Introduction
Part I
Part II
Afterword: Race in America
Timeline
Kevin Shird is an activist, national youth advocate, public speaker, and author. Shird began dealing drugs at the age of sixteen, and later served almost twelve years in prison for drug trafficking. Today he works with young people to help them avoid the dangers of street culture and advocates for policy changes that support their safety and development. With his friend, award-winning R&B singer Mario (Mario Barrett), Shird cofounded the Do Right Foundation, a nonprofit that from 2008-2014 provided a lifeline to children living with family members abusing drugs. During the tenure of President Barack Obama, Shird worked with the White House Office on National Drug Control Policy and as part of the committee for President Obama's Clemency Project. During the protests in Baltimore following the death of Freddie Gray, Shird was an action consultant to then-Baltimore Mayor Stephanie Rawlings-Blake's administration. Today, Shird speaks at colleges and universities nationwide on public health policy, reentry into society after incarceration, and substance abuse prevention. He lives in Baltimore, MD.
Nelson Malden owned and worked for a half-century at the Malden Brothers Barbershop. Martin Luther King Jr. was a client of his and the reverend at his church, and the two were friends until King's assassination. During the civil rights movement, Malden distributed the Southern Courier newspaper, one of the few newspapers in the South to cover the African American community, and participated in the Montgomery Bus Boycott. Later, Malden was the first African American to run for political office in the racially divided city of Montgomery, AL. He lives in Montgomery, AL.
“This book is an important exploration of our past and a roadmap
for our future. Once again, Kevin’s example pushes us to be better
and move faster.”
—Wes Moore, CEO of Robin Hood Foundation and New York Times
best-selling author of The Other Wes Moore and The Work
“I’m a civil rights activist, a mom, and a daughter. Dr. King’s
lessons still reverberate through every aspect of my life. This
book is an important reminder of them.”
—Tamika Mallory, national co-chair of the Women's March on
Washington
“This incredible collaboration between Kevin Shird and Nelson
Malden tells a story that puts our history and the civil rights
movement into an important context and shares it in a way it's
never been told.”
—Rev. Anthony W. McCarthy, executive director, Baltimore City
Chapter, NAACP
“Kevin Shird’s book reminds us that it’s past time to usher in the
next step in our civil rights evolution. It reveals the urgency to
do so.”
—Mario Barrett, actor and Grammy-nominated R&B singer
“Kevin Shird has opened the door to a much-needed conversation
about race in the past and race in the present, one which could
transform racial issues in the future. His approach is
brilliant."
—Terrie M. Williams, best-selling author and
multi-award-winning activist
“Before his assassination fifty years ago, the Reverend Dr. Martin
Luther King Jr. asked, 'Where do we go from here: chaos or
community?' In The Colored Waiting Room, Kevin Shird provides
a resounding answer to Dr. King’s fifty-year-old question by
depicting the liberating power of community, connecting to our
history, fulfilling the dreams of our ancestors, and amplifying the
voices of current young activists who are on the frontlines in the
continued fight for racial justice. The Colored Waiting Room is
mission fuel for the fight for those that believe we can still
win.”
—Shawn Dove, CEO, Campaign for Black Male Achievement
“I am thankful for scholars like Kevin Shird who provide an
accurate picture of the value of the civil rights movement and the
need to never forget that great sacrifices were made and that
freedom of choice is a birthright not a right determined by a
ruling body.”
—Obba Babatundé, Emmy Award-winning actor
“The Colored Waiting Room provides a valuable glimpse of life
during the first American civil rights movement, including the
mistreatment of blacks on a daily basis, and a portrait of Dr. King
as a person. Most importantly, it connects the past and the
present, and gives us hope for the future.”
—Freeman Hrabowski, III, president of the University of Maryland,
Baltimore County
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