tavis: coming up, a conversation with diane braddock. stay with us. diane braddock was a college sophomore when her sister carol robertson was murdered by a bomb planted in the 16th street baptist church by white supremacists. she joins us now from washington where she is also taking part in the 50th anniversary commemorations. diane, in honor to have guns program. thank you for your time. five decades as a longtime. does it seem like 50 years? >> yes, in a lot of ways, it does seem like 50 years when you carry that kind of pain in your heart. years.seemed like 50 tavis: how is it that you have navigated carrying that pain for 50 years, losing your sister in this most terrific ways? >> i had to just go on and live bestfe and try to make the of my life, raise my children, my two daughters. i couldn't wallow in a lot of pity because that was not the image i wanted them to see of me. of course, they know about everything that happened and it led me to dowhat more with black history and talking about civil rights and what it was like growing up in 1963 in