|
|
- NEWSLETTERS
- MOBILE APPS
-
ADD TIME NEWS
Civil Rights: The Awful Roar
(5 of 10)
In this epochal era of Negro frustration, new leaders and new organizations began bursting out all over. Perhaps the most successful has been the Rev. Martin Luther King's Southern Christian Leadership Conference. In 1955-56, Baptist King, an exponent of the Gandhian technique of massive but passive protest, successfully led a boycott to end bus segregation in Montgomery, Ala. The post-Little Rock disappointments gave King's movement even greater impetus. King himself has explained: "We were confronted with blasted hopes, and the dark shadow of a deep disappointment settled upon us. So we had no alternative except that of preparing for direct action, whereby we would present our very bodies as a means of laying our case before the conscience of the local and national community."
The Fangs. Last April, King sent out marchers, including troops of Negro schoolchildren, to protest discrimination in hiring and at lunch counters, rest rooms and other public facilities in Birmingham. Many civil rights leaders, both Negro and white, thought the effort was singularly ill-timedafter all, a new, perhaps more moderate, city administration was about to take over Birmingham. But the way it turned out, King's demonstrations may reasonably be considered the sparking point for the Negro revolution of 1963.
King's accomplishment came only with the inadvertent help of Birmingham whites, particularly that of Public Safety Commissioner Eugene ("Bull") Connor, who during the Birmingham crisis became an international symbol of blind, cruel Southern racism. When King sent out his marchers, Connor had them mowed down by streams from fire hoses. Shocking news photos splashed across the pages of the world's pressof a young Negro sent sprawling by a jet of water, of a Negro woman pinioned to the sidewalk with a cop's knee at her throat, of police dogs lunging at fleeing Negroes.
With that, millions of peopleNorth and South, black and whitefelt the fangs of segregation and, at least in spirit, joined the protest movement. The revolution was onin earnest. Places little known for anything else became bywords for racial conflictAnniston, Ala., Albany, Ga., Prince Edward County, Va., Cambridge, Md., Englewood, N.J., Greenwood and Greenville, Miss., Goldsboro and Greensboro, N.C.
Baltimore Postman William Moore, a white man murdered as he walked along an Alabama highway wearing an integration sign, and Mississippi N.A.A.C.P. Leader Medgar Evers, shot in the back outside his home, became martyrs to the cause. Direct-action protests proliferated. There were more "freedom walks" and "freedom marches"and then came the "freedom calls," in which Negroes harass white city officials by calling them on the telephone, murmuring "Freedom" and hanging up.
There are boycottsNegro leaders prefer to call them "selective patronage movements"against business firms that discriminate against Negroes in their personnel practices. There are rent strikes against slumlords who refuse to repair Negro tenements. There is the "sit-in" technique and its myriad variations: the "swim-in" to integrate pools, the "wade-in" at beaches, the "pray-in" at churches, the "wait-in"
Most Popular »
- Israel vs. Hizballah: Drumbeats of War
- Super-Earth: Astronomers Find a Watery New Planet
- Church Group Attacks Christmas Commercialism
- The Pentagon Prepares for a Missile Attack from 'Iran'
- Under U.S. Pressure, Pakistan Balks at Helping on Afghan Taliban
- America's Most Wanted Teenage Bandit
- Proposed 'Botox Tax' Draws Wide Array of Opponents
- Why Home Churches are Filling Up
- Study: European Muslims Feel Shut Out
- The Teddy Awards for Political Courage
- Church Group Attacks Christmas Commercialism
- Super-Earth: Astronomers Find a Watery New Planet
- Why Home Churches are Filling Up
- The Teddy Awards for Political Courage
- The Pentagon Prepares for a Missile Attack from 'Iran'
- Proposed 'Botox Tax' Draws Wide Array of Opponents
- Majority U.S. Population Non-White by 2050
- Study: European Muslims Feel Shut Out
- Tax Reform Means Working Moms Do Less Housework
- Singapore: 10 Things to Do in 24 Hours





RSS