Artwork by Hatty Ruth Miller, Lumbee artist  
 
Category: 28. Biographical sources

     KAYE001. Kaye, Mary. “A place to be an Indian.” Sassy (New York: Fairfax Publications) 5 (November 1992): 74-5, 82-3.

Publication type: Magazine article

This article, second in a series on Native American activists, features Rhiannon Chavis-Legerton, who was twelve years old when the interview was conducted. Born in Pembroke, she is the daughter of Mac Legerton and Donna Chavis. In 1980, the two of them founded the Center for Community Action, a multiracial organization which combats hunger and poverty in Robeson County.

Rhiannon reflects on the murder of Julian Pierce and other killings of people of color in the mid-to-late 1980's; her parents' battle against the GSX toxic waste treatment plant that was proposed near the Lumbee River; the Center for Community Action's Phoenix Project in Robeson County, which unites Native American and African American teenagers to work together and with elders for economic justice; and her participation in a play, called “Side by Side,” about race relations in Robeson County.

Additional subjects: Rhiannon Chavis-Legerton  | Donna Chavis | Mac Legerton | Center for Community Action

This annotation was edited on: June 21, 2002

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Copyright © 2001, Glenn Ellen Starr Stilling. 
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