Call and Post Editor Connie Harper laid to rest, homegoing service was supported by prominent dignitaries, including U.S. Senator Sherrod Brown, Cleveland Mayor Frank Jackson, Congresswoman Marcia Fudge and retired congressman Louis Stokes, and Black clergy, media personalities, community activists, and local journalists, By Cleveland Urban News.Com, Ohio's leader in Black digital news
By Kathy Wray Coleman, editor-in-chief, Cleveland Urban News. Com and The Cleveland Urban News.Com Blog, Ohio's Most Read Online Black Newspaper and Newspaper Blog. Tel: 216-659-0473. (Kathy Wray Coleman is a 21-year investigative and political journalist and legal reporter who trained for 17 years under five different editors at the Call and Post Newspaper
(www.clevelandurbannews.com) / (www.kathywraycolemanonlinenewsblog.com)CLEVELAND, Ohio- Cleveland Urban News.Com, Ohio's most read digital Black newspaper, remembers Call and Post Newspaper associate publisher and editor Connie Harper, who was Black and who fought for Black people and civil and human rights all of her adult life, as a journalist and otherwise, on the one- year anniversary of her death. (Editor's note: The Call and Post Newspaper is a longstanding Black print weekly with distributions in the Ohio cities of Columbus, Cincinnati and Cleveland. It is published by internationally know bocing promoter Don King, a Cleveland native who has own the newspaper since 1008. Kenneth Miller is its president uver King with local Cleveland attorney George Forbes a former Cleveland NAACP president and former longtime president of Cleveland City Council, as its general counsel).
Harper, 81, died on October 24, 2014 at a local hospital in Columbus, Ohio after falling ill at the after the homecoming celebration her Alma mater Central State University, of which she was the Cleveland alumni chapter president.
Funeral service were at Olivet Institutional Baptist Church on Cleveland's east side, with the articulate Dr. Jawanza Covin delivering the eulogy, a home-going service supported by hundreds, if not thousands, including dignitaries, Black clergy, media personalities, community activists, and local journalists. (Editor's note: Led by Congresswoman Marcia L. Fudge, a Warrensville Heights Democrat and chair of the Congressional Black Caucus of Blacks in Congress, the Delta Sigma Theta Sorority saluted Harper Friday evening during a standing-room-only ceremony at Mount Olive Missionary Baptist Church in Cleveland. Harper was an active remember of Delta Sigma Theta and Fudge is a former national president of the distinguished Black sorority of Black women).
The family of international boxing promoter Don King, 83, and the owner and publisher of the Call and Post, sent yellow-stemmed roses for the occasion.
The Rev Dr. Jawanza Karriem Colvin, a Morehouse graduate and senior pastor at Olivet who also eulogized political strategist Arnold Pinkney in January, delivered the brilliant eulogy.
Among those at Saturday's funeral, a packed house in fact, were U.S. Sen Sherrod Brown, Fudge, retired congressman Louis Stokes, former Cleveland City Council president George L. Forbes, who is also general counsel for the Call and Post, Ohio's oldest and most prominent Black newspaper, Cleveland Mayor Frank Jackson, Carole Hoover, Advance Local Vice President Debra Adams Simmons, Cuyahoga County Councilpersons Jack Schron and Anthony Hairston, and state representatives Armond Budish and Bill Patmon.
“Connie Harper was not only a legend in Cleveland journalism, she was a fierce Civil Rights advocate and leader," said Brown, a Cleveland Democrat and senior member of the United States Senate.
"The loss of Connie Harper will be felt throughout our entire community, " said Mayor Jackson. "She was more than just the Editor of the Call & Post who will be greatly missed."
Others there include Call and Post employees and alumni of CSU, Cleveland City Community Relations Board Director Blaine Griffin, Cleveland News Chanel 3 Anchorman and Reporter Russ Mitchell, Cleveland 19 Action News Anchorman and Reporter Harry Boomer, Cool Cleveland Correspondent Mansfield Frazier, Cleveland Ward 6 Councilwoman Mamie Mitchell, Cleveland Municipal Court Judge Pauline Tarver, East Cleveland City Councilman Mansell Baker, and City of Cleveland Mayoral Executive Assistant Valerie McCall.
Community activists there include Khalid Samad of Peace in the Hood, Laura Cowan of the Laura Cowan Foundation, Amy Hurd of the Carl Stokes Brigade, Kathy Wray Coleman of the Imperial Women Coalition, Robert "Brother Bob" Saffold, Grio Y-Von, Yvonne Pointer, a city of Cleveland community relations liaison, and Dick Peery, a retired Cleveland Plain Dealer Newspaper reporter.
A video presentation of Harper's life featured Stokes, Ohio's first Black congressman, Fudge, the current congressperson of the 11th congressional district, former senior pastor and pastor emeritus of Olivet the Rev Dr. Otis Moss Jr., and Hoover, one of Harper's close friends and confidants.
Retired Ohio Eighth District Court of Appeals Judge Sara J. Harper, one of two surviving siblings of Connie Harper, spoke on behalf of the family and said that her baby sister was an avid reader and writer who dressed to the nines, and that she loved Cleveland, and trained local journalists to perfection.
The supremely talented Olivet choir sang and Connie Harper's equally talented nephew, Rodger C. Varner, performed an independent solo.
A host of preachers spoke, including the Rev Ledra Bigelow, who read a proclamation from President Barack Obama, and the Rev. Dr. Todd C. Davidson, senior pastor at Antioch Baptist Church in Cleveland.
The articulate Colvin, senior pastor at Olivet since 2009, who succeeded Moss, said that Harper, as the local alumni chapter president of CSU, understood the importance of historically Black colleges and universities, and that she knew that some Black students needed the extra help that Black institutions of higher learning bring to students who might not ordinarily graduate.
He said during his 25-minute eulogy that Harper understood that Black colleges and universities serve to "believe in you when you do not believe in yourself."
Colvin said that Harper was a news editor par excellence and that she promoted the positive aspects of the Black community rather than just fatal shootings and other crimes.
Ordinary people at the funeral also mourned Harper, an 83-year-old woman telling Cleveland Urban News.Com that Harper had sometimes eaten Sunday dinner with her family and gave to the local food bank, and another saying that "I did her hair."
Rep. Patmon, a Cleveland Democrat of Ohio's 10th state legislative district, said after the funeral that Connie Harper "was a community icon and is irreplaceable."(www.clevelandurbannews.com) / (www.kathywraycolemanonlinenewsblog.com)
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