I was ostracized by my community.
CLAUDETTE COLVINI sleep when the sleep comes down on me.
More Claudette Colvin Quotes
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I was about four years old the first time I ever saw what happened when you acted up to whites.
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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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A lot of African American women wanted to emulate white women. But I said in my mind, rationally thinking, there is no way you are going to get your hair that straight, especially in the summer.
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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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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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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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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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I’ve always told my children that once they go out into the world, they must have two heads and two minds: one to keep grounded, the other to deal with corporate America.
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I wanted the young African-American girls also on the bus to know that they had a right to be there, because they had paid their fare just like the white passengers.
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When you’ve been abused daily and you see people humiliated and harassed, you just get tired of it.
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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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The light-skinned girls always thought they were better looking. So did the teachers, too. That meant most of the dark complexion ones didn’t like themselves.
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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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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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