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CNY Radio Host Remembers John Lewis, Connects Him To Current Movements

Lawrence Jackson, White House Photographer
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Civil rights advocate and Congressmember John Lewis is being remembered in Central New York as a selfless crusader who’s connected to the racial justice movement of today. 

Local media member and human rights advocate George Kilpatrick had the chance to interview Lewis. 

“There was an energy about him. There was a humbleness about him as he recalled some of the most horrific events in history,” said Kilpatrick.  “Obviously Bloody Sunday on the Edmond Pettus Bridge, and the beating that he took for our rights to vote and live in America, the land of promised freedom.”

Credit Inspiration for the Nation George Kilpatrick / Facebook
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George Kilpatrick is a radio host and human rights advocate in Syracuse.

Kilpatrick remembers Lewis as someone who never took his eye off the prize of those freedoms.  Lewis gained attention protesting alongside Dr. Martin Luther King Junior.  In 1963, he spoke on issues that still concern racial justice advocates today.

“We are tired of being beaten by policemen,” said Lewis. “And in your call to be patient. And then you holler, ‘Be patient.’ How long can we be patient?”

Kilpatrick calls Lewis and the other young activists of the time the bridge to the current Black Lives Matter movement.

“We don’t know who the next John Lewis is going to be, but John Lewis at that time was just doing what he thought was right,” said Kilpatrick. “And that’s what these young people who are part of the movement today are doing. They’re doing what they think is right because we can no longer wait until the system says it’s ready to change. We must demand the change now.”

In remembering Lewis, Kilpatrick says he’s the best of who we are and the promise of who we can be.  He adds even those who opposed Lewis’s causes still praised him for standing up for what he believed. 

Chris Bolt, Ed.D. has proudly been covering the Central New York community and mentoring students for more than 30 years. His career in public media started as a student volunteer, then as a reporter/producer. He has been the news director for WAER since 1995. Dedicated to keeping local news coverage alive, Chris also has a passion for education, having trained, mentored and provided a platform for growth to more than a thousand students. Career highlights include having work appear on NPR, CBS, ABC and other news networks, winning numerous local and state journalism awards.
John Smith has been waking up WAER listeners for a long time as our Local Co-Host of Morning Edition with timely news and information, working alongside student Sportscasters from the Newhouse School.