From Mike Martin:
It was interesting to watch the inauguration of President Obama on
Martin Luther King Jr. Day but I still say people need to understand
what really brought about the Civil Rights Act. What really allowed
Barack Obama to win the Presidency in the United States of America.
People want to publicize the Tuskogee Airmen, and their history is
important and dramatic, but mostly as an illustration of the stupidity
of racism. The Tuskogee Airmen themselves had little effect on people in
the Jim Crow south. It had an influence in the banning segregation in
the U.S. military, but not much effect on civil society. The same is
true of the Brown v. School Board decision by the U.S. Supreme Court.
That decision made segregation illegal, but it was largely ignored.
Busing didn't happen because of Brown. School integration didn't happen
because of Brown. President Eisenhower forced the intregration of Little
Rock High School, but that was essentially a one time event. Similarly,
Rosa Parks is lauded for her courage, but she had a very limited effect
on Jim Crow. Her protest is noted primarily because it was the first
involvement of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. It has historical import for
that reason but not because it significantly changed the lives of
African Americans in the U.S. There were many different efforts to break
Jim Crow in the 1940s and 1950s, including violent riots. Nothing really
happened.
However, on February 1, 1960, four Black college students (Ezell Blair,
Jr., Franklin McCain, Joseph McNeil, and David Richmond) started a
sit-in at the lunch counter of the F. W. Woolworth's in Greensboro,
North Carolina. As I detailed in an essay at
http://www.azsba.org/static/index.cfm?contentID=199 this action started
the movement that crushed Jim Crow. It was 4 college students, not
college graduates, not adults, not Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., who
started the sit-in that ignited a wildfire across America. Those
students learned about freedom and courage in American public schools.
They were still in college when they stood up to Jim Crow. And to top it
off, the Greensboro business community refused to cave because they new
the college students would go home for the summer. But when that
happened, Dudley High School students led by William Thomas took up the
protest and expanded it to Meyer's and Walgreens. It was then that the
local business community capitulated. High school students broke Jim
Crow. They were emulated throughout the country and a national meeting
of sit-in participants was called to form the Students Nonviolent
Coordinating Committee (SNCC).
College students in Tennessee were encouraged by the sit-ins and
performed a sit-in on interstate buses. They were contacted by the
Congress On Racial Equality about participating in a Freedom Ride on
buses through the south. That Freedom Ride started in Washington, D.C.,
and when it got to Atlanta they were told by Dr. Martin Luther King,
Jr., that they would never make it through Alabama. In Birmingham,
Alabama, violence against the Freedom Riders, including the firebombing
of one bus, resulted in the adults calling off the effort. But SNCC
students refused to stop and continued the ride into Montgomery,
Alabama, where a mob severely beat the riders. One of the white students
was hospitalized where he told the others to keep going. And they
continued, with support from the Kennedy Administration and Dr. Martin
Luther King, Jr., on to Mississippi where they were arrested but the
federal transportation agency decided to enforce integration in bus
transportation, so the students won.
That, in turn, inspired Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., to try integrating
businesses in Birmingham, Alabama in early 1963. He instituted marches
and boycotts, but the adults were repeatedly arrested and thwarted. Dr.
King wrote in his biography that they were defeated: "As we talked, a
sense of doom began to pervade the room. I looked about me and saw that
for the first time our most dedicated and devoted leaders were
overwhelmed by a feeling of hopelessness." There was no way the adults
could defeat Jim Crow. Dr. King realized "If our drive was to be
successful, we must involve the students of the community. Even though
we realized that involving teenagers and high school students would
bring down upon us a heavy fire of criticism, we felt that we needed
this dramatic new dimension. Our people were demonstrating daily and
going to jail in numbers, but we were still beating our heads against
the brick wall of the city officials' stubborn resolve to maintain the
status quo. Our fight, if won, would benefit people of all ages. But
most of all we were inspired with the desire to give to our young a true
sense of their own stake in freedom and justice. We believed they would
have the courage to respond to our call."
When you see movies of the fire hoses used on marchers, and police dogs
biting marchers, those marchers were students. Bull Connor had
peacefully arrested the adults, but when thousands of kids joined the
protest he turned violent because he ran out of jail space and they
still kept marching. The fire hoses and police dogs didn't stop the
students from continuing the protest marches. The business community
finally capitulated in the face of the student protest. The student led
triumph in Birmingham resulted in a national vindication for Dr. King
and nonviolent protests. It resulted in the galvanizing of protests
against Jim Crow and the organization of the "March On Washington" where
on August 28th, 1963, in Washington, D.C., Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.,
gave his "I have a dream" speech. That is a historical event, but it
wasn't a triumph of adults. Condoleeza Rice lived with her parents in
Birmingham, Alabama, at the time and they did not participate in the
protests. The adults lived with Jim Crow, it was the students who
learned about freedom and justice in their public schools who broke Jim
Crow.
The Birmingham Board of Education, however, expelled over a thousand of
the protesting students, which continued the controversy. So in the fall
of 1963 protesters attempted to integrate Birmingham schools, 9 years
after Brown. They enrolled children in white schools in the face of
rioters who tried to attack them, and after a series of unfortunate
events, the schools were, in fact, integrated. The protests were
organized and led out of the Sixteenth Street Baptist church. It was in
September, 1963, during this school integration struggle that this
church was bombed, killing 11-year-old Denise McNair and three
14-year-olds: Cynthia Wesley, Carole Robertson and Addie Mae Collins. It
was this bombing that outraged the nation, even the world, and
galvanized efforts to finally bring civil rights to Black Americans.
Certainly the protests were organized and instigated by adults, but it
was the courage of 11-year-old Dwight and 9-year-old Floyd Armstrong
enrolling at Birmingham’s Graymont elementary school in the face of
jeering adult mobs, and teenager Richard A. Walker who integrated Ramsay
High School as a White mob fought with police, that integrated public
education. And, of course, four young students died in the process as well.
For some reason, no one wants to give credit to the children and their
public schools for liberating America. Certainly I haven't heard Barack
Obama talk about them. Certainly I haven't heard Arne Duncan talk about
them. And Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., learned from them, not the other
way around. Where did 4 young adults get the idea to stand up against
Jim Crow nonviolently in Greensboro, North Carolina? Where did the young
Freedom Riders who refused to quit when the adults gave up get their
ideas of courage and liberty? What possessed young people in Birmingham,
Alabama, to face down fire hoses and police dogs to rescue a failed
adult protest? With adults screaming violently at them, how is it that
school children in Birmingham integrated schools? Do we really want to
teach that history just happens? Mysteriously?
It seems to me that this is the most important lesson to teach young
people today: the adults are not going to save you. The adults are not
going to prevent global warming. It is not Barack Obama who will control
guns and stop children from being shot to death in classrooms. The NRA
is nothing compared to Jim Crow. Jim Crow had night riders, lynchings,
assassinations. Students crushed Jim Crow. They did it by learning about
history, by learning about leadership, by learning about courage, by
learning about perseverance, by learning about working together
nonviolently. Where did they learn this?
--
Mike Martin
Phoenix, Az
I enjoyed reading your point of view regarding "who really saved America from its racist stronghold", and I agree somewhat. But I think that it was a concerted effort on the part of all who protested, marched, sit-in, debated, walked, died, prayed, stayed, and lived to tell about it.
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