When you’ve been abused daily and you see people humiliated and harassed, you just get tired of it.
CLAUDETTE COLVINI wanted to be an attorney. My mother would say I never stopped talking. I always had a lot of questions to ask, and I was never satisfied with the answer. A lot of things I wasn’t satisfied by.
More Claudette Colvin Quotes
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As long as white people put people of color, African Americans and Latinos, in the same dispensable bag, and look at our children of color as insignificant and treat women of color as not as deserving of protection as white women, we will never achieve true equality.
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I’d like my grandchildren to be able to see that their grandmother stood up for something, a long time ago.
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When I told my mother I was pregnant, I thought she was going to have a heart attack.
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I left the South in 1963 and was living in Morristown, New Jersey, when the March on Washington took place, so I watched it on television instead.
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Young people think Rosa Parks just sat down on a bus and ended segregation, but that wasn’t the case at all.
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We were churchgoing people.
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A lot has changed since I grew up, but there’s still a long way to go. I don’t think we can move forward with Donald Trump as the president. There’s a disconnect there. We don’t want to regress, we want progress.
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What do we have to do to make God love us?’ I always grew up with that. I always used to go around thinking that. ‘God loved the white people better. He must’ve. That’s why he made them white.’
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Rosa Parks wasn’t the first one to rebel against the segregated seats. I was the first one.
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I always tell young people to hold on to their dreams. And sometimes you have to stand up for what you think is right even if you have to stand alone.
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I lost most of my friends. Their parents had told them to stay away from me, because they said I was crazy, I was an extremist.
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New York is a completely different culture to Montgomery, Alabama.
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There was segregation everywhere. The churches, buses and schools were all segregated and you couldn’t even go into the same restaurants.
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I sleep when the sleep comes down on me.
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I was ostracized by my community.
CLAUDETTE COLVIN