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Attorney James “Fergie” Ferguson waged war on systems built to keep Black people in the margins. He walked into courtrooms that were never designed for us and made them reckon with the truth. He stood shoulder‑to‑shoulder with our elders and our students when the cost of speaking up was high, and he never flinched. Fergie didn’t ask for permission, he didn’t wait for the world to be ready.Image courtesy of Charlotte Observer In Charlotte, he took on cases that reshaped public education. Through landmark school desegregation battles, including those that transformed Charlotte‑Mecklenburg Schools, he helped ensure that Black children could step into classrooms that once shut them out.
He knew that education was the key to liberation, and he forced this city and the nation to confront its own promises of equality. For decades, his work rippled through Charlotte neighborhoods, creating opportunities where there were none and giving generations of students a shot at the future they deserved. He laid the foundation for a more just city, a city where we can still believe in the power of public education to change lives. To our campaign and to our community, his legacy is a reminder and a demand: NEVER PLAY SMALL AND NEVER GIVE IN! Don’t water down the truth or fall for the okie doke to make it palatable. Fight for our schools. Fight for our neighborhoods. Fight for justice even when the room gets uncomfortable and especially when it gets uncomfortable. Attorney Ferguson showed us what it looks like to disrupt the status quo with brilliance and love for Black people. We owe him more than words. We owe him the work. Rest in power, Brother Fergie. Your fight lit a fire in us that will not go out. We honor you by demanding more for Charlotte’s children and by carrying his fight forward, every single day.
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This picture will forever haunt me. It marks the day I began a journey to prevent tragedies like this from happening again. Five years have passed. He would be 19 now and graduating from high school, stepping into adulthood. I still wonder about his mother, his family, and how they are holding up. I remember reaching out to her in those early days. She was in shock. She had so many people calling, messaging, praying over her and I was probably just one voice among a gazillion. None of us could bring him back. I also wonder how we, as a community, can find the strength to change the conditions that give rise to violence in the first place. There are so many activists, organizers, nonprofits, and everyday people who care deeply and want to help and yet, here we are. One person alone can’t solve it. If it worked that way, violence would have disappeared long ago. But I want to be that one person bold enough, clear enough, and determined enough to push for answers to figure out how our schools, our neighborhoods, and every stakeholder can work together to stop the cycle. When I look at this picture, it still fuels me. It gives me the courage to keep going and keep pursuing peace. As a candidate for the District 2 School Board, I am committed to doing everything I personally can. And if I am elected, I will have the power to do even more. Will you help me? |
Shamaiye HaynesShamaiye is a candidate for CMS School Board. Archives
August 2025
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