Rev. Willie Barrow has a life lesson for King breakfast audience

SHARE Rev. Willie Barrow has a life lesson for King breakfast audience

After 89 years on earth and decades in the trenches of the civil rights movement, the Rev. Willie Barrow has all kinds of life lessons to teach.

On Friday, the feisty Barrow schooled her audience at the interfaith breakfast celebrating the life of the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King about what it takes to stay married for 57 years.

“I told him, `You can look around all you want. But, you’re not gonna find another Willie B,’ “ the irrepressible Barrow said, as a hotel ballroom filled with politicians and community leaders dissolved into laughter and applause.

“She can’t cook like me. She can’t talk like me. She can’t walk like me. She can’t even put up with you like me. There’s no need to be looking around. You got what you deserve. Don’t try to find nobody else.”

During Friday’s breakfast, Mayor Rahm Emanuel gave Barrow the city’s Champion of Freedom Award.

She’s a former field organizer and confidante to Dr. King who went on to found Operation Breadbasket, which later became Operation PUSH. Barrow served as the organization’s national executive director and retired as its president in 1989.

“We are working the work that I’ve done my entire life—work that Dr. King and I started over 40 years ago,” said Barrow, who got her start during the 1940’s as a student leading demonstrations against segregated schools.

“Mr. Mayor, I want to thank you. I appreciate you. And I am grateful that you chose me for this award. At the age of 89 years, I’m still working. The good Lord is not through with me yet.”

The Latest
At Cesar’s Killer Margaritas in Lake View, siblings Sandra “Sandy” Sánchez, Israel Sánchez and Lourdes “Lulu” Durán are serving up a mole poblano recipe that runs three generations deep.
Local Government Information Services agreed to the order amid a pending lawsuit from the Illinois Attorney General accusing it of publishing sensitive personal data.
Dozens of Emmy Star Brown’s murals can be found in and around Chicago, including this mammoth piece on the side of the District 1860 development.
Russell Elleven was out of school for months at 13 while facing cancer treatments. One thing kept him entertained: The Chicago Cubs. Now, as an adult, he feels priced out of Wrigley Field.
The Israel-Hamas war is heightening fears of unrest, but convention leaders say they’re confident in their partnerships with Mayor Brandon Johnson, Chicago Police Supt. Larry Snelling and the U.S. Secret Service.