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Times, they are a Changin’…Thankfully!

May28

A city, like a house, can have ghosts. Certainly this was the case with Philadelphia.

The city of Philadelphia, Mississippi where members of the Ku Klux Klan killed three civil rights workers in 1964 in one of the era’s most infamous acts, on Tuesday elected its first black mayor.

Jim Prince/The Neshoba Democrat

His name is James A. Young, a Pentecostal minister and former county supervisor.

Young, a Pentecostal minister and former county supervisor, narrowly beat the incumbent, Rayburn Waddell, in the Democratic primary.

The results, announced Wednesday night, were a turning point for a mostly white city of 7,300 people in east-central Mississippi still haunted by the killings, which captured front-page headlines across the nation and were featured in the 1988 film “Mississippi Burning.”

“This shows a complete change of attitude and a desire to move forward,” said Mr. Young, 53, a Philadelphia native who integrated the local elementary school as the only black student in his sixth-grade class in the mid-1960s. “When I campaigned, the signs on the doors said, ‘Welcome,’ and I actually felt welcome.”

Source: New York Times

posted under Courage, Positive News

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