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The son of a preacher who had escaped from slavery, Robeson became deeply politicized by his experiences when he lived and worked in the UK in the 1930s. Robeson graduated from Rutgers University, New Jersey, USA, with an assortment of honours for excellence, then studied law at Columbia University. He was the first black law graduate to enter one of New York's most prestigious law firms. Robeson was an outstanding athlete, becoming one of the first black men to play professional American football. In the cinema Robeson was the first black actor to rise to international prominence in film and, through his outspokenness at the stereotyping of black actors, was the first to bring dignity and respect to black characters. His films include Sanders of the River (1935) and King Solomon's Mines (1937).
Robeson was also a communist and a supporter of the Soviet Union. Before the McCarthy House Un-American Activities Committee he refused to say whether he was a communist or not. But on his return from a visit to the Soviet Union his passport was withdrawn. For eight years he could not act or sing abroad. In 1949, as anti-communist fervour gripped the country, a Robeson concert was attacked at Peekskill, just outside New York City. The concert, in aid of the Harlem chapter of the Civil Rights Congress, was abandoned as jeering crowds screamed abuse and pulled concert-goers from their cars. Robeson returned the following week determined that he and his followers would not give in to mob violence.
Blue stands for the Pacific Ocean and water on which life depends. Yellow symbolizes the sun. Green represents the lush vegetation. Effective date: 18 November 1977.
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