NEPHEW OF MALCOLM X STRESSES OBLIGATION TO THE COMMUNITY AT 3RD
ANNUAL ROSA PARKS DAY EVENT AT SPRINGFIELD TECHNICAL COMMUNITY COLLEGE
“Life
is about helping someone else, doing for someone else, and making them feel
good,” said Rodnell P. Collins, the nephew of civil rights activist Malcolm X.
Collins spoke at the recent third annual Rosa Parks Day program at
Springfield Technical Community College. The presentation and panel discussion
were attended by college and high school students, as well as faculty and
staff, and community residents.
The event was planned in recognition of
the courage of Rosa Parks, the Montgomery Alabama seamstress who on December 1,
1955 refused to give up her seat on a bus, sparking the Montgomery Bus Boycott,
which was led by activists including Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.
Collins continued, “People should ask
‘How can I help my mother or father or child.’ People may say ‘I want to have a
baby,’ and that’s well and good, but as Malcolm said, anyone can make a baby.
You don’t hear people say ‘I want to be a parent.’”
Collins went on to describe his mother,
Ella L. Little-Collins. “She was a black woman from Georgia, and was a
self-made millionaire. She divorced her first husband, a doctor, because
he wasn’t an activist. For her, being a
man wasn’t about the American dream of a house and a car. My mother
taught me to ride a horse, shoot a rifle, skin a pig. She also taught me how to respect a woman. A woman is a
very powerful entity, and I’ve learned that very well.”
Collins named the Malcolm X/Ella L.
Little-Collins Family Foundation after his uncle and mother. Established
in Boston, where Collins grew up, he has designated the foundation to assist
students in pursuing their education. He talked of “the citizen student,
one who volunteers in their community – in schools, nursing homes, etc.”
He added that “education is not about you and a good job; it’s about
enlightening oneself – a higher pursuit for the sake of learning, for the human
species to progress, for family and for responsibility for the community – it’s
not just for yourself.”
Collins participated in a panel
discussion with A. Peter Bailey, former editor of Ebony and co-author with
Collins of The Seventh Child: A Family Memoir of Malcolm X; STCC social
sciences professor Nicholas Camerota; Dr. Kamal Ali, professor of World
Languages, Multicultural and Gender Studies at Westfield State College; STCC
economics professor
Michael Magala; and STCC Dean of Arts, Humanities, and Social Sciences Dr.
Arlene Rodriguez. Also included in the event was the first national
unveiling of a new portrait of Malcolm X.
The annual Rosa Parks Day observance at STCC is sponsored by E. Henry Twiggs, Camerota, Rodriguez, STCC history department chair Cecelia Gross, Janine Fondon of Unity First News, STCC Vice President for Human Resources and Multicultural Affairs Myra Smith, as well as the STCC Diversity Council and the student group Mobilization Against Poverty, Racism, and War.