NABJ Co-founder Claude Lewis Passes Away

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Claude Lewis, co-founder of the National Association of Black Journalists passed away from complications of diabetes at age 82 on Thursday according to the organization.

A New York City native, Lewis graduated with a degree in English. He started his career as a reporter and in 1967 made history, becoming the first African American columnist in Philadelphia writing for The Evening Bulletin. As a pioneering journalist, he covered the civil rights movement and interviewed civil rights leaders Malcolm X and Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. as well as icons Langston Hughes and James Baldwin.

During a time when black faces weren’t common in the newsroom, Lewis recognized the need for more opportunities for current and aspiring journalists in the field. In 1973, he co-founded the Philadelphia Association of Black Journalists, a founding chapter of the National Association of Black Journalists that would come two years later. Today, NABJ is one of the largest journalism organizations in the country providing career support and resources to journalists of color. Making history again in 1982, he founded the first national African American newspaper The National Leader.

NABJ President and Social Media Editor for NBC Owned Stations Sarah Glover remembers Lewis as a “gentle soul and quiet man with a boisterous spirit in his journalistic voice” that made an impact.

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