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Behind the Aegis

(54,850 posts)
Tue Dec 12, 2023, 04:51 PM Dec 2023

In 'Rustin,' a 'deputy' civil rights leader finally gets his due

If 200,000 Jews who turned up at the March for Israel in Washington on Nov. 14 feel more empowered since that gathering, they have Bayard Rustin to thank.

Then again, so does everyone else in the country, whether they ever participated in a mass protest or not.

Rustin’s role as the chief organizer of the nation-changing 1963 March on Washington — a direct inspiration for dozens of mass protests since, including the Israel march — is chronicled in the biopic Rustin, now streaming on Netflix. It’s directed by George C. Wolfe (Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom) and stars a very likely Oscar-bound Colman Domingo in the title role. Executive producers are Barack and Michelle Obama, themselves historical figures and fittingly so because the film is as much a history lesson as it is entertainment.

That history centers around Rustin’s role organizing what was then the largest mass gathering at the nation’s capital, most famous as the setting of the “I Have a Dream” speech of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. (Aml Ameen). Officially, Rustin was only the march’s deputy director, relegated to the role because Harlem’s Black Congressman Adam Clayton Powell (Jeffrey Wright) and NAACP head Roy Wilkins (Chris Rock) adamantly refused to bestow the director title to a gay Black Quaker pacifist who once belonged to the Young Communist League.

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If you haven't seen it....WATCH IT!

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In 'Rustin,' a 'deputy' civil rights leader finally gets his due (Original Post) Behind the Aegis Dec 2023 OP
Thanks so much! Glorfindel Dec 2023 #1
Long a hero of mine. LoisB Dec 2023 #2
Me, too. hoosierspud Dec 2023 #3

LoisB

(8,625 posts)
2. Long a hero of mine.
Tue Dec 12, 2023, 05:00 PM
Dec 2023

It's about time he gets some of the recognition he is due. His name should be as well known as any of the so-called leaders of the Civil Rights movement.

hoosierspud

(174 posts)
3. Me, too.
Wed Dec 13, 2023, 12:06 AM
Dec 2023

I remember seeing him portrayed in a movie talking to Martin Luther King, Jr. and explaining the concept of non-violent protest to him. He thought that King would be a better person to lead the civil rights movement because he didn't have the baggage that Rustin did. Can't remember which movie that was, but I have been fascinated with Rustin ever since.

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