as whoopi for getting it out. because i was able in many of years and getting to know may need to know how important this was to her and the one thing i remember, nicole, and i share this with keith, when i was a teenager during the movement in the north, rosa parks wind, she sat in front of the box, the boss, again after emmett tail, she told us she thought about it but she couldn t get up. she thought about emmett till. that s how significant mamie till mobley opening that casket, letting the world see her son was. it was the direct reason rosa parks didn t get off that bus. and it took all these years to thank god for a person like keith and for maybe the stories out so people understand it. it didn t start with george floyd. it continues with george floyd. it started with a courageous woman opening that casket.
tell his story as mother mobley would say until man s consciousness has written, because only then that would mean justice for emmett tail. rev, what was watching this film like for you. you know the story. the film is transports you and even if you are familiar with it i wonder what that was like. it reminded me of how we had to be of two minds in this country. i was born and raised in brooklyn, new york, my mother was from alabama. when we would visit her folks in alabama we literally head what mamie till mobley had to do, we were taught how to act down. there can you measure the pain and humiliation of a mother having to tell their child that you have to act a certain way to accommodate peoples hatred of you. and the pain it must be inside of them to have to tell their