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Around this time every year, shortly before I leave to visit
my mother in Augusta, Ga. for Christmas, I attend a party at the home of Pat
and Ron Walters in Silver Spring, Md. I attended the annual party Saturday night
with one noticeable difference – it was held without Ron, an enormously
talented strategist and political scientist.
Ron died of cancer Sept. 10, 2010 and to her credit, Pat
decided to hold the party this year because she knew that’s what her Ronnie, as
she calls him, would have wanted. It’s also what his friends wanted. We wanted
to let Pat know that although her Ronnie has passed from this earth, we still
feel his presence.
I wrote shortly after Ron died that he was a one-man civil
rights movement. And he was. More than that, the distinguished professor who
served at Howard University and the University of Maryland taught us how to use
our professional skills to improve the plight of our people. In that respect,
he was very much like W.E.B. DuBois, who like Ron, did his undergraduate work
at Fisk University in Nashville.
Ron was quoted more than any other political scientist of
his time. He could have opted to teach his university classes and be a talking
head on national TV, but he didn’t. He felt obligated
to do more, which explains why he quietly advised the Congressional Black
Caucus on a variety of issues. It explains why he served as Jesse Jackson’s presidential
issues adviser in 1984 and 1988.
Those of us who covered that first campaign witnessed how
Ron prepared Jesse Jackson for TV debates. Ron would be hovering above and
Jackson, outstretched on the floor in blue jeans, would listen to Professor
Walters, process the information, and then restate it in his own unique way.
Those prep sessions were so detailed that Jackson never had a Rick Perry-like
ooops moment in any debate.
Unlike some public intellectuals, he was not enamored with
rap. He didn’t record a rap CD, like Cornel West, or teach a course on Jay-Z,
like Michael Eric Dyson. When it came to the empowerment of African-Americans,
Ron Walters was serious. Very serious.
Above all else, Ron Walters was consistent. It didn’t matter
if Bill Clinton, George W. Bush or Barack Obama was in the White House. You
could count on Ron holding them all to one standard: What have you done for
Black people? And he wasn’t content with words, he wanted to measure how well
policies had helped – or harmed – people of African descent.
His take-home tests for political leaders, Black and White, usually
covered 10 subjects: health disparities, police brutality, equal access to
education, voting rights enforcement, racial profiling, housing, equal
employment, ex-offenders’ voting rights, access to credit, and economic
justice.
And Ron didn’t believe President Obama should be allowed to
skip the test or be judged any differently from anyone else who occupied the
White House.
As serious as Ron was, he was also a person who enjoyed a
good laugh.
I thought about him Saturday night as I was replaying a Dick
Gregory joke for my friend Joe Madison, the activist and talk show host. Joe
and his wife, Sharon, were sitting on kitchen stools when I asked Joe if he had
heard what Dick Gregory had said at Troy Davis’ funeral. As you know,
protesters objecting to Davis being put to death in Georgia carried signs and
wore T-shirts proclaiming, “I am Troy Davis.”
Dick Gregory being Dick Gregory said at the funeral service
for Davis that a bill collector had telephoned his house and asked for Dick
Gregory. When asked if he was Gregory, Dick claimed to have replied, “I am Troy
Davis.”
Joe buckled in laughter. We both agreed that only Dick
Gregory could come up with that joke.
Returning the favor, Joe had me laughing uncontrollably
after he proposed that we start our own mega-church in Prince George’s County,
Md. and I would be the pastor. I think
Joe was joking. He had it all figured out down to the big rings I should wear
on my pinky finger, the type of limo I would be chauffeured in, and carefully demonstrated
how my cape would be removed.
He even told me about a church in his native Detroit that had
such divided loyalties that two pastors preached on Sundays at the same time,
one addressing his followers on one side of the church and the other preaching
to his supporters on the other side. I don’t know if Joe was telling the truth,
as he claimed. But when you’re laughing hard and having a good time at the
Walters residence, it doesn’t matter whether it was true or a product of Joe’s fertile
imagination.
When we finished laughing, we kissed Pat goodnight, and
headed for the door. We had carried on just as if Ron were still there. And we
pledged to not only continue laughing like we did when Ron was around but to be
as serious about advancing the cause of our people as Ron was. If we can
contribute half as much as he did, we will not betray his legacy.
George E. Curry,
former editor-in-chief of Emerge magazine and the NNPA News Service, is a
keynote speaker, moderator, and media coach. He can be reached through his Web
site, www.georgecurry.com You can also follow him at
www.twitter.com/currygeorge.
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