"I was a symbol of a Black man who wanted all of my freedoms," Jim Brown told the Washington Post in 1979. "It's very difficult for White America to understand that if you are part of football's elite why you are not satisfied with recognition and good money." Brown, the football great who died Thursday, put his will and strength to use on behalf of civil rights and social and economic justice. Even before retiring from the NFL, Brown saw off-the-field causes as more important, and he said wanted the same rights other Americans had; Post columnist Shirley Povich pointed out after a game that Brown was "born ineligible" to play for Washington's unintegrated team. "Anyone who expected me to be overjoyed that I was doing well in football would be disappointed," he said. He could be a source of pain for others, too. Parts of Brown's life "were as ugly as the bigotry he overcame," Jerry Brewer writes in a Washington Post column you can find here. Athletes and others are taking the measure of Brown: