Boynton Robinson in New York in 2011. Photo by Stephen Lovkin via Getty Images
Amelia Boynton Robinson was nearly beaten to death in 1965 during the first march in Selma, Alabama, led by Martin Luther King Jr. She was 53 years old at the time. A graphic photo of Boynton Robinson, severely beaten and collapsed, spread around the world and became an iconic image of the civil rights era.
“Thank god I learned that color makes no difference,” Boynton Robinson said Friday at a private luncheon at the Soho House in West Hollywood, California. “My parents [were] an example for what they wanted their children to be.”
The civil rights activist, dressed in pale yellow and sparking jewels, was honored at the luncheon with Cinema for Peace’s Nelson Mandela award. The award was presented by Kweku Mandela, a grandson of Nelson Mandela.
Boynton Robinson traveled with friends and family to Los Angeles just in time for Sunday’s Academy Awards, where “Selma” was nominated for Best Original Song and Best Picture (Common and John Legend took home the former award for their song “Glory”). Boynton Robinson is portrayed in the movie, which she calls “fantastic,” by actress Lorraine Toussaint.
Though she sat in her wheelchair with a heavy coat around her shoulders, Boynton Robinson enthusiastically shared her thoughts into a microphone in a steady and clear voice, and even sang a few lines of a song she and fellow marchers sang in jail together all those years ago.
“I look back at the time that we fought and when those heads were beaten,” she said. “I look at what God brought to us. Dr. King cracked the door open. People rose up and felt that they were just as good as everybody else.”
Amelia Boynton Robinson in Los Angeles on Feb. 20, 2015.
In January, Boynton Robinson traveled to Washington, D.C., for President Barack Obama’s State of the Union address, attending as the special guest of Rep. Terri Sewell (D-Ala.). “I will forever remember this day,” she said at the time.
Boynton Robinson wishes that after everything she fought for, the state of race relations under the nation’s first black president were more positive. “I look at our president and see hate coming out of the minds of so many people because of his color,” she said.
Boynton Robinson in New York in 2011.
“People have hate within their souls and that’s what we have to get rid of,” she continued. “I think so often of what my mother said when people felt they couldn’t get rid of the evilness and hate [in the world]. She used to say, ‘You are not evil. You’re not mean. You’re not hateful. Lift up your heads — you are descendants of Him.’”
But Boynton Robinson is neither bitter nor disappointed. As she looks back on everything she has seen and experienced, her perspective is positive. “It makes me realize that this is where I belong,” she said.
“This is where God sees me — at this age, at 103 years old — in order that I might be able to reach out and pull [people] up.”