Author
                  Actress, movies: Gods and Generals and Murder in 
                    Mississippi
                    Television: Don King: Only in America, Miss 
                    Evers Boys, Chicago Hope, Any Day Now, and 
                    EZ Streets
                  Founding member and V.P. of the Board of Trustees of New 
                    Road Schools
                  Spokesperson; Centers for Disease Control AIDS Project 				
 			
			 
			
			
				
				
					c/o 
                  Gilbertson Kincaid 
                  1330 Fourth St. 
                  Santa Monica, CA 90401 				
			
			 
			
			
			
			
					 
		
		
		GUEST BIO
		
		Donzaleigh Abernathy: A Connection with 
        Martin Luther King Jr.
		
		By 
  The 700 Club
        
		
		
		February 5, 2004 
  
		
		 CBN.com 
   A Loving Legacy
Donzaleigh is the third child of the Reverend Ralph David Abernathy, who 
    co-founded the Civil Rights Movement with his closest friend, Dr. Martin Luther 
    King Jr. As far back as she can remember, Donzaleigh's father had greatly 
    impacted her life. One of her earliest memories was her father buying hamburgers 
    for her sister and her. The family was driving on Alabama Highway 80 one evening, 
    and the girls asked for hamburgers. Ralph David Abernathy refused and wouldnt 
    stop. After the girls pestered him more, he relented, stopped, and got them 
    hamburgers. When he returned and gave them the hamburgers, he told them he 
    would never do that again. Later, when Donzaleigh was older, she learned that 
    her father risked his life getting the hamburgers because restaurants were 
    not allowed to serve blacks. She learned he had to sneak around to the back 
    of the restaurant where another black man served him. Ralph David taught Gods 
    love and forgivenesss, as well as the importance of serving others, by example 
    . During the turbulent struggle for racial equality, Donzaleigh and her family 
    felt safe as long as her father was there. Ralph David told his family that 
    God would take care of them and not to fear.
  Partners Called by God
  It was the late 1940s when Ralph David Abernathy and Martin Luther King Jr. 
    met twice briefly. They were reconnected in the early 1950s and became inseparable. 
    They had similar lives as pastors and shared a common vision for the progression 
    of civil rights. Throughout the Civil Rights Movement, Ralph David focused 
    on practical applications while Martin Luther King Jr. expounded on philosophies. 
  
  On January 10, 1957, the Alabama homes of Ralph David and Martin Luther King 
    Jr. were bombed. Along with their homes, four churches, including Martin Luther 
    King Jr's. were also targeted, in a failed attempt to stop the Movement. Ralph 
    David and Martin Luther King Jr. were in Atlanta at the time and were relieved 
    to find that God had protected their families. 
  Their families were very close and actively participated in events together, 
    like the Selma to Montgomery March. When the King family moved from Alabama 
    to Atlanta in 1960, at the urging of Martin Luther King Jr., the Abernathy 
    family soon followed. 
  According to Donzaleigh, Ralph David was known to be fearless and Martin 
    Luther King Jr. called Ralph David "his rock." The evening before 
    Martin Luther King Jr.'s death, both Ralph David and King were called to speak 
    in Memphis. Not following the usual program order, Ralph David spoke first 
    and paid tribute to his dearest friend, Martin Luther King Jr. Martin Luther 
    King Jr. was shot early morning on April 4, 1968, and he died later at the 
    hospital in Ralph David's arms. Ralph David was very grieved at the loss of 
    his friend but continued to carry the torch of his and Martin Luther King 
    Jr.'s life mission together with projects like the Poor People's Campaign. 
    Of her father's work, Donzaleigh is most proud of the Voting Rights Act, establishing 
    the Martin Luther King Jr. holiday, and free meal programs in public schools 
    for low-income children.
  A Call to Serve
  As a young child, Donzaleigh knew she wanted to be baptized but was told 
    she was too young. At the age of 11, Donzaleigh demonstrated her own growing 
    faith and her earliest mission call of giving hope to others. A ruptured appendix 
    brought her close to death. Though she knew she was going to be fine, her 
    family was afraid she would die. Eventually, she recovered and gave hope and 
    encouragement to another critically injured girl in the same hospital ward. 
  
  Her father instilled in her the call to love and take care of the less fortunate; 
    however, for most of her life, Donzaleigh felt the need to serve her father 
    since he was always serving others. In 1989, Ralph David told Donzaleigh she 
    had to move to Los Angeles from Atlanta and start living her own life. He 
    felt that her taking care of him was hindering the call God had for her life. 
  
  She left Atlanta for Los Angeles. As she was driving cross-country, she heard 
    a voice telling her that she had to tell the story and that she would be an 
    actress. Not long afterward, Donzaleigh began working on the book Partners 
    to History and she started getting work as an actress in Los Angeles. 
    In 1990 Rev. Ralph David Abernathy died. When Donzaleigh was at her fathers 
    casket, she told him that she would follow Jesus.
  Following the Father's Footsteps
  Donzaleigh had been twice told by God to tell the story of Ralph David and 
    Martin Luther King Jr.; thus, Partners to History was born. It is a 
    personal account of the Civil Rights Movement and faith in God, much of it 
    told in the words of Ralph David and Martin Luther King Jr., along with poignant 
    photograghs. A teacher told her that students who cannot read well are able 
    to learn about the Civil Rights Movement through the photographs in the book. 
  
  Donzaleigh has been in several major film and television productions, such 
    as Gods and Generals, Don King: Only in America, Miss Evers 
    Boys, Chicago Hope, Murder in Mississippi, and EZ Streets. Before 
    each acting scene she says, 'Jesus, Savior, pilot me,' giving the Lord control.
  Donzaleigh knows that God is in control and she is not. During the L.A. Riots, 
    she first became involved in serving the less fortunate in her community. 
    She began to distribute groceries to people in the city when stores were burned 
    down. Later, she became reaquainted with Glenn Smiley, who taught her father 
    and Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. the principles of nonviolence shortly after 
    the beginning of the Montgomery Bus Boycott in the late 1950s. This led to 
    a series of events that eventually established New Road Schools, which tries 
    to encourage diversity and tolerance in its curriculum. 
  Whatever her endeavor, Donzaleigh tries to follow the example of faith in 
    God she learned from her father.
        
		
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