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Today in Black History: May 28th

May 28, 2026

This article commemorates two significant events in African American history that occurred on May 28th in different years. In 2014, celebrated poet, author, and civil rights activist Maya Angelou died after a distinguished career that included writing the acclaimed memoir "I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings" and receiving the Presidential Medal of Freedom. The article also marks the 1963 Woolworth sit-in in Jackson, Mississippi, where college students from Tougaloo staged a protest at a segregated lunch counter and endured brutal violence for over three hours while police observed without intervening.

Who is affected

  • Maya Angelou (deceased poet, author, and civil rights activist)
  • Barack Obama (who awarded Angelou the Presidential Medal of Freedom)
  • Wake Forest University (where Angelou was a professor)
  • Pearlena Lewis, Annie Moody, and Memphis Norman (Tougaloo student protesters)
  • Other Tougaloo classmates and faculty who joined the sit-in
  • People who harassed and assaulted the protesters

What action is being taken

  • No explicit ongoing actions stated in the article

Why it matters

  • Maya Angelou's legacy matters because she inspired generations through her literary works exploring themes of identity, resilience, and love, and she received national recognition for her contributions to literature and civil rights. The 1963 Woolworth sit-in matters because it represented one of the most violent confrontations of the Civil Rights Movement, yet the protesters' courage and sacrifice helped advance the cause, contributing to the passage of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, which outlawed segregation.

What's next

  • No explicit next steps stated in the article

Read full article from source: The San Diego Voice & Viewpoint