By Gloria DULAN-Wilson

Charles Barkley’s Black History Month All Stars
All Star #21: Leon Sullivan
In 2016, Charles Barkley marked Black History Month with a daily spotlight on local African-American heroes. Many of them didn’t make it into the history books or even the newspapers of their time. But their stories are inspiring and worth knowing. Here’s another look.
20
Leon Sullivan Civil Rights Leader
(October 16, 1922- April 24, 2001)
Rev. Leon Sullivan—the “LION OF ZION”—used his pulpit and his position as longtime pastor of North Philly’s Zion Baptist Church to organize for local African-American causes, particularly in employment.
From 1959 to 1963, he led area black preachers in organizing “selective patronage” boycotts of local companies—Tasty Baking, Sun Oil, Gulf—deemed to discriminate against African Americans in their hiring, urging black consumers with the slogan “Don’t buy where you don’t work.”
The movement opened up several thousand jobs to black workers and drew national attention, including that of Martin Luther King Jr, who adopted Sullivan’s techniques in his Operation Breadbasket.
In 1964, Sullivan opened the first Opportunity Industrial Center (OIC) - a job-service training program to teach manufacturing skills to Black Philadelphians. OIC still operates today, in 22 states and around the globe.
Sullivan led Zion for 40 years, growing it from 600 congregants to 6,000, and turning it into a community hub (the center still bears his name).
Throughout, he also spent time in South Africa helping to fight and dismantle apartheid and creating a set of rules—now dubbed the ‘Sullivan Principles’ —that serve as guidelines for American corporations doing business in South Africa.
He recalled in a 1999 interview a trip to South Africa that ended with him enduring a strip search at the airport.
“A man with the biggest .45 I’d ever seen said, ‘We do to you what we have to,’” Sullivan recalled to the New York Times. “I stood there in my underwear, thinking, ‘I’m the head of the largest Black church in Philadelphia and I’m on the board of directors of General Motors. When I get home, I’ll do to you what I have to.’”
Cheat Sheet
EDUCATION:- West Virginia State College, B.A. 1943
- Union Theological Seminary
- Columbia University, M.A. 1947
- Virginia Union University, D.D.
ACCOMPLISHMENTS:
- Founded Zion Investments Inc. in 1962
- Founded OIC in 1964
- First Black Director of General Motors’ board
- Started first African-African American Summit, 1991
- Selected as one of 10 outstanding young men in United States by U.S. junior Chamber of Commerce, 1955
- Named one of 100 Outstanding Young Men of America, Life magazine, 1963
- Russwurm Award, National Publisher’s Association, 1963
- Philadelphia Fellowship Commission Award, 1964
- Philadelphia Book Award, 1966
Awarded Presidential Medal of Freedom in 1991 - Franklin D. Roosevelt Four Freedoms Medal in 1987 for his efforts to eradicate apartheid in South Africa
Final Word: The preamble of Sullivan Principles reads: “The objectives of the Global Sullivan Principles are to support economic, social and political justice by companies where they do business; to support human rights and to encourage equal opportunity at all levels of employment, including racial diversity on decision making committees and boards; to train and advance disadvantaged workers for technical, supervisory and management opportunities; and to assist with greater tolerance and understanding among peoples; thereby, helping to improve the quality of life for communities, workers and children with dignity and equality. I urge companies large and small in every part of the world to support and follow the Global Sullivan Principles of corporate social responsibility wherever they have operations.”
01
Leon Higginbotham Jr.
District Court Judge
02
Sadie Tanner Mossell Alexander -
Co-Founder of Philadelphia Alumnae Chapter Delta Sigma Theta Sorority inc
Lawyer
03
Walter P. Lomax Jr.
Physician
04
Frances Ellen Watkins Harper
Writer
05
Octavius Catto
Civil Rights Activist
06
Crystal Bird Fauset
Politician
07
James Forten
Businessman
08
Caroline LeCount
Teacher/Civil Rights Activist
09
Julian Francis Abele
Architect
10
Rebecca Cole
Doctor
11
Cecil B. Moore
Civil Rights Activist
12
Jessie Redmon Fauset
Writer
13
Richard Allen
Preacher/Civil Rights Activist
14
Henry Ossawa Tanner
Painter
15
Marian Anderson
Singer
16
Guion Bluford
Astronaut/Scientist
17
Charlotte Forten Grimké
Writer/Teacher
18
Nathan Francis Mossell
Physician
19
Caroline Still Anderson
Physician
20
Leon Sullivan
Civil Rights Leader
21
Alain Leroy Locke
Writer, ‘Dean’ of Harlem Renaissance
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