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  1. 29 de sept. de 2015 · Today, the 75-year-old Lafayette is the director of the Emory (University) Center for Advancing Nonviolence in Atlanta. Lafayette’s memoir, In Peace and Freedom: My Journey in Selma, was published in 2013 by the University Press of Kentucky. Last March you joined a commemorative walk across the Edmund Pettus Bridge in Selma, where 50 years ...

  2. 4 de abr. de 2018 · April 4, 2018. It was about 9 in the morning on April 4, 1968. Bernard Lafayette Jr. had gotten the final details of his mission from Martin Luther King Jr. Later on that fateful day in Memphis, Tennessee, Lafayette would pack his luggage at the Lorraine Motel and head to the airport for a flight to Washington, D.C., the site of his assignment.

  3. The Rev. Dr. Bernard LaFayette, Jr., an ordained minister, is a longtime civil rights activist, organizer, and an authority on nonviolent social change. He co-founded the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) in 1960, and he was a core leader of the civil rights movement in Nashville, Tennessee, in 1960 and in Selma, Alabama, in 1965 ...

  4. Today, she runs a small art studio in her hometown of Lafayette, Louisiana and recently opened her first brick and mortar showcasing other artists and designers, Cocodrie by Colette, at 515 Jefferson St, Lafayette LA 70501. Colette Bernard's accessory designs feel like the lovechild between sculpture, graphic design, and fashion. She is heavily ...

  5. 15 de jun. de 2015 · The goal of non-violence is to win people over by showing them love. We don't feel that there are people who are evil. There are people who do a lot of evil things, but they are human beings and they are people with a life. And they will grow up in different cultures. They didn't choose their families, or their neighborhoods, or they didn't ...

  6. 20 de jul. de 2020 · Bernard LaFayette Jr. Photograph by Dana Smith. This story was originally published in the March 2001 issue of Rhode Island Monthly. Today, Dr. LaFayette Jr. serves as a professor at Auburn University in Auburn, Alabama. Small necessary acts of civil disobedience. It’s what started this country on the road to being this country.

  7. 18 de jul. de 2020 · Dr. Bernard Lafayette Jr. is a longtime civil rights leader and activist. From the Archive: ‘Forgiving George Wallace’ John Lewis wrote in a 1998 Op-Ed about the best way to remember the ...