The sit-in movement born in Greensboro
36 years ago later served as a model for the black struggle
for freedom in South Africa, that country's U.S. ambassador
said in a visit here Saturday night.
Ambassador Franklin Sonn attended the yearly black-tie benefit
for the museum project at the Elm Street Woolworth, site of
the 1960 protest. Sonn accepted an award on behalf of President
Nelson Mandela, six years to the day after Mandela was released
from prison.
Sonn, a Capetown native and educator
who was prominent in the ANC, said that during the bleak years
of oppression in his homeland, the U.S. civil rights movement
was a beacon.
"Our level of awareness was
raised almost to the same pitch but was crushed," Sonn said
in an interview, recalling the apartheid government's banning
of the writings of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. and news
about the civil rights struggle.
"The information we got was
part of the underground, and we lived through the experiences
of the (U.S.) civil rights movement. When the time came, we
took over the same methods as the sit-ins and civil disobedience."
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