Fifty years after civil rights pioneer Medgar Evers was murdered, his widow says she’s proud to continue his work and honor his legacy by giving the invocation at President Obama’s second inauguration. “I’m just so appreciative, so thankful,” Myrlie Evers-Williams said on PoliticsNation. “I never imagined that this would happen in my wildest dreams.”
Myrlie and her husband Medgar had been working in the civil rights movement for years. He served as the NAACP’s first Mississippi field officer; together they fought to desegregate schools and earn voting rights. Medgar was shot and killed on June 12, 1963.
Evers-Williams continued that work while raising their three children. She battled to see her husband’s killer brought to justice–Byron de la Beckwith was convicted more than 30 years after the murder–and fought hard for the civil rights movement, eventually becoming chairperson of the NAACP.
The inauguration was not meant to be Evers-Williams first major speech in Washington. She had been scheduled to speak at the historic March on Washington, but her husband was shot only months before and she could not bring herself to speak. “For years I thought, I’ll never be able to do anything like that again–and here we are 50 years later, I’ve been asked to deliver the invocation.”








