Carroll graduate will run from Columbus to Wilberforce to raise money for NAACP legal-defense fund

Paul Bete wants to be ‘an ally in the fight against systemic racism’
The Charles Young house in Wilberforce was dedicated as national monument by the National Park Service on Tuesday, April 2. The dedication of the Charles Young Buffalo Soldiers National Monument was attended by the Secretary of the Interior Ken Salazar and National Park Service Director Jonathan Jarvis. CHRIS STEWART / STAFF

Credit: Chris Stewart

Credit: Chris Stewart

The Charles Young house in Wilberforce was dedicated as national monument by the National Park Service on Tuesday, April 2. The dedication of the Charles Young Buffalo Soldiers National Monument was attended by the Secretary of the Interior Ken Salazar and National Park Service Director Jonathan Jarvis. CHRIS STEWART / STAFF

Carroll High School graduate Paul Bete will run 56.3 miles from Columbus to Wilberforce on Sunday to raise money to benefit the NAACP Foundation’s legal-defense fund.

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Bete's goal was to raise $5,000, and he had already passed $4,000 in donations by Friday afternoon. He contributed $500 himself. Anyone can contribute at RallyUp.com.

Bete, who walked on to the track and cross country teams at Ohio State and graduated this year, will start the run at the Jesse Owens statue outside Ohio State’s Jesse Owens Memorial Stadium and finish at the Charles Young Buffalo Soldiers National Monument in Wilberforce.

Under the headline, “Be an Ally in the fight against systemic racism,” Bete wrote about his motivations:

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“For much of my life, I’ve avoided the topic of race. And like many people of my background it wasn’t due to any explicit biases, but rather it was easy and convenient to not confront a system in which I was privileged and had an advantage to succeed. The murder of George Floyd by the Minneapolis police department, as well as the murders of countless other black people have been a wake up call. A call to no longer just condemn these actions in my mind or in talking with friends, but instead to go out in the world, protest, and take tangible action to stop the machine that allows these actions to happen. As a member of the Ohio State track and field program, my life has been shaped over my college years by strong black coaches/role models such as Karen Dennis and Khadevis Robinson. I had the privilege of competing with and getting to know dozens of black teammates whose constant strength in the face of adversity over the past weeks and years has changed my life and inspired me to do whatever I can to change the lives of others. In light of this, I will be using my ability to run that so many of these people have helped cultivate in me to raise money for the NAACP legal defense fund.”

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