage and abortion to the economy, social security, healthcare, etc...

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God bless her
Posted by: Asses of Evil on Aug 2, 2005 10:57 AM   
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And she's so right; Republicans use wedge issues and then amplify Democrat support of these "controversial" issues, like gay marriage or medical marijuana or something. They blow up Democratic (or otherwise) opposition to the supposed "reasonable" thinking on these matters as though it's a point of religion that "reasonable" people will think in a conventional way on the issues and of course they go on all the Screaming Shows and make a big fuss about it, ignoring big quality of life issues like health-care, a living wage, unemployment, the outsourcing of jobs, etc. Repubs throw up the most facile distractions and people eat this stuff up...and Democrats, not being an opposition party, don't call the Repubs on this political sensationalism.

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Keep Eye On Ball
Posted by: atlien on Aug 2, 2005 12:14 PM   
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Blaming the 'wedge' issue tactic on Republicans is a serious misunderstanding of politics.

Both Democrats and Republicans employ this tactic to distract us all from economic issues with non-monetary, cultural issues. This tactic is consistently used not by one but both major political parties in the US. Their prime target in this isn't African-Americans but the working class, Eur-Amer, Af-Amer, Latin Amer, it doesn't matter. The target is and always has been people who aren't super rich.

People considered to be ethnic or sexual minorities are used as the 'wedge' but the issue remains an economic one, again, as it always has been.

I say this wishing that more interviews emphasized this aspect instead of making a lone demon of the Republican Party which channels too much dissent into the Democratic Party establishment which is a part of the assault on workers. Democrats and Republicans worked together to pass both NAFTA in the 90s and CAFTA a few days ago, assualts on workers domestic and global.

We must somehow keep making this point to circumvent this seemingly endless cycle of FAKE partisan politics which is only partisan on NON-MONETARY issues.

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» RE: Keep Eye On Ball Posted by: Asses of Evil
The Good People
Posted by: pjrsullivan on Aug 2, 2005 12:23 PM   
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When the first Europeons arrived in Africa they dubbed what is modern day Mozambique, the "Land of the Good People."

The environment fostered cooperation, and the people from there are cooperators. We also use the term civilized for cooperator behavior.

Our society is a predator society, with the driving forces being cannibals, hence the people from the land of the good people find themselves visiting "Hell on earth," filling the brutal prison systems of this old crown colony.

The predator behavior is the one that produces shame in thinking people, especially because we do not need to prey on one another. It is the "Animal Primitivism" that is driving the predator behavior.

Though of the 2 types of behavior, it is the predator behavior that has caused the higher level powers to reveal themselves to us. The plan by the predators to nuke the human race has brought "ET" to the forefront.

Militarism is cannibal behavior, and a simple form of life and culture. Let us follow the lead of the people from the land of the good people, and set about a path of cooperation, civilization and Peace. Shut the nukes down and the prison camps, and end the blight of the primitive predator behavior.

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Thank you for telling a bit of Ms. Luper's story
Posted by: Sojourner on Aug 2, 2005 9:09 PM   
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March of this year marked the 40th anniversary of the day people from Selma, Alabama, were beaten and driven back across the bridge out of town by Alabama state troopers.

I had read about the Freedom Rides and the beatings of the riders in Birmingham. I had heard of Martin Luther King before, in the news about the bus boycott in Montgomery. But I did not know his history going back to 1957. I did not take the opportunity to march with him until shortly after the Selma beatings in 1965. A lot of 'outside agitators' had come and gone in Alabama by then. Two with whom I felt close ties died there.

And I find it necessary to remind people today that Dr. King was not a popular person before his assassination in 1968. Yes, he had gotten the Nobel Prize for Peace. And with the Voting Rights Act and the Civil Rights Act, he had led Americans into a new era. But in his time, he was not widely liked and admired. Of course, I speak from my perspective as a member of the dominant white community.

His murder after JFK's and shortly before RFK's I thought were the most dismal American events not only in my lifetime but in American history. Assassins ruled.

But we are desperate now, more desperate than even then, for their kind of leadership. I thank God that we have Dr. King's and Malcolm X's examples for inspiration. I pray our need may be answered.

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"Our" issues
Posted by: libby on Aug 6, 2005 8:14 AM   
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Ms. Looper may believe that abortion and gay marriage are not "Black people's issues", but Black women are more likely than white or Latina women to get abortions and, believe it or not, the 10% rule (percentage of people who are gay or bisexual) applies to African-Americans as well. "Are heterosexual Blacks particularly interested in gay marriage?" seems like the question she thought she was answering.

And, if Black Americans are so disinterested in gay rights, why is opposition to it one of the major ways that candidates court the Black churchgoing community?

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Trivialization of Gay Rights Issues
Posted by: thirdmg on Aug 6, 2005 8:59 AM   
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>when we go to black churches, people say they're against gay marriage<

Suppose the interviewer had gone to a gay church and heard people say they're against inter-racial marriage or some other issue of rights related to race. The reaction would be moral outrage, and gay rights activists and most gays would join in the reaction.

Yet, when it comes to support for gay rights, the reaction of moral outrage is too often entirely the opposite. And, it's tell-tale about what's wrong with the left. Gay rights are attacked as "divisive issues" which pull attention from "important issues," such as the economy, social security, healthcare, etc. But, what these critics really mean is that gay rights are unimportant to them or silly, and they don't want to hear about them - so, sell out the gays.

Obviously, the economic and safety net issues are important. They're just as important to gays as to everyone else. But they're especially important to gay couples who can't marry and therefore can't participate in the same benefits and advantages married couples take for granted. For example, when one member of a gay couple on Social Security dies, the survivor has no right to the other's benefits. That can mean an instant financial crisis.

The main reason why Republicans have been so successful in their use of social wedge issues is that Democrats have so often been tepid and spineless in standing up for those issues. And, when Republicans succeed on social issues, they also succeed on thwarting any progress on economic and safety net issues.

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Hi there!
Posted by: blackavenger on Aug 6, 2005 3:20 PM   
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I read this article and as a minority I can say that Clara Luper has done many great things. However as far as rights go, we all have the same rights today. The primary people who are suppressinng black people are liberals and certain black politicians. (black on black crime?) Young black people should be taught today that they live in the greatest and most free country in the world, and Jackson, Sharpton, and the Naacp just arent cutting it. They want to create racial tension because it helps keep them in power. It also is a partisan racial issue that they use to try to hurt republicans. Neither I nor any other black person born in this country has ever been a slave, so therefore nothing is owed to me or any other minority. People today should look at Condoleeza Rice or Colin powell for examples of how to live our lives. Now race baiters and certain reverends who were caught with there pants down in an exta-marrital affair. I vote republican because it is and always has been the pary of civil rights.
Blackavenger

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» RE: Hi there! Posted by: chip90043
» RE: Hi there! Posted by: blackavenger2
» RE: Hi there! Posted by: doesmynamematter
Guam grateful for visit
Posted by: NasionChamoru on Sep 2, 2005 7:07 PM   
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Quite a few of us here on Guam had the good fortune of hearing Ms. Luper speak a few years back. The interview she gave was not only heartwarming but empowering as well. She's a dynamic lady, an inspiration to many and may very well be the Teacher of teachers!
Thank you Ms. Clara for your contributions and love for humanity. Debbie Quinata-Guam

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mzretta
Posted by: mzretta on Sep 19, 2005 12:46 PM   
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I am one of the fortunate, I had the opportunity to be one of Ms. Luper's students as well as she watched me grow from a child to an adult. She not only played a huge roll with my high school education but my up-bringing through church. She was a part of my mother's life, my life and my daughter's life and for that, I'm eternally grateful. Thanks Ms. Luper for all you and others have done to pave the way for me and others to enjoy such a rich and blessed life! My concern now is, where's the next Clara Luper? Seeing as though the generation now, seems to think all is well and they have arrived!

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Civil Rights Alive in Clara Still
Posted by: morningbear on Aug 14, 2006 10:47 AM   
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Clara is a hingepin that encouraged many Oklahomans to push for changes in what was laughably called civil rights in Oklahoma. When I moved back to the homestead in 1971 and subsequently became student at the University of Oklahoma, Class of 73, Oklahoma still had signs that spoke to the demeaning of people of color. Even towns that were predominantly Native American had signs of the segregation that had gripped the state less than a decade before. I recall the Squad room of the Anadarko Police Station displayed the "N___s must be out of town before sundown" sign that had arched over two of the main highways into town for half a century. Clara was a mover and a shaker. She inspired people of color and many with little color at all. Wilma Mankiller, the finest Chief of the Cherokee Nation, was of my generation, helped industrialize her people. Frannie Lewis, who died in the mid -1970's was a beleagured African-American leader seeking dignity from public services for the poor women and men who lived in slums and public housing. Except for a very few black and red leaders in Oklahoma, most seemed to have dropped the ball regarding social reform and economic equity. Civil disobedience was not in their vocabulary. Many seemed to only to want to feather their own nests and capitolize on their color. Not Clara. She is the most vigerous and feisty defender of civil rights I ever new in Oklahoma. Long after Katz Drugs was out of business the building was used as a community theatre. Most of the plays delt with issues of justice. I performed in several of them and always thought of the lunch counter where it all started. I now live in Oregon with my spouse's family, and am glad to see Clara still making her mark. We share so many values.

Tlanese Sunalei Yo'nv Cullimore Mercer, M.Div.

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