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| Dr. Timothy B. Tyson listens to an audience member’s
question after his lecture Wednesday, September 21,
at the Dennis A. Wicker Civic Center. |
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| Dr. Timothy B. Tyson (far left), the featured speaker
at a special CCCC lecture, signs copies of his book, “Blood
Done Sign My Name.” |
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| Gospel singer Mary
D. Williams opens the special CCCC lecture event with
a medley of songs mentioned in Tyson’s “Blood
Done Sign My Name.” |
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Author shares local story at lecture
SANFORD – Dr. Timothy B. Tyson, author of “Blood
Done Sign My Name,” stressed the importance of
remembering the past at a special Central Carolina Community
College (CCCC) lecture event Wednesday, September 21,
at the Dennis A. Wicker Civic Center.
In “Blood Done Sign My Name,” Tyson recounts
the story of a racially-driven murder and the following
insurrection he witnessed as a teenager in Oxford, N.C.
Tyson said people frequently ask him why he dredged up
this ugly story from the past.
“
We do have to go forward,” Tyson said, but he emphasized
the importance of turning to the past for guidance. “Who
we are is very much a function of who we have been. If
you’re going to heal, you have to have an honest
conversation with your own past.”
While Tyson opened the lecture discussing some accounts
of racial stand-offs and violence that received national
attention, he went on to present the audience with a
piece of Sanford’s local history.
“
We look at the civil rights movement as if it were a
series of battles like the Civil War,” he said, “but
it happened everywhere. It happened in Sanford.”
Tyson lived in Sanford as a youth and his father, the
Rev. Vernon Tyson, pastored a number of area local churches.
The elder Tyson was the pastor at Jonesboro United Methodist
Church in 1963. The pastor invited Dr. Samuel Proctor,
a renowned black preacher who was president at North
Carolina A&T State University at the time, to preach
at the church on Race Relations Sunday.
Tyson said in between the invite and the special sermon,
Sanford had its “own little Birmingham” when
more than 50 black teenagers were arrested and charged
with trespassing after participating in demonstrations.
He said after that incident (and because of Proctor’s
upcoming visit) his father began to receive complaints
from church members and threats from opposition in the
community.
Tyson recalled that one of the church’s members – a
first grade teacher named Ms. Amy Womble – may
have saved the church and his father when she spoke up
in support of the guest preacher at an emergency meeting
of the church’s administrative board.
According to Tyson, she shared the story of a black airman
who saved the life of a young white boy in Orange County
and it moved the board to vote 25-14 in favor of Proctor’s
visit.
Tyson said the church was packed for Proctor’s
sermon and the visiting preacher won the congregation
over with a powerful sermon, not about race, but regarding
the Biblical account of Jacob wrestling with an angel.
“
That was our civil rights story,” Tyson said. “The
one we grew up hearing. We felt good about it.”
However, he emphasized that people need to remember the
whole Civil Rights history. “America needs to come
to grips with its own past,” he said. “History
is not always a happy story.” Tyson said for every
story with a happy ending, there is another with “buildings
burning and bullets flying.”
Tyson also said public education is important to society.
He encouraged those in attendance to back CCCC. “Support
your community college, because it’s really important,” he
said. “A place like this helps people grow and
blossom and find their worth.”
Mary D. Williams, who often performs before Tyson gives
such lectures, opened the evening with a moving medley
of songs mentioned in “Blood Done Sign My Name.”
“
They set the tone for what we’re going to talk
about tonight,” the gospel singer told the audience.
Tyson is professor of Afro-American Studies at the University
of Wisconsin-Madison, visiting professor of American
Christianity and Southern Culture at the Duke Divinity
School and senior scholar at the Center for Documentary
Studies at Duke University. From 2004 through 2005, he
served as the John Hope Franklin senior fellow at the
National Humanities Center.
Media Contact:
Benton Smith
Central Carolina Community College
(919) 718-7265
bsmith@cccc.edu
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