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After the Chants by Dr. Julianne Malveaux

March 15, 2015

After the Chants
By Dr. Julianne Malveaux

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(TriceEdneyWire.com) - Just a week or so after Black History Month concluded, the civil rights movement experienced a special commemoration. Tens of thousands thronged to Selma, Alabama for a historic march across the Edmond Pettus Bridge, marking March 7, 1965, the fiftieth anniversary of Bloody Sunday when armed police officers attacked peaceful marchers attempting to walk to Montgomery, the state capital.  More than ten thousand people were attacked in 1965, including Congressman John Lewis (D-GA), whose powerful eloquence puts the entire protest movement in context.

President Obama was there, delivering one of the best speeches of his presidency, correctly asserting that there has been much change in the last fifty years.  Not only is the President correct, but also his speech reminds us that we spit on our ancestors when we say that things are the same as they were fifty years ago.  Still, the YouTube recording depicting members of the Sigma Alpha Epsilon at Oklahoma University gleefully engaging in racist chants, was disgusting, chilling and informative.  The fraternity, whose mantra is “The True Gentleman”, was founded before the Civil War and brags of its founding in the “Deep South”.  One of its early twentieth century handbooks limits its membership to those of the Caucasian race.  While many in these United States have moved at least a bit from the country’s racist foundations, the Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity, at least at Oklahoma University, has not much moved from theirs.

OU President David Boren was absolutely right to remove Sigma Alpha Epsilon from the campus. I also agree with his decision to expel the “ringleaders” in the chant, Parker Rice and Levi Pettit. Will there be consequences for the rest of those on the bus, those who were enthusiastic in participating in the chants? Who birthed these young people?  Who raised them?  Who instilled no sense of right and wrong in them?  Who let them know that lynching is not so funny as to be included in an already-racist chant?

What kind of history is taught at Oklahoma University?  Do American history classes at OU touch on our nation’s history of lynching?  Alternatively, are students required to take African American history (which really are American history) classes?  Has the fact that people in the United States pointedly ignore our collective history of lynching empower young fraternity members to treat lynching casually.  As reported in the New York Times in early February, the Equal Justice Initiative (EJI) in Montgomery, Alabama, inventoried the nearly 4000 lynchings that took place in a dozen Southern states between 1877 and 1950.  Their report showed a pattern of terrorist intimidation directed at African American people.

These lynchings were an institutional attempt to keep black people in our place. We were lynched because white men feared interracial sex (civil rights leader Ida B. Wells wrote that white women’s virtue was an excuse to cover the real reason for lynching, an assertion that caused angry whites to put a price on her head).  We were lynched for challenging the status quo, for refusing to yield a sidewalk to a white person, or failing to address a white person by an appropriate title.  We were lynched when we were accused, but not convicted, of crimes as petty as minor theft.  We were lynched when we were organized and protested mistreatment or demanded economic equity.  We were lynched because we had too much money.

White folks treated these lynchings as celebratory affairs with, according to EJI, vendors selling food, and photographers producing postcards of lynching victims.  So-called “decent” white people (early twentieth century version of Parker Rice and Levi Pettit) posed for pictures with lynched bodies.  On some occasions, they had their children and young neighbors pose with them.  These “Christian” people came together to watch black people tortured, mutilated, dismembered, and burned.  They vied for their body parts – toes, fingers, bones, and even genitals  -- as souvenirs, sometimes bidding on them.

Oklahoma University President David Boren might turn the Sigma Alpha Epsilon incident into a teaching moment if he were willing to insist that all students at OU learn about African American history, either through including a required class on race and resistance in the South, or by expanding and requiring that all students take an African American history class.  He might take it a step further by establishing an internship program with OU students and EJI, and providing a significant contribution to the organization.  Finally, as a condition of reinstatement to OU as students in good stating, Parker Rice and Levi Pettit could be required to spend a semester or year working with EJI to help document lynchings through the monuments EJI would like to erect at the sites of lynchings in the South.

It is easy to decry the ignorance that fueled the ugly racist chants that have now come to light.  It would be far more substantive if President Boren were to use this opportunity to encourage (or require) his community to learn why casual references to lynchings are so heinous and unacceptable.

Julianne Malveaux is an author and economist based in Washington, DC

Selma: 50 Years Later by Dr. E. Faye Williams, Esq.

March 15, 2015

Selma: 50 Years Later
 By Dr. E. Faye Williams, Esq. 

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(TriceEdneyWire.com) – Having grown up in the South, I had certainly gone through the City of Selma many times, but nothing prepared me for what happened there on Bloody Sunday weekend!  We’ve heard estimates that 20,000 to 100,000+ people were in attendance—but the number of people wasn’t the most significant issue.  What mattered most was the contrast between 50 years ago and what we experienced a few days ago.

First, I was housed in a Southern mansion located in the historic district which was owned by a white woman who took excellent care of us.  Our wonderful Birmingham Chapter of the NCBW rented the home and several of our members stayed there.  We were very near the “Bloody Sunday Bridge” and were able to walk there without concerns held in 1965.

On Saturday, March 7, President Barack Obama, First Lady Michelle Obama, Sasha and Malia Obama, Attorney General Eric Holder, former President George W. Bush, Alabama’s Governor, the Congressional Delegation, and many more who came to town to commemorate “Bloody Sunday.”   I reflected on the change in Selma, and this country, when President Obama smoothly left his prepared notes to respond to a group of young people who rudely questioned whether change had occurred.  Although President Obama acknowledged that much remained to be done, that he masterfully identified many of the changes that have taken place, to include his own achievements .With personal knowledge of how hard he has worked, against the greatest of odds, to make changes for our betterment, I know that any questions about his commitment to creating positive change are undeserved.

It was a great and historic day.  Many people of all races and cultures brought their children to witness the presence of a President who readily admits to being the fruit of what our ancestors did in Selma 50 years ago.

This being Women’s History Month, I also thought about Ms. Amelia Boynton, now 105 years old, and what this 50th anniversary must have meant to her.  Remembering what she and others did in Selma 50 years ago, I wonder if she believes that those following in “The Movement” have kept faith with the courage and dedication shown in 1965 by her contemporaries.  Recalling the pain of that day, I wonder if she feels that “voter apathy” signals a lack of appreciation for the sacrifices made to gain the right to vote on “Bloody Sunday”.  Recognizing that we have been dealt significant losses in recent Supreme Court decisions, I wonder how she feels about having to return to the starting line to fight, once again, to regain the ground lost in the quest for equitable voters’ rights.  I wonder if Mother Boynton knows how much she is loved and appreciated by millions of others and me for her courage and commitment.

Finally, I am proud of all the women who worked to make the “Fruits of Labor Luncheon” in Selma a big success.  The Birmingham Chapter of the National Congress of Black Women served as hosts, as they proudly honored many of those who both worked in the Civil Rights and Voting Rights Movement, and those who benefitted from the fruits of that work—such as those who were the first in the succession of Black people who became mayors, city councilmembers, county councilmembers, school board members and governors.

I left Selma with a feeling of immeasurable gratitude for the collective and individual acts of bravery of those who marched in 1965.  I proclaim immense pride in the accomplishments we have attained since then.  I have steeled myself for the remaining struggle against those who stand as adversaries in the fight to claim full/equitable citizenship.

Now, let us work to get Loretta Lynch confirmed as U.S. Attorney General.  Call your Senator now.

(Dr. E. Faye Williams, National President of the National Congress of Black Women.  www.nationalcongressbw.org.)

 

Selma's Lesson — The Struggle Continues By Jesse Jackson

March 10, 2015

Selma's Lesson — The Struggle Continues
By Jesse Jackson 

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(TriceEdneyWire.com) - President Barack Obama marked the 50th anniversary of Selma by celebrating the ordinary heroes who sacrificed so much to make America better. Noting that nearly 100 members of Congress were in the audience, he urged them to return to Washington to strengthen the Voting Rights Act, weakened by the ill-considered decision of five conservative Supreme Court Justices in Shelby County v. Holder. Today, 50 years after Selma, states are moving once more to make voting harder rather than easier.

Reviving the Voting Rights Act is essential, but it is not sufficient. The marchers in Selma were marching not just for the right to vote, but also for jobs and justice. And today, Selma itself reveals how far we have to go.
Much attention was rightly paid to the 103-year-old Amelia Boynton Robinson. In 1965, she was a leader in planning the Selma demonstrations, and her home was the site for Dr. Martin Luther King and legislators to gather as they wrote the first draft of the Voting Rights Act. This weekend, 50 years later, she joined President Obama on the Edmund Pettus Bridge, sitting tall in her wheelchair.
Yet, her home — which ought to be a national memorial — now sits boarded up, joining other vacant and foreclosed homes in her neighborhood.
Selma is now 80 percent black. Dallas County, where it sits, suffers the highest unemployment in the state at 10.2 percent. The official figure doesn’t count the many who have simply given up trying to find a job. Downtown Selma has as many boarded-up stores as operating ones.

USA Today quoted David Garrow, the author of “Bearing the Cross: Martin Luther King and the Southern Christian Leadership Conference,” who warned against “reducing history to a photo op.” The focus, he argued, “should be on investment and economic development in places like Selma. The focus should be on what we can do for Selma, not what Selma can do for us.” And of course, it is not just Selma. African-American unemployment remains at more than twice the level of white unemployment. Only 60 percent of all African-American men have a job of any kind, with only one in five African-Americans 16-19 employed. We lock up more people — mostly people of color — than any other nation in the world. The Justice Department’s investigation of Ferguson, Missouri showed a destructive racial bias still stains our criminal justice system. Our schools in poor communities — ghettos, barrios and rural areas — still suffer a savage inequality in resources and capacity.
Yes, great progress has been made, and it is important to recognize and remember the courage and costs of those who sacrificed to make America better.

But the commemoration must be a call to action. We should be protesting in Selma, not celebrating. The Civil Rights struggle was in some respect a movement that had three parts. The first was ending legal segregation. The second was guaranteeing the right to vote. The third, the one Dr. King knew would be the most difficult, was to guarantee economic justice, equal opportunity and a fair start for all. As Selma shows today, and as the Fergusons across the country demonstrate, that part has yet to be achieved.

President Obama was right. It’s great to see 100 legislators at the demonstration, but we need them to legislate, not demonstrate. We need them to return to Washington and raise the minimum wage. We need a jobs program for young people in urban America. We need to fulfill the easy rhetoric about education as an answer, by investing the most in those who need it the most — the sons and daughters of the poor and low-wage families.

President Obama called out to the young to lead once more: “It is you, the young and fearless at heart, the most diverse and educated generation in our history, who the nation is waiting to follow.” We’ve seen the stirrings in the Black Lives Matter demonstrations across the country. What Selma reminds us is that to make America better will take much more action to demand what could be, and much less acceptance of what is.

Barbara Arnwine Launches 'Igniting Change' Radio Talk Show

March 11, 2015

Barbara Arnwine Launches 'Igniting Change' Radio Talk Show 

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(TriceEdneyWire.com) - Barbara Arnwine, noted civil rights leader, has launched a weekly news talk radio program on Radio One’s WOL 1450 AM, it has been announced.

 “Igniting Change with Barbara Arnwine” will provide provocative and empowering information and discussion designed to ignite change and inspire action in achieving racial justice, social justice and equality.  The show, which began airing March 3, will broadcast live on Tuesdays, 12-1 p.m. EST, on WOL 1450 AM (D.C. Metropolitan Area) and is accessible by listeners worldwide via the internet (BarbaraArnwine.com and woldcnews.com) and the free Tune In app.

“I am honored for the opportunity to expand my civil rights outreach in such a significant manner as I continue to touch lives across the country and around the globe,” said Arnwine, in a statement.  “Activism at every level is indeed critical in advancing race relations and I endeavor to engage, challenge and equip listeners as activists as I feature guests, information and resources to foster justice and equality for all, particularly people of African descent. My show is designed to answer those questions lots of people have after hearing about a major issue, “'What Can Be Done About This? What Can I Do?'”

Karen Jackson, general sales manager for Radio One’s D.C. stations, said in a release, “WOL welcomes Barbara Arnwine to the Radio One family. We look forward to her enthusiasm and expertise in encouraging our listeners to actively participate in effecting change.”

For more information about “Igniting Change with Barbara Arnwine”, please visit www.BarbaraArnwine.com.

 

Retracing the Steps: Selma's 'Bloody Sunday' Marchers Recalled the Pains of the Past and of the Present By Vern Smith

March 10, 2015

Retracing the Steps: Selma's 'Bloody Sunday' Marchers Recalled the Pains of the Past and of the Present 
By Vern Smith
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PHOTO: Vern Smith/Trice Edney News Wire

(TriceEdneyWire.com) - A day after President Barack Obama walked across the Edmund Pettus Bridge in Selma, Alabama to commemorate the 50th Anniversary of "Bloody Sunday" - the police assault on civil rights demonstrators that lead to passage of the 1965 Voting Rights Act--thousand of marchers thronged the bridge beginning in early morning and lasting into late afternoon. From 15,000 to 20,000 people participated in the event,  according to the Associated Press.

Obama was introduced on Saturday by Georgia Democratic Congressman John Lewis, an Alabama native and one of the March leaders who was injured in the "Bloody Sunday" violence. Obama praised Lewis as one of his longtime heroes.

"What they did here will reverberate through the ages," Obama said. "Not because the change they won was preordained, not because their victory was complete, but because they proved that nonviolent change is possible; that love and hope can conquer hate."

While there has been undeniable progress in the past 50 years, the struggle is far from finished, Obama said, calling the events of Selma, "one leg in our long journey toward freedom."

Obama was joined on stage by Michelle Obama, former President George W. Bush, Laura Bush, and Alabama Congresswoman Terri Sewell.

More people began arriving early Sunday morning at the foot of Broad Street just below the base of the Pettus Bridge.And by noon the crush of thousands had filled the space in preparation for the symbolic crossing.

Among the many speakers at Sunday's program at Brown Chapel AME Church, the original start point for the 1965 March, out-going attorney general Eric Holder vowed to continue his advocacy to strengthen voting rights laws even after he leaves office as the nation's first African-American attorney general.

No matter what he does, Holder said, "I will never leave this work. I will never abandon this mission. Nor can you. If we are to honor  those who came before us and those still among us, we must match their sacrifice, their effort."  With many families in the crowd, Sunday's gathering had a festive atmosphere. But the recent events involving police and unarmed Black citizens and the scathing federal report outlining institutional racism in the Ferguson, Missouri police department was on the minds of many.

Marchers carried signs protesting an end to the spate of shootings of unarmed black men by white police officers, gun violence and immigration reform.

The multi-racial, intergenerational marchers sang, kneeled, and locked arms as they retraced the first steps of a march intended to reach the State Capital in Montgomery to protest the shooting on Feb. 18, 1965 of Jimmie Lee Jackson. Jackson, a voter registration worker with the Southern Christian Leadership Conference was shot by Alabama State Trooper James Fowler as he attempted to protect his mother from a beating by state troopers after a voting rights march in Marion, Alabama. Jackson, who was unarmed, later died from his wounds in a Selma hospital.

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