Today (March 7) thousands of people, including several members
of Congress and President Obama, have gathered in Selma, Alabama to commemorate
the 50th anniversary of the 1965 March from Selma to Montgomery, in
which thousands of courageous individuals marched 50 miles demanding Voting
Rights for Black people in Alabama. On this day 50 years ago a much younger
John Lewis and Bernard Lafayette led a group of about 600 folks lined up two by
two over the Edmund Pettis Bridge leading out of Selma. Before they could even
cross the bridge, they were met by a phalanx of
local and state police officers
in military gear and on horse backs, who sprayed tear gas and beat them with
clubs, literally driving them back over the bridge. The march had been organized
after a young man, Jimmie Lee Jackson, was beaten to death by a police officer
during a protest for voting rights in a nearby town. That day, which came to
called “Bloody Sunday,” brought national attention to Selma. Dr. Martin Luther
King, Jr. went on television and called on people from outside the South,
particularly clergy, to come to Selma to support their cause, and three weeks
later, 8000 people marched over the bridge, and the same police who had beaten
folks three weeks earlier, were now ordered by the state and federal
governments to protect the marchers on their walk.
While anyone who has seen the recent movie “Selma” knows the
outline I just shared, there is so much more to the story, then and now.
Eighteen months ago , while on a Civil Rights bus tour led by Dr. Todd Allen, I
was in Selma and met Rev. Fredrick Reese, a pastor, school teacher and local
organizer, who had been leading marches demanding the right to vote to the
Selma City Hall for years before it came to national attention. Our tour
through Selma was led Mrs. Joanne Bland, who when she was 14 years old joined
hundreds of other young people who march to the court house demanding their parents’
right to vote.
We saw Brown Chapel where people gathered as they prepared to
march on Bloody Sunday. We walked over the Edmund Pettis Bridge, drove the 50
miles between Selma and Montgomery, and stood in front of the state capital in
Montgomery where Dr. King proclaimed:
I
know you are asking today “How long will it take? I come to say to you this
afternoon, however difficult the moment, however frustrating the hour, it will
not be long because truth pressed to earth will rise again.
How
long? Not long, because no lie can live forever.
How
long? Not long, because you will reap what you sow.
How
long? Not long, because the arc of the moral universe is long, but it bends
toward justice.
Five months
later the U.S. Congress passed the Voting Rights Act, assuring all people,
regardless of race, the right to vote.
determined) telling the stories of White people in U.S. history who worked alongside People of Color
for racial justice. Two of the stories I have written involve Rabbi Abraham Joshua Heschel and Mrs. Viola Liuzzo, two of the hundreds of White people who joined their Black brothers and sisters in Selma. During the evening following King’s stirring Montgomery speech, Viola Liuzzo was killed by members of the KKK as she was driving between Selma and Montgomery after having driven some marchers back to Selma so they could begin their trek home. On our trip to Selma, we also paused at a memorial to Viola Liuzzo, which was erected at the spot where her car was driven off the road and she died. Having spent weeks learning and writing her story, for me pausing at the monument was a moving and solemn moment.
In my
research I also reviewed the story of Rev. James Reeb, a Unitarian minister who
was beaten by who
was beaten by some angry White thugs before the march began. In a recent New York Times article, Rev Clark Olsen,
who was with James Reeb the night of his death, and who also was beaten but
survived, shared his reflections of that night and of the march itself. Rev
Olsen struggled for years with “survivor’s guilt, ” but also recognized that racism
was even at work in the way the country, and especially President Johnson, responded to Reeb’s death. While the march was precipitated by the death of a
Black man, Jimmie Lee Jackson, it took the death of a White man, James Reeb, to
get the nation as a whole to act. Following Jackson’s death, there was no
national media coverage, but Reeb’s death was front page news, and precipitated marches all over the country and over fifty phone calls to the
White House demanding the president act in some way. Shortly after Reeb’s
death, President Johnson went before Congress to propose the passing of the
Voting Rights Act. In his speech he mentioned Rev. Reeb, but not Mr. Jackson.
Many Black activists today are rightly critical of White
activists who use their White privilege to call attention to their efforts to
fight racism. Despite the legitimacy of this charge, as a White person at times I have found that privilege is
thrust upon me without my consent or knowledge. So too James Reeb; he did not ask for this
attention, nor did Viola Liuzzo, but unfortunately it took their
deaths to wake White people across the nation to the horrors of racism.
Unfortunately, not much has changed in fifty years. The “Black Lives Matter”
movement that has emerged following the deaths of Michael Brown and Eric Garner
has come about because just as Jimmie Lee Jackson’s death was not valued as
much as James Reeb’s, so too the deaths of young Black men today too often don’t
spawn the outrage that the death of White folks do.
The march from Selma to Montgomery addressed issues that are still as relevant in 2015 as they were in 1965. Like in Selma, today there are thousands
of ordinary people working and marching for racial justice. Like in Selma, today there
are public officials who need to be confronted with policies and laws that
dehumanize People of Color. Like in Selma, today the media places higher value on
White lives than Black lives. Like in Selma, today the struggle continues, as we
trust in Dr. King’s vision that “the arc of the moral universe is long, and it
bends toward justice.”
[Photos by the author and from Google images]
3 comments:
With all due respect Drick, I think you have very little credibility on this issue. In a earlier post you flat out accused Officer Nelson of murdering Brown because of racial biases. That has been proven wrong by many. I have not seen your apology to Nelson. I think you have a template and a narrative for these situations and the facts don't matter. You and others only hurt the cause, not help it. There was no "hands up-don't shoot"
One of the real problems of the black community is the breakdown of the family and the absence of fathers, which leads to many of the problems you blame on racism.
I respect greatly your ministry and your service to the Lord. I do not respect your narrative on racism and I think you are badly misguided.
Steve Miller
If the actions Darrin Wilson (not Nelson) "have been proven wrong by many," I don't think the Justice Department would agree. The Attorney General's report on the Ferguson Police Department did not exonerate Wilson, but rather put his actions in the context of a culture and organization grossly negligent and abusive toward people of color. Michael Brown, Eric Garner and others have not died because of absent fathers or family breakdown (as real as those issues are in all racial groups) but by a criminal justice system is great need of reform.
Drick, this piece on white activists dying along side their black brothers is both deep and touching. I say brothers because in reality we are by God's standards and calling in Faith. I grieve that in this life we are making little to no progress in see things the way they are. But rather seeing through the eyes of hatred and bias.
“Darkness cannot drive out darkness: only light can do that. Hate cannot drive out hate: only love can do that.”
― Martin Luther King Jr., A Testament of Hope: The Essential Writings and Speeches
Libby
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