Recy Taylor, circa 1944.
by Erica Ayisi
This report was published on December 28.
Recy Taylor, an African-American woman from
Abbeville, Alabama, whose abduction and rape by six white men in 1944
made national headlines, died Thursday morning, her brother Robert
Corbitt told NBC News.
She would have turned 98 on Sunday.
Corbitt said she passed peacefully in a nursing home in Abbeville.
“[She
was] a brave woman and a fighter who tried her best to get it known all
over the world,” he said during a phone interview from Alabama.
Taylor recently made headlines again as the film “The Rape of Recy Taylor” made its North America debut at the New York Film Festival this fall.
The
film chronicles Taylor, who was 24 at the time, walking home from a
church service on a September summer evening in 1944, when she was
kidnapped, gang raped, and left blindfolded on the side of a road by six
white men. According to reports, the men were armed and threatened to
kill her if she told anyone about the attack. The young, married mother
did tell authorities, however, in the height of the Jim Crow Era.
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Source: NBC News
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