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Israel/Zionism See other Israel/Zionism Articles Title: Jack Greenberg, civil rights attorney who defended MLK Jr., dies at 91 Jack Greenberg, a prominent lawyer in the US civil rights movement who once defended the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr., has died. Greenberg had been suffering from Parkinsons disease, said his wife, Deborah Cole Greenberg, according to The New York Times. He died Wednesday in Manhattan at 91. US President Barack Obama expressed his condolences to Greenbergs wife and children and all those who loved him dearly and have benefited from his strong sense of right and wrong. The son of immigrants who had fled anti-Semitism, he believed that civil rights was a cause for all Americans, regardless of race or circumstances of birth, Obama said in a press release sent by the White House. Obama praised Greenbergs devotion to justice, and said that thanks to him millions of Americans have known the freedom to learn and work and vote and live in a country that more faithfully lives up to its founding principle of equality under the law. Jacks calm temperament and intellectual approach to moral arguments perfectly suited him for the fight; he knew, after all, that history was on his side, said the president. The son of Jewish parents from Poland and Romania who immigrated to the US, Greenberg was a pioneer in the civil rights movement of the 1960s and 70s who fought for equal rights for disenfranchised African-Americans. He was the last surviving member of a group of lawyers assembled by Thurgood Marshall who argued for voting rights, equal pay and access to schooling for African-Americans. Greenberg was one of seven lawyers who argued against segregated schools in Brown v. Board of Education, leading to the Supreme Courts 1954 ruling to end single-race public schools. After Marshall was appointed to serve on the Supreme Court in 1961, he tapped Greenberg to lead the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund. Greenberg served in the role for more than 20 years. The appointment rankled some who wondered why Marshall had not picked an African-American lawyer, The New York Times reported. Greenberg also was involved in controversy with Jewish groups for his support of affirmative action. The Anti-Defamation League said the policy, which favors minorities for university admission and employment, discriminated against whites. In 1963, he represented King when the civil rights leader was jailed in Birmingham, Alabama, for protesting against segregation. Greenberg was born in 1924 and grew up in Brooklyn and the Bronx boroughs of New York City. He earned bachelors and law degrees from Columbia University, and served as the dean of its law school in 1989-93. Greenberg said he wasnt driven by his religion to fight for civil rights but more by his upbringing in the socialist Zionist movement of Jews who had immigrated from Eastern Europe. We were social activists, he said. Back then wed call them socialists; now youd call them liberals. Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread
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