BETHUNE: Out of the darkness and into the light of Freedom; Dr. Evelyn Bethune
The Daytona Beach News-Journal
Festival planned to further Bethune's legacy
Friday, February 22, 2013 at 6:46 p.m.
DAYTONA BEACH — The story of how Mary McLeod Bethune opened a
school with $1.50, faith in God and five little girls is so well-known
her granddaughter worries the rest of the tale might be forgotten.
How Bethune advised four
presidents; carried picket signs in Atlanta, Washington and other places
to support boycotts of stores that would not hire blacks; became the
first African-American woman appointed as head of a federal agency.
"Mary
McLeod Bethune is an international icon," said Evelyn Bethune, who
speaks across the U.S. about her grandmother, especially in February for
Black History Month. "Daytona Beach probably knows less about her than
other places around the country."
Bethune
wants her grandmother to be remembered as "more than the founder" of
Bethune-Cookman University, and hopes to raise awareness and celebrate
Bethune's life and history through an inaugural Dr. Mary McLeod Bethune
Cultural Heritage Arts Festival. Planned for Oct. 3-7, the festival will
also be a catalyst for economic and cultural development in the Midtown
community and the Daytona Beach area and attract people from across the
country and the world, Bethune said.
Sponsorships
and hundreds of volunteers are needed to help with planning and working
the festival, which is expected to cost about $200,000, including
in-kind services.
"There
are organizations my grandmother started all over the country," Bethune
said. "Her impact in terms of the times she did the things she did
deserves national recognition. What better place than Daytona Beach to
do that."
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