From The
Idiot Factor:
Aretha Franklin was more than just a singer and
entertainer, she was also a voice for the civil rights movement. We can be
thankful that we had such entertainers during the civil rights movement, during
the 1960s. The following article explains some of her political work:
From the BBC:
Her Baptist minister father was the organiser behind
the 1963 Detroit Walk to Freedom - the largest-ever demonstration for civil
rights in the US until
the March on Washington later
that year, when the Reverend Martin Luther King Jr made his "I have a
dream" speech.
King was a frequent guest in her father's home.
At 16 years of age, Franklin went
on tour with him, just after recording her first album.
She would sing at King's funeral a decade later.
King's daughter, Dr Bernice King, called Franklin a "shining example" of how
to use the arts to support social change.
For the rest click here.
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