Friday's Woolworth sit-in commemoration features South
Africa's ambassador to the U.S.
South African Ambassador Franklin Sonn will headline Friday's
annual benefit to raise money for Greensboro's Woolworth sit-in
museum.
The $100-a-plate banquet to raise
funds for the renovation of the historic Elm Street store
will include awards to some of the original participants in
the February 1960 lunch counter sit-ins, local civil rights
leader John Erwin and retired Greensboro Record reporter Jo
Spivey.
Spivey was among the first reporters
to chronicle the sit-in by four black A&T freshmen, which
gained national attention and inspired similar civil disobedience
movements in cities across the segregated South.
But in the years when the civil
rights movement began to flag in the late 1960s, it was the
inspiration of the South African struggle led by Nelson Mandela
that kept the spirit alive in this country, said Guilford
County Commissioner Melvin "Skip" Alston, a co-director of
the museum foundation.
On behalf of Mandela, who is being
awarded the foundation's civil rights honor, which last year
went to Rosa Parks, Sonn will attend the banquet.
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