By Roscoe Barnes III
Chairman, Anne Moody History Project
Copyright (c) 2017
#AnneMoody
Copyright (c) 2017
#AnneMoody
Note: Mr. Issa Arnita, communications director for Management & Training Corporation (MTC), shared this news on Thursday, Sept. 21, 2017, on the company website. MTC, which is based in Utah, is a company that focuses on education, training and rehabilitation.
I serve as chaplain at Wilkinson County Correctional Facility (WCCF) in Woodville, Miss., which is privately run by MTC. It is through this prison that the Anne Moody History Project (AMHP) was formed earlier this year with the full support of Warden Jody Bradley. I am grateful to Warden Bradley and Mr. Arnita for their support and recognition of the work we're doing as a community service endeavor to promote and help preserve the legacy of Anne Moody, author of Coming of Age in Mississippi. I'm especially grateful to AMHP members Emma Taplin, Ruby Dixon and LaVern Taylor. -- Roscoe Barnes III, Chairman, Anne Moody History Project
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NEWS: Mississippi Hometown
Honors Author Of Civil Rights Memoir
Published by the
Management & Training Corporation (MTC) on September 21, 2017.
Led by Wilkinson County Correctional Facility
Chaplain Roscoe Barnes, a group of MTC staff at the Wilkinson facility in
Woodville, Mississippi recently set out to honor a civil-rights activist whose
courage and determination had an impact on many people in the South and
throughout the world. Anne Moody was honored by Wilkinson staff and the
City of Centreville, MS where she was born. The mayor and city council issued a
resolution renaming a street in Moody’s name and proclaiming September 15 as
“Anne Moody Day”. The story was picked up nationally! Read the article below by
the Washington Post.
The Washington Post
By Emily Wagster
Pettus | AP September 16
JACKSON, Miss. — A civil rights activist who
wrote about challenging segregation in the South was honored in her hometown,
two years after her death.
About 70 people gathered Friday in the
southwestern Mississippi town of Centreville — population 1,680 — to unveil a
sign for the newly renamed Anne Moody Street. Moody was born in Centreville on
Sept. 15, 1940.
Her memoir, “Coming of Age in Mississippi,”
was published in 1968 and is required reading in some schools. It recounts her
early life in a poor family and her participation in civil rights activities
that put her in danger, including efforts to register black voters.
Roscoe Barnes III, who is chaplain at a prison
near Centreville, helped organize the Anne Moody Day commemoration, held on
what would have been her 77th birthday. He said her son, Sasha Straus, attended,
as did some of her siblings and cousins.
“Here’s a woman who literally put her life on the line in the fight for freedom and justice,” Barnes told The Associated Press. “We’re here because she was there. She survived threats, beatings, incarcerations.”
On May 28, 1963, Moody was part of an
integrated group of students from historically black Tougaloo College who
staged a peaceful sit-in at a segregated Woolworth’s lunch counter in Jackson,
Mississippi. They had worked with Mississippi NAACP leader Medgar Evers to
prepare for the protest.
White high school students, egged on by some
adults, dumped ketchup and mustard on the heads of Moody and the other
protesters. She wrote that after she and two other black students started
praying at the counter, one white man slapped her and another threw her against
an adjoining counter. One of the praying students was pulled violently from his
seat.
Evers was assassinated outside his Jackson
home two weeks after the sit-in.
After Moody graduated from college in 1964,
she moved to New York, where she wrote her book. She returned to Mississippi in
the mid-1990s but never felt at ease in the state, said one of her sisters,
Adline Moody.
Anne Moody had dementia before she died at
home in Gloster, Mississippi, in 2015. She was 74.
Barnes does volunteer work for the Anne Moody
History Project, which is based at the privately run prison where he works,
Wilkinson County Correctional Facility. He said some inmates and have been
reading and discussing “Coming of Age in Mississippi” as part of a book group.
He said he also gives away copies of the book to people who live in
southwestern Mississippi.
“I spoke to a woman in her 40s who grew up in
this area,” Barnes said. “She said, ‘Who is Anne Moody?’ That broke my heart.”
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Editor's Note:
Questions about the Anne Moody History Project may be directed to Roscoe Barnes III via email at doctorbarnes3@gmail.com or roscoebarnes3@yahoo.com For updates on Anne Moody history and the on-going work of this community service project, simply follow this blog or follow AMHP on Twitter (@AnneMoodyHP). #ComingOfAgeinMississippi
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