Rosa Parks Heritage Abandoned By America [View all]
Utter disrespect towards the Black woman who in 1955 dared to refuse to give up her seat to a white man in Alabama.
Youd be surprised to know that to visit the home where civil rights legend Rosa Parks lived, youll have to travel to Germany, because now it is displayed in the backyard of an American artist Ryan Mendoza moved a house from the city of Detroit to Europe for an art project.
How and why did the house get there? The answer is simple Detroit planned to demolish it. When Parks niece Rhea McCauley found out she had no means to save the historical building she and Mendoza applied to the city mayor, though he showed no interest in protecting the construction.
Using volunteers help Mendoza disassembled the home, put it into shipping containers, transported it to Germany, and put it back together at her own expense. Hundreds of people attended the official unveiling of the home in Berlin last week.
The Rosa Parks house should actually be a national monument and not a demolition project, Mendoza said in an interview. The basic question, the fundamental question I ask myself: Is the house worthless or is the house priceless? For the American institutions so far the house has been deemed worthless.
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https://blackmattersus.com/32308-rosa-parks-heritage-abandoned-by-america/
Rosa Parks' Detroit Home Restored and On Display in Berlin
Rhea McCauley (R), niece of African-American human rights figure Rosa Parks, speaks to a journalist while standing next to the former house of Rosa Parks on property of U.S. artist Ryan Mendoza on April 6, 2017 in Berlin, Germany. Mendoza bought the house, which was slated for demolition in Detroit, took it apart, shipped it to Germany, and put it back together again on the property next to his studio.
Photo: Sean Gallup/Getty Image
The Washington Post reported today (April 10) that the wooden, three-bedroom house where Parks lived with extended family in the late 1950s had its first visitors over the weekend. Niece Rhea McCauley, one of those relatives, purchased the deteriorating house for $500 from the City of Detroit, which planned to demolish it.
"It is something that is precious," she said to The Detroit Free Press/The Associated Press last week. "And it is priceless. And yet it is being mistreated."
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I am glad it still stands even if it is not in Detroit, the city Mayor had no interest in protecting it.