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Ralph David Abernathy (March, 1926 – April, 1990) was an American
civil rights activist and leader and a close associate of Martin Luther King, Jr.
in the Southern Christian Leadership Conference. Following King's assassination,
Abernathy took up the leadership of the SCLC Poor People's Campaign and led the
march on Washington, D.C. that had been planned for May 1968.
After serving in the army during World War II, he enrolled at Alabama State
University, in Montgomery, Alabama, graduating with a degree in mathematics in
1950. His involvement in political activism began in college while he was a member
of Kappa Alpha Psi Fraternity, when he led demonstrations protesting the lack of
heat and hot water in his dormitory and the dreadful food served in the cafeteria.
In 1951 he earned a M.A. in sociology from Atlanta University (later Clark Atlanta
University) and then became pastor of the First Baptist Church in Montgomery,
Alabama. While living in Montgomery he formed a close and enduring partnership with
Dr. Martin Luther King Jr..
In 1955, when Rosa Parks refused to move to the back of the bus, Abernathy and King
organized the bus boycott in Montgomery. After a year of the boycott, it finally
ended when the United States Supreme Court affirmed the U.S. District Court's
ruling that segregation on buses was unconstitutional.
Abernathy was Martin Luther King's Number Two in the Southern Christian Leadership
Conference, holding the official title of Secretary-Treasurer. Abernathy was with
Martin Luther King in Memphis, Tennessee when King was assassinated; in fact, they
shared Room 306 at the Lorraine Motel the night before.
Abernathy assumed the presidency of the SCLC after King's death. Less than a week
after the assassination, Abernathy led a march to support striking sanitation
workers in Memphis, Tennessee. In May 1968 he, among others including Jesse
Jackson, organized the Poor People's Campaign (PPC) March on Washington, D.C.
Hoping to bring attention to the plight of the nation's impoverished, he
constructed huts in the nation's capital, precipitating a showdown with the police.
The settlement was named "Resurrection City"; Abernathy himself slept in a hotel
during the campaign. On June 19 he held a speech at the Lincoln Memorial, in front
of tens of thousands of black and white citizens.
Lacking King's leadership and vision, the PPC at Resurrection City quickly became
an embarrassment to the civil rights movement. Its demands were unreasonable, and
did not fit the political mood of the country. Abernathy began to lose control of
the situation to more fiery leaders like Jesse Jackson. Rapes and robberies among
the camping protesters became a problem, and there was no police force to keep
order. Eventually on June 24, the federal government had to move in, using force to
disband the protesters. Abernathy was jailed for nearly three weeks following the
collapse of this ill-planned enterprise.
On June 15, 1969, the eve of the launch of Apollo 11, Abernathy arrived at Cape
Canaveral together with several hundred members of the Poor People's Campaign to
protest the money being spent on space exploration, while so many people remained
poor. He was met by Thomas O. Paine, the administrator of NASA, who he told that in
the face of such suffering, space flight represented an inhuman priority and funds
should be spent instead to feed the hungry, clothe the naked, tend the sick, and
house the homeless. Paine told Abernathy that the advances in space exploration
were child's play compared to the tremendously difficult human problems of the
society, and told him that "if we could solve the problems of poverty by not
pushing the button to launch men to the moon tomorrow, then we would not push that
button." On the day of the launch, Abernathy led a small group of protesters in the
restricted guest viewing area of the space center, chanting, "We are not
astronauts, but we are people." The protest, which had originally been planned by
Martin Luther King, failed to generate any support for Abernathy's cause.
Abernathy resigned in 1977 to run unsuccessfully for a Georgia congressional
seat.
In 1980, Abernathy was the most prominent African American to endorse Ronald
Reagan, along with Hosea Williams and Charles Evers. Abernathy later said he was
very disappointed with the Reagan administration's civil rights policies, and he
did not endorse him for reelection in 1984.
In the 1980s Abernathy co-founded the American Freedom Coalition, with Robert
Grant. The AFC received major funding from Sun Myung Moon's Unification Church and
works in partnership with The Washington Times, CAUSA, the American Constitution
Committee, and other Unification Church related organizations. Abernathy served as
Vice President of American Freedom Coalition until his death in 1990.
Abernathy and his wife, Juanita, had four children. His younger son, Ralph David
served as a Georgia State representative, his youngest daughter, Donzaleigh, is an
actress and writer. Abernathy died on April 17, 1990 in Atlanta.
Abernathy received many awards, most notably honorary degrees from Long Island
University in New York, Morehouse College in Atlanta, Kalamazoo College in
Michigan, and his alma mater, Alabama State University. Interstate 20 and Abernathy
Road, in Atlanta, are named in his honor.
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