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Biographical Notes on Bayard Rustin 1912 - 1987
Bayard Rustin was active in the struggle for human rights and economic justice for over 50 years. Born in 1912, he was reared in West Chester, Pennsylvania where he excelled as a student, athlete and musician. He attended Wilberforce University, Cheyney State College, the City College of New York, and the London School of Economics, earning tuition at odd jobs and singing professionally with Josh White’s Carolinians and Leadbelly.
A Quaker, Mr. Rustin placed his religious convictions above his musical interests, and in 1941 began a long association with the Fellowship of Reconciliation (FOR). Serving as its Race Relations Secretary, he toured the country conducting Race Relations Institutes designed to facilitate communication and understanding between racial groups. He was active in A. Philip Randolph’s March on Washington Movement, and became the first field secretary of the Congress of Racial Equality (CORE). In 1942, the FOR dispatched him to California and the American Friends Service Committee to help protect the property of Japanese- Americans held in detention. In 1943, Mr. Rustin was imprisoned in Lewisburg Penitentiary as a conscientious objector.
In 1947, Bayard Rustin took part in a demonstration to test enforcement of the 1946 Irene Morgan case decision outlawing discrimination in interstate travel. Known as the “Journey of Reconciliation” this protest was a model for Freedom Rides of the 1960’s. Arrested in north Carolina, he served 30 days on a chain gang. His account of that experience, serialized in The New York Post, spurred an investigation, which resulted in the abolition of chain gangs in North Carolina.
Mr. Rustin directed A. Philip Randolph’s Committee against Discrimination in the Armed Forces, which was instrumental in securing President Truman’s order eliminating segregation in the Armed Forces. At Mr. Randolph’s request he was granted temporary leave from his position as Executive Secretary of the War Resisters League, to assist Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. in the early days of the Montgomery Alabama Bus Boycott. His extensive background in the theory, strategies, and tactics of nonviolent action proved invaluable and were the foundation of this close association with Dr. King.
Mr. Rustin organized the Prayer Pilgrimage for Freedom in 1957, the National Youth Marches for Integrated Schools in 1958 and 1959, and was the Deputy Director and Chief Organizer of the 1963 March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom which, at the time, was the largest demonstration in the Nation’s history. Thought by many to be the high point of the Civil Rights movement, the March on Washington created the political climate for the passage of the major civil rights legislation of the 1960’s.
In 1964 Bayard Rustin helped found the A. Philip Randolph Institute, names for his mentor, the noted labor and civil rights activist. During that time the Institute had 200 local affiliates involved in voter registration drives and programs designed to strengthen relations between the black community and the labor movement. A long-time supporter of worker’s rights, Mr. Rustin participated in many strikes and was last arrested in 1984 while demonstrating in support of the clerical and technical employees of Yale University. During the mid-1960’s he participated in the formation of the Recruitment and Training Program (R-T-P) which successfully upgraded and increased minority participation in construction trades.
While working to promote democracy at home, Bayard Rustin also supported human rights struggles worldwide. In 1945 he organized the FOR’s Free India Committee which championed India’s fight for independence from Great Britain. Following the examples of Ghandi and Nehru, with whom he consulted during visits to India, he was frequently arrested for protesting Britain’s colonial rule in Africa. He consulted with Kwame Nkrumah of Ghana and Nnamde Azikewe of Nigeria. At home he helped organize the Committee to Support South Africa Resistance which later became the American Committee on Africa.
Mr. Rustin had
a long involvement with refugee affairs. As a
Vice Chairman o the International Rescue
Committee he traveled the world working to
secure food, medical care, education, and
proper resettlement for refugees. His several
visits to Southeast Asia helped to bring the
plight of the Vietnamese "boat people" to the
attention of the American public. In 1980 he
took part in the international "March for
Survival" on the Thai-Cambodian border. He was
Co-Chairman of the Citizens Commission on
Indochinese Refugees, a non-governmental
advocacy group working to assist the refugee
fleeing Vietnam Cambodia and Laos. In 1982, he
helped found the National Emergency Coalition
for Haitian Refugees, an organization, which
works to protect the rights o Haitians seeking
refuge from the poverty and political chaos of
their trouble homeland.
As Chairman of
the Executive Committee of Freedom House, an
agency which monitors international freedom and
human rights, Mr. Rustin observed election in
Zimbabwe, El Salvador, and Grenada. His last
mission abroad, coordinated b Freedom House,
was to Haiti where he met with a broad spectrum
of individuals in an attempt to determine how
Americans could best help them bring democracy
to their country.
In 1975,
Bayard Rustin organized the Black Americans to
Support Israel Committee (BASIC). He made
numerous fact-finding visits to the Middle East
and wrote many columns and articles on that
troubled area. He worked for the freedom Soviet
Jews and was an early advocate for the
Ethiopian Jews in their struggle to emigrate to
Israel.
In 1983, Mr.
Rustin and two colleagues made a fact-finding
visit to South Africa. Their report, South
Africa: Is Peaceful Change Possible?, led
to the formation of Project South Africa, a
program which seeks to broaden Americans’
support of groups within South Africa
attempting to bring about democratic through
peaceful means.
A collection
of Mr. Rustin' s essays, Down the Line,
was published in 1971. In 1976 he deliver the
Radner Lecture at Columbia University which was
published under the title Strategies for
Freedom The Changing Patterns of Black
Protest.
Mr. Rustin was
the recipient of numerous awards including The
Murray/Greene/Meany Award, The John LaFarge
Memorial Award, and The Stephen Wise Award. He
received more than a dozen honorary doctorates.
At the time of
his death in August of 1987, Bayard Rustin was
Co-Chairman of the A. Philip Randolph Institute
and President of the A. Philip Randolph
Educational Fund. He was Chairman of Social
Democrats USA, was a member of the United
States Holocaust memorial Council, and was a
life member of Actor' Equity. He also served on
numerous boards and committees.
