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his speech, he talked about the role the NAACP played in the civil
rights movement, reminding his audience of that not-so distant - but
too often overlooked - history.
Earlier in the afternoon, Bond himself got in touch with that history,
visiting for the first time the spot where the sit-ins started.
He stood behind the counter where four N.C. A&T students asked
for nothing more than a meal at a whites-only lunch spot.
He said their actions mobilized hundreds of thousands of people
to join the civil rights movement.
"Their action democratized the civil rights movement,"
Bond said.
"Instead of just attorneys and ministers, now everyone could
do something."
Bond fought many of those battles himself.
He helped form the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee and
became the group's spokesman. The group was at the forefront of
student efforts to desegregate public facilities.
Starting in 1965, he was elected to four terms in the Georgia House
of Representatives and then six terms in the state's Senate.
For the first two years, the state house refused to seat him. The
U.S. Supreme Court eventually ruled Bond must be seated.
Bond now spends most of his time teaching, at American University
in Washington and at the University of Virginia.
And while he enjoys teaching about the past and reminding his students
how much better things are now, he's all too aware that much work
remains to be done. "There is still the belief in white supremacy,
not by all white people, but by too many," Bond said.
"I think there's nothing new to be done, we just need to keep
doing the old things better."
A native of Nashville, Bond graduated from the George School, a
coeducational Quaker school in Pennsylvania. He served four terms
in the Georgia House of Representatives and six terms in the Georgia
Senate. After an unsuccessful run at the U.S. Congress, Bond was
president and founder of the Southern Elections Fund, an early political
action committee that aided in the elections of rural Southern black
candidates.
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