NPR: Shirley Sherrod Stands Up To The Politics Of Fear
Corey Holman • Dec 02, 2021

Shirley Sherrod was forced out of the Department of Agriculture because of a misleading video. An edited clip appeared to show her saying she didn't want to help white farmers save their land. But the entire speech made it clear that Sherrod was actually saying racism is wrong. She talks with host Michel Martin about her book The Courage To Hope.


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By Corey Holman 23 Oct, 2022
Reverend Charles Sherrod was a civil rights activist based in Albany, New York. His strategy of building community ties with students, churches and local organizations helped form a model for the national fight against desegregation. Sunday TODAY’s Willie Geist remembers a life well lived.
By Corey Holman 23 Oct, 2022
The Rev. Charles Melvin Sherrod, whose grassroots organizing of unregistered black voters sent shock waves through the segregated South and kickstarted the Albany Movement, has died. He was 85. Sherrod, whose death was confirmed by his family, died of natural causes at his home in Albany on Tuesday at 3:45 p.m. “He was a great husband, a great father and great servant to his community,” Sherrod’s wife of 56 years, Shirley Miller Sherrod, said. “His life serves as a shining example of service to one’s fellow man.”  Sherrod played a transformative role in the civil rights movement during the 1960s, cofounding the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC), and inspiring blacks in southwest Georgia to straighten their backs and stand up for their rights.
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