It
began for me as it did for many more.
On
February 4, 1960, I was sitting in a cafe near my college
campus in Atlanta, Georgia, a place where students went between
or instead of classes.
A
student named Lonnie King approached me. He held up a copy
of that day’s Atlanta
Daily World, Atlanta’s daily black newspaper.
The headline read: “Greensboro Students Sit-in for Third
Day!”
The
story told, in exact detail, how black college students from
North Carolina A & T University in Greensboro had, for
the third day in a row, entered a Woolworth’s Department
Store and asked for service at the whites-only lunch counter.
It described their demeanor, their dress, and their determination
to return the following day � and as many successive days
as it took – if they were not served.
“Have
you seen this?” he demanded.
“Yes,
I have,” I replied.
“What
do you think about it?” he inquired.
“I
think it’s great!”
“Don’t
you think it ought to happen here?” he asked.
“Oh,
I’m sure it will happen here,” I responded. “Surely
someone here will do it.”
Then
to me, as it came to others in those early days in 1960, a
query, an invitation, a command:
“Why
don’t we make it happen here?”
King,
Joe Pierce, and I canvassed the cafe, talking to students,
inviting them to discuss the Greensboro event and to duplicate
it in Atlanta. The Atlanta student movement had begun.
We
formed an organization, reconnoitered downtown lunch counters,
and within a few weeks, 77 of us had been arrested.
In
an early 1960 Freedom Song, the youth who joined together
to create the southern student movement were described in
this way:
“The
time was 1960, the place the USA,
That
February 1st became a history-making day.
From
Greensboro across the land, the news spread far and wide,
As
quietly and bravely, youth took a giant stride.
(Chorus)
Heed the call, Americans all, side by equal side.
Sisters,
sit in dignity, brothers sit in pride.
From
Mobile, Alabama to Nashville, Tennessee
From
Denver, Colorado to Washington, D. C.
There
rose a cry for freedom, for human liberty.
The
time has come to prove our faith in all men’s dignity.
We
serve the cause of justice, of all humanity
We’re
soldiers in the army, with Martin Luther King
Peace
and love our weapons, nonviolence is our creed.
(Chorus)
This
is a land we cherish, a land of liberty
How
can Americans deny all men equality?
Our
Constitution says we can’t and Christians, you should
know.
Jesus
died that morning, so all mankind could know.
(Chorus)
No
mobs of violence and hate shall turn us from our goal
No
Jim Crow laws nor police state shall stop my free bound
soul.
Three
thousand students bound in jail still lift their heads and
sing.
We’ll
travel on to freedom, like songbirds on the wing.
(Chorus)”
[1]
As
former President Jimmy Carter told Mary King, “If you
wanted to scare white people in Southwest Georgia, Martin
Luther King and the Southern Christian Leadership Conference
[SCLC] wouldn’t do it. You only had to say one word
– SNCC!” [2]
John
F. Kennedy said that compared to Martin Luther King�s SCLC,
SNCC workers were �real sons of bitches.�
The
Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) was founded
in Raleigh, North Carolina, in 1960 by southern student protesters
engaged in sit-in demonstrations against lunch counter segregation.
Within
a year, SNCC evolved from a coordinating committee to a hands-on
organization helping local leadership in rural and small-town
communities across the South participate in a variety of protests
and political and economic organizing campaigns, setting SNCC
apart from the civil rights mainstream of the 1960s.
Its
members, youth, and independence enabled the organization
to remain close to grass-roots currents that rapidly escalated
the southern movement from sit-ins to freedom rides to voter
drives to political organizing.
By
1965, SNCC fielded the largest staff of any civil rights organization
operating in the South. It had organized nonviolent direct
action against segregated facilities and voter registration
projects in Alabama, Arkansas, Maryland, Missouri, Louisiana,
Virginia, Kentucky, Tennessee, Illinois, North and South Carolina,
Georgia, Texas, and Mississippi. It had built two independent
political parties and organized labor unions and agricultural
co-operatives. It gave the movement for women’s liberation
new energy. It inspired and trained the activists who began
the “New Left.” It helped expand the limits of
political debate within black America, and broadened the focus
of the civil rights movement.
Unlike
mainstream civil rights groups, which merely sought integration
of Blacks into the existing order, SNCC sought structural
changes in American society itself. [3]
In
1960, the dominant organization fighting for civil rights
was the National Association for the Advancement of Colored
People (NAACP). Its preferred method was litigation, and it
had achieved its greatest victory in 1954 in Brown
v Board of Education, outlawing segregation in public
schools. The NAACP lobbied Congress and Presidents to adopt
anti-segregation measures. Its local Branches were often the
main civil rights outposts in many communities.
The
NAACP – and similar groups and many individuals –
fought against a tripartite system of racial domination which
whites had solidified over time.
The
system “protected the privileges of white society and
generated tremendous human suffering for blacks. In the cities
and rural areas of the South, blacks were controlled economically,
politically and personally,” relegated to the worst
jobs, prevented, often by force and terror, from free participation
in the political process, denied due process of law and personal
freedoms all whites routinely enjoyed. [4]
Ironically,
a consequence of the segregation system was the development
in close-knit communities, of institutions, churches, schools
and organizations � which nurtured and encouraged the fight
against white supremacy.
The
young people who began the 1960 student sit-in movement lived
and learned among such institutions.
The
student movement’s goals were described to the Democratic
Convention’s Platform Committee in 1960 by SNCC’s
first Chair, Marion Barry, as “seeking a community in
which man can realize the full meaning of self, which demands
open relationships with others.” [5] Barry declared
southern students wanted an end to racial discrimination in
housing, education, employment, and voting. SNCC’s goals
were similarly broadly described by Executive Secretary James
Forman in 1961 as “working full-time against the whole
value system of this country and by working toward revolution;”
[6] in 1963 as a “program of developing, building and
strengthening indigenous leadership;” [7] and by third
SNCC Chair John Lewis, at the 1963 March on Washington, as
building “a serious social revolution” against
“American politics dominated by politicians who build
their careers on immoral compromises and ally themselves with
open forms of political, economic and social exploitation.”
[8]
SNCC
pioneered first-time races by blacks in the 1960s Deep South,
added foreign policy demands to the black political agenda,
and broadened the acceptable limits of political discourse.
SNCC
was in the vanguard in demonstrating that independent black
politics could be successful. Its early attempts to use black
candidates to raise issues in races where victory was unlikely
expanded the political horizon. SNCC’s development of
independent political parties mirrored the philosophy that
political form must follow function and that non-hierarchical
organizations were essential to counter the growth of personality
cults and self-reinforcing leadership.
For
much of its early history, SNCC battled against the fear which
had kept southern rural blacks from aggressively organizing
and acting in their own behalf. It strengthened or built aggressive,
locally led movements in the communities where it worked.
While
organizing grass-roots voter registration drives, SNCC workers
offered themselves as a protective barrier between private
and state-sponsored terror and the local communities where
SNCC staffers lived and worked.
The
rural South SNCC entered in 1961 had a long history of civil
rights activism; in many instances, however, SNCC staffers
were the first paid
civil rights workers to base themselves in isolated rural
communities, daring, as it was reported then, to “take
the message of freedom into areas where the bigger civil rights
organizations fear to tread.” [9]
SNCC
workers were more numerous and less transient than those from
other civil rights organizations and their method of operation
was different as well.
The
NAACP was outlawed in Alabama in 1956 and did not begin operating
there again until 1964, although NAACP activists continued
under other sponsorship. In 1962, the NAACP had one Field
Secretary each in South Carolina, Florida, Alabama, and Mississippi
and a regional staff headquartered in Atlanta. [10]
One
historian writes, “SCLC has to adopt a strategy of ‘hit
and run,’ striking one target at a time. SCLC’s
willingness to run as well as hit provoked consistent criticism
from SNCC which organized the same communities for years rather
than months or weeks.” [11]
“SCLC
mobilized,” someone said. “SNCC organized.”
By
Spring, 1963, SNCC had 11 staff members in Southwest Georgia,
and 20 staff – with 6 offices – in Mississippi.
By August, SNCC had projects and permanent staff in a dozen
Mississippi communities; in Selma, Alabama; Danville, Virginia;
and Pine Bluff, Arkansas. There were 12 workers in the Atlanta
headquarters, 60 field secretaries, and 121 full-time volunteers.
[12]
Typically,
SNCC began campaigns by researching the economic and political
history of a target community. Field workers were supplied
with detailed information on a community’s economic
and financial power structure, tracing corporate relationships
from local bankers and business leadership in a local White
Citizens Council to the largest American banks and corporations.
Other research provided the economic and political status
of a state’s black population. [13]
SNCC
organizers spent their first weeks in a new community meeting
local leadership, formulating with them an action plan for
more aggressive registration efforts, and recruiting new activists
through informal conversation, painstaking house-to-house
canvassing and regular mass meetings.
Registering
rural southern blacks, a SNCC worker wrote, “would greatly
liberate American politics as a whole. At the very least,
these new voters would defeat the powerful, hidebound, Southern
Democrats who were holding the reigns of Congress and the
Senate on the basis of being elected year after year from
districts where Black citizens were denied the franchise.
The southern Democratic legislators weren’t just holding
up civil rights legislation, they were a serious impediment
to any kind of liberal social or economic changes.”
[14]
SNCC
and other organizations fought white terror and helped create
a willingness to risk danger to register to vote. By one estimate,
“a majority of the unregistered had at least been confronted
with registration’s challenge” by 1965. [15]
SNCC’s
broader definition of the civil rights movement’s purposes
was obvious from its beginnings. At its founding conference,
in April 1960, SNCC Executive Committee member Charles Jones
declared, “this movement will affect other areas beyond
[lunch counter] services, such as politics and economics.”
[16]
A
report from the conference concluded with a warning about
America’s false preoccupations in early 1960. “Civil
defense and economic power alone will not insure the continuation
of Democracy,” it said. “Democracy itself demands
the great intangible strength of the people able to unite
in a common endeavor because they are granted human dignity.
This challenge cannot be met unless and until all
Americans enjoy the full promise of our democratic heritage
– first class citizenship.”
Another
recommendation noted: “Students have a natural claim
to leadership in this project. They have pioneered in nonviolent
direct action. Now we can show we understand the political
implications of our movement – that it goes far beyond
lunch counters. We are convinced of the necessity of all local
areas joining in the campaign to secure the right to vote.
No right is more basic to the American citizen, none more
basic to a democracy.” [17]
Within
four months of these declarations, SNCC volunteer worker Robert
Moses was planning a student-staffed voter registration project
in all black Mound Bayou in the Mississippi Delta for the
summer of 1961. [18]
Mississippi,
the most resistant state, became a laboratory for SNCC’s
unique methods of organizing.
SNCC’s
work began in southwestern Mississippi in 1961, but when its
workers were driven from the area by violence, state suppression,
and federal indifference, the organization regrouped in Jackson
and in Mississippi’s Delta counties in early 1962.
Earlier
in 1961, SNCC’s Nashville affiliate had continued the
Freedom Rides when Alabama violence threatened to bring them
to a halt; after they were released from Parchman Penitentiary,
many jailed Riders had joined the McComb movement. Several
became part of the organizing cadre for the Mississippi movement
that followed.
Unencumbered
by allegiances to the national Democratic Party which frequently
constrained other, older organizations, SNCC encouraged two
black candidates to run for Congress. Moses served as unofficial
campaign manager. They ran “to shake loose the fear”
among Mississippi blacks, and, through their progressive platforms,
gave their intended constituents an expanded notion of what
meaning politics might have in their lives. [19]
They
talked of matters which white Mississippi politicians had
never dreamed of mentioning, ideas which resonate today –
“legislation improving the school system, a broader
plan of medical coverage, special training facilities to develop
industrial skills among the great mass of Mississippians who
lacked these completely.” [20]
To
demonstrate that disenfranchised Mississippi blacks did want
to vote, SNCC mounted a “Freedom Vote” campaign
in November 1963. Over 80,000 blacks cast votes in a mock
election for Governor and Lieutenant Governor. One hundred
northern white students worked in this campaign, attracting
attention from the Department of Justice and the national
media as black registration workers had never done, paving
the way for the “Freedom Summer” campaign in 1964.
“Freedom
Summer” brought 1000 mostly white volunteers to Mississippi
for the summer of 1964. They helped build the new political
party SNCC had organized, the Mississippi Freedom Democratic
Party (MFDP), [21] registered voters, and staffed 28 “Freedom
Schools” intended by their designer, Charles Cobb, “to
provide an education which will make it possible for them
to challenge the myths of our society, to perceive more clearly
its realities, and to find alternatives, and ultimately new
directions for action.”
Over
the next several years, SNCC-backed candidates for Congress
ran in Albany, Georgia; Selma, Alabama; Danville, Virginia,
and Enfield, North Carolina. [22]
SNCC
helped candidates for Agricultural Stabilization and Conservation
Service (ASCS) Boards in Alabama, Arkansas, Georgia, North
Carolina and Mississippi, aided school board candidates in
Arkansas in 1965, and worked toward “solving the economic
problems of the Southern Negro” by organizing the Mississippi
Freedom Labor Union and Poor People’s Corporation and
mounting economic boycotts against discriminatory merchants.
[23]
Among
SNCC’s contributions to electoral politics were the
formation of two political parties and the conception and
implementation of my successful campaigns for the Georgia
State Legislature.
The
Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party (MFDP) challenged the
seating of the regular, all-white delegation from Mississippi
at the 1964 Democratic Convention, and, in 1965, challenged
the seating of Mississippi’s congressional delegation
in Washington.
The
convention challenge ended in failure when pressures from
President Lyndon Johnson erased promised support from party
liberals. An offer was made – and rejected – of
two convention seats to be filled by the National Party, not
the Freedom Democrats.
Fannie
Lou Hamer declared: “We didn’t come for no two
seats when all of us is tired!”
Each
challenge served as an object lesson for strengthening black
political independence, and the organizing and lobbying efforts
for each laid the groundwork for congressional passage of
the Voting Rights Act of 1965.
The
MFDP served “as a prototype for the model of Black Power
advocated and popularized by Stokely Carmichael.” [24]
In
1965, the McComb MFDP Branch became the first black political
organization to express opposition to the war in Vietnam.
State MFDP officials not only refused to repudiate the McComb
statement, they reprinted it in the state MFDP newsletter,
giving it wider circulation and laying the groundwork for
future black opponents of the war. [25]
The
MFDP’s legal efforts against white resistance to political
equality proved important to black political efforts across
the South. An MFDP-directed court suit resulted in the Supreme
Court’s landmark 1969 decision in Allen
v. State Board of Elections, [26] “critical to
continuing black political progress throughout the South.
For the first time,” a scholar wrote, “[although
in the context of interpreting the Voting Rights Act rather
than applying constitutional principles] the Supreme Court
recognized and applied the principle of minority vote dilution
– that the Black vote can be affected as much by dilution
as by an absolute prohibition on casting a ballot.”
[27]
The
MFDP wasn�t the only organization SNCC helped build and not
the only one that survived the demise of the parent.
In
1964, SNCC encouraged a group of New York progressive health
professionals to form a group to provide health care to workers
in the Freedom Summer campaign. Most were veterans of past
attempts to organize physicians to push for integration of
the American Medical Association�s (AMA�s) segregated southern
affiliates and of sporadic attempts to win support for national
health insurance.
They
called their new organization the Medical Committee for Human
Rights (MCHR).
�Wherever
there was a demonstration or confrontation,� historian John
Dittmer writes, �be it at the Edmund Pettus Bridge outside
Selma or on the Meredith March in the South, in Resurrection
City with the Poor People�s Campaign, at Columbia University
during the student rebellion, in the streets of Chicago outside
the Democratic National Convention in 1968 or at Wounded Knee
with the American Indian Movement, men and women in white
coats and Red Cross armbands were on the scene, providing
�medical presence� and assistance to the people who were putting
themselves at risk.� [28]
Dittmer
writes:
�Throughout
it all, Medical Committee activists were in agreement that
health care in the United States was inadequate, unjust, racist,
and in need of a major overhaul. MCHR members established
free health clinics in inner cities and created the model
for the comprehensive health center. They also campaigned
for a national health service that would provide quality health
care for everyone.� [29]
In
summary, he writes:
��.
MCHR helped bring about permanent improvements in the availability
and delivery of health care. Its five-year campaign against
the AMA facilitated the desegregation of state and local medical
societies in the South and the subsequent awarding of hospital
privileges to hundreds of black physicians. It played a major
role in desegregating Southern hospitals and other health
facilities.�
�MCHR
stimulated consumer participation in health affairs, and successfully
pressured medical schools to add programs in family and community
medicine and to admit more black and female students. Medical
Committee lobbying directly influenced passage of health care
legislation and implementation of federal programs. It was
in the creation of the model for the comprehensive community
heath center that MCHR activists made their most important
contribution to the well being of impoverished Americans.
By 2009 nearly 1,300 centers were providing primary care for
more than sixteen million Americans at 7,354 sites in urban
and rural medically underserved communities across the nation.�
[30]
The
mid ’60s were a turning point in the southern human
rights struggle. The 1964 Civil Rights Act and the Voting
Rights Act of 1965 accomplished the immediate goals of many
in the civil rights movement. Cleveland Sellers wrote, “When
the federal government passed bills that supposedly supported
Black voting and outlawed public segregation, SNCC lost the
initiative in these areas.” [31] Northern urban riots
in the late ’60s made the nation and southern civil
rights workers aware that victories at lunch counters and
ballot boxes meant little to blacks locked in northern ghettoes.
[32]
SNCC
had long believed its work ought to be expanded to larger
cities in the South and outside the region. Executive Committee
minutes from December 1963 quote Forman asserting, “SNCC
is going to have to go into the poor sections of large cities
to work.” [33]
My
campaign for the Georgia House of Representatives in 1965
was an attempt to take the techniques SNCC had learned in
the rural South into an urban setting, and to carry forward
SNCC’s belief that grass-roots politics could provide
answers to problems faced by America’s urban blacks.
In
keeping with SNCC’s style, a platform was developed
in consultation with the voters.
The
campaign supported a minimum wage of $2.00 an hour, repeal
of the right-to-work law, and abolition of the death penalty.
When
the legislature twice rejected me, objecting to my support
of SNCC’s anti-war position, the resulting two campaigns
gave SNCC a chance to successfully test its critique of American
imperialism at the ballot box.
The
campaign – like the MFDP – enabled SNCC to provide
a political voice for the politically impotent and inarticulate
black poor.
In
1966 in Alabama, SNCC helped to create a black political party
called the Lowndes County Freedom Organization (LCFO), “an
independent political party which would prove to be a factor
in Alabama politics for years to come. … The political
consciousness of some of Alabama’s blacks had been raised
to another level.” [34]
The
party was formed in reaction to the racism of local and state
Democratic parties. Like the MFDP, the new party was open
to whites, but no whites in Lowndes County would participate
in a black dominated political effort.
Concurrently
with the organizing efforts of the MFDP and LCFO and the Bond
campaign, SNCC was reassessing its concentration on the South.
At
a retreat in May 1966, Ivanhoe Donaldson argued in favor of
SNCC’s replicating its successful southern political
organizing efforts in the North, and the staff agreed. Donaldson
and Robert Moses suggested that techniques learned in southern
campaigns could be employed to ease SNCC’s passage into
northern cities.
Organizing
for political power and community control could mobilize northern
urban dwellers, they contended. [35]
Michael
Thelwell proposed in 1966 that the organization move “to
the ghetto and organize those communities to control themselves.
The organization must be attempted in Northern and Southern
areas as well as in the rural Black belt of the South,”
Thelwell said. [36]
Projects
were established in Washington, D.C., to fight for home rule;
in Columbus, Ohio, where a community foundation was organized;
in New York City’s Harlem, where SNCC workers organized
early efforts at community control of public schools; in Los
Angeles, where SNCC helped monitor local police and joined
an effort at creating a “Freedom City” in black
neighborhoods; and in Chicago, where SNCC workers began to
build an independent political party and demonstrated against
segregated schools.
In
each of these cities, the southern experiences of SNCC organizers
informed their work.
As
SNCC Chair, Marion Barry had written members of Congress in
1960 to “urge immediate action to provide self- government
to the vote-less residents of our nation’s capitol,
the District of Columbia.” In February 1966, Barry,
then Director of SNCC’s Washington Office, announced
the formation of the “Free DC Movement” (FDCM).
He wrote, “The premise…is that we want to organize
Black people for Black power.” Barry and the FDCM conducted
a successful boycott of Washington merchants who did not support
home rule. [37]
In
New York, SNCC worker William Hall helped a Harlem group working
for community control of Intermediate School #201 in Fall,
1966. His work laid the groundwork for later successful protests
for community control of schools throughout the city.
In
Los Angeles, SNCC worker Clifford Vaughs described his work
as “a manifestation of self-help, self-determination,
power for poor people.” [38]
As
the focus of the southern movement had changed, so would the
aim of the northern organizer. Desegregation had proven both
illusive and insufficient to the problems of American blacks,
north or south. Their ability to control the black community
itself and to direct the community’s elected officials
had become paramount in rural Mississippi and in urban New
York.
Just
as its concern for social change had never been limited to
the southern states alone, SNCC’s concern for human
rights had long extended beyond the borders of the United
States.
It
had linked the fight of American blacks with the struggle
for African independence from its first public statements.
At
its founding conference, SNCC first announced its identification
with the African liberation struggle. “We identify ourselves
with the African struggle as a concern for all mankind,”
they said. At SNCC’s Fall, 1960 conference in Atlanta,
a featured speaker was Alphonse Okuku, an Antioch College
student and brother of Kenya labor leader Tom M’Boya.
The mass meeting program said Okuku “brings to our attention
the great significance of the African struggle and its relationship
to our fight.” SNCC Chairman John Lewis told the March
on Washington in 1963, “One man, one vote is the African
cry. It must be ours!”
In
December 1963, SNCC workers in Atlanta conferred with Kenya
leader Oginga Odinga and in September 1964, an eleven-member
SNCC delegation went to Guinea as guests of that country’s
President, Sekou Toure; two members of the group toured Africa
for a month following the Guinea trip. [39]
In
October 1965, two SNCC workers represented SNCC at the annual
meeting of the Organization of African Unity (OAU) in Ghana.
[40]
SNCC’s
January, 1966 anti-war statement charged the United States
with being “deceptive in claiming concern for the freedom
of colored people in such other countries as the Dominican
Republic, the Congo, South Africa and the United States itself.”
Singer
Harry Belafonte organized a supportive reception at the United
Nations with 15 African diplomats and myself in early 1966,
and on March 22, 1966, seven SNCC workers were arrested at
the South African Consulate in New York, preceding by twenty
years the “Free South Africa Movement” that later
saw hundreds arrested at the South African embassy in Washington.
[41]
At
a June, 1967 staff meeting, SNCC declared itself a human rights
organization, dedicated to the “liberation not only
of Black people in the United States but of all oppressed
people, especially those in Africa, Asia and Latin America.”
At that meeting, Forman became director of SNCC’s International
Affairs Commission; in this capacity, he visited Tanzania
and Zambia. [42]
SNCC
Chair Stokely Carmichael visited Algeria, Syria, Egypt, Guinea,
and Tanzania in mid-1967. In November 1967, Forman testified
for SNCC before the United Nation’s Fourth Committee
against American investments in South Africa. [43]
There
are many reasons for the demise of this important organization.
The current of nationalism, ever-present in black America,
widened at the end of the 1960s to become a rushing torrent
which swept away the hopeful notion of black and white together
that the decade’s beginning had promised.
SNCC’s
white staff members were asked to leave the organization and
devote their energies to organizing in white communities;
some agreed, but most believed this action repudiated the
movement’s hopeful call to “Americans all, side
by equal side.”
For
many on the staff, both white and black, nearly a decade’s
worth of hard work at irregular, subsistence-level pay, under
an atmosphere of constant tension, interrupted by jailings,
beatings, and official and private terror, proved too much.
When
measured by the legislative accomplishments of the 1964 Civil
Rights and 1965 Voting Rights Acts, SNCC’s efforts were
successful. But the failure of the Mississippi Freedom Democratic
Party to gain recognition at Atlantic City predicted the coming
collapse of support from liberals. The murders of four schoolgirls
in Birmingham and Medgar Evers in Jackson in 1963, of civil
rights workers and others in Mississippi in 1964, and Martin
Luther King Jr. in 1968 argued that nonviolence was no antidote
to a violent society. The outbreak of urban violence at the
decade’s end further produced a sense of frustration
and alienation in many SNCC veterans.
Throughout
its brief history, SNCC insisted on group-centered leadership
and community-based politics. It made clear the connection
between economic power and racial oppression. It refused to
define racism as solely southern, to describe racial inequality
as caused by irrational prejudice alone or to limit its struggle
solely to guaranteeing legal equality. It challenged American
imperialism while mainstream civil rights organizations were
silent or curried favor with President Lyndon Johnson, condemning
SNCC’s linkage of domestic poverty and racism with overseas
adventurism.
SNCC
refused to apply political tests to its membership or supporters,
opposing the Red baiting which other organizations and leaders
endorsed or condoned. It created an atmosphere of expectation
and anticipation among the people with whom it worked, trusting
them to make decisions about their own lives.
SNCC
widened the definition of politics beyond campaigns and elections;
for SNCC, politics encompassed not only electoral races, but
also organizing political parties, labor unions, producer
cooperatives, and alternative schools.
It
initially sought to liberalize southern politics by organizing
and enfranchising blacks. One proof of its success was the
increase in black elected officials in the southern states
from 72 in 1965 to 388 in 1968. [44]
But
SNCC also sought to liberalize the ends of political participation,
by enlarging the issues of political debate to include the
economic and foreign policy concerns of American blacks.
SNCC’s
articulation and advocacy of Black Power redefined the relationship
between black Americans and white power. No longer would political
equity be considered a privilege; it had become a right.
One
SNCC legacy is the destruction of the psychological shackles
which had kept black southerners in physical and mental peonage;
the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee helped to break
those chains forever.
It
demonstrated that ordinary women and men, young and old, could
perform extraordinary tasks; they did then and can do so again.
What
began 50 years ago is not history. It was a part of a mighty
movement that started many years ago and that continues to
this day � ordinary women and men proving they can perform
extraordinary tasks in the pursuit of freedom.
@
2010 by Julian Bond
BlackCommentator.com
Editorial Board Member Julian Bond was Communications Director
of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee from l960
until l965; today he is Distinguished Scholar in Residence
in the School of Government at American University in Washington,
DC and a Professor in the History Department at the University
of Virginia. In February 2010, he stepped down after 12 terms
as Chairman of the NAACP.) Click here
to contact Mr. Bond.
Footnotes:
[1]
�Ballad of the Student Sit-ins�, words and music by Guy Carawan,
Eve Merriam and Norma Curtis, Sing
for Freedom, Ed. By Guy and Candie Carawan, A Singout
Publication, Bethlehem, Pa. (1990).
[2]
Carter anecdote from Mary King, April 22, 1995.
[3]
Papers of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (hereinafter
�SNCC Papers�); Carson, Clayborne, In
Struggle: SNCC and the Black Awakening of the 1960s,
Harvard University Press (1981);
Zinn , Howard, SNCC: The New Abolitionists, Beacon Press (1965);
Forman, James, The Making of Black Revolutionaries,
Open Hand Press (1985); Forman, 1967:
High Tide of Black Resistance, SNCC (1967); Sellers,
Cleveland, and Robert Terrell, The
River of No Return, William Morrow & Co. (1973);
Stoper, Emily, The
Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee Carlson Publishing
Co. (1989); �Dear Friend�, find-raising letter from SNCC Chairman
John Lewis, (1965) hereinafter �Lewis letter�.).
[4]
Morris, Aldon, The
Origins of the Civil Rights Movement, pp. 1-4, The
Free Press, New York (1984).
[5]
“Statement submitted by the Student Nonviolent Coordinating
Committee to the Platform Committee of the National Democratic
Convention, Thursday morning, July 7, 1960, Los Angeles, Ca.,”
(SNCC Papers).
[6]
Forman, p 236.
[7]
Laue, James H., Direct
Action and Desegregation, 1960-1963, p 252, Carlson
Publishing Co., (1989).
[8]
Branch, Taylor, Parting
the Waters: America in the King Years, p 880, Simon
& Schuster, (1988).
[9]
Atlanta Inquirer,
March, l962.
[10]
Hughes, Langston, Fight
for Freedom: The story of the NAACP, Berkeley Medallion
Books, (l962).
The
Congress of Racial Equality’s (CORE’s) southern
staff fluctuated between 5 and 10 in 1962 and l963; in 1964,
CORE had 18 field secretaries in Mississippi; there were four
CORE staff in Alabama in 1965. Meier, August and Elliot Rudwick,
CORE: A Study in
the Civil Rights Movement, 1942-1968, University of
Illinois Press (1975).
The
Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC) hired its
first field secretary in 1960; in 1964 SCLC staff numbered
62. By summer, 1965, SCLC had staff in every southern state
except Florida and Tennessee. Much of the organization’s
work – like the NAACP’s efforts – were conducted
through affiliates. Fairclough, Adam, To
Redeem the Soul of America: the Southern Christian Leadership
Conference and Martin Luther King, Jr., the University
of Georgia Press (1990).
[11]
Fairclough, id.
[12]
Carson, p 71.
[13]
See The Economic
Status of Blacks in Alabama, SNCC Research Office,
1965 (SNCC Papers).
[14]
Norman, Martha, Paper delivered to Civil Rights Conference,
Carter G. Woodson Institute, University of Virginia, May 5,
1988.
[15]
Watters, Pat & Reese Cleghorn, Climbing
Jacob’s Ladder: The Arrival of the Negro in Southern
Politics, p 53, Harcourt, Brace & World (1967).
[16]
Note from Organizing Conference, April 14-17, 1960, Raleigh,
North Carolina, Group leader Charles Jones (SNCC Papers).
[17]
SNCC Papers.
[18]
Letter from Robert Moses to Father LaBaure, St. Gabriel�s,
Mound Bayou, Miss. (Sept 4, 1960) (SNCC Papers).
[19]
Forman, p 263.
[20]
Salter, John R., Jackson,
Mississippi, pp. 32-33, Krieger Publishing Co. (1987).
[21]
McLemore, Leslie Burl, The
Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party: A Case Study in Grass
Roots Politics, pp. 106-249, Ph.D. Thesis, University
of Massachusetts (1971),
[22]
Stoper, pp. 14-15.
[23]
Lewis letter.
[24]
Lawson, Steven, In
Pursuit of Power: Southern Blacks and Electoral Politics,
1965-1982, p 94, Columbia University Press (1985).
[25]
McLemore, pp. 234-242.
[26]
393 U. S. 544 (1969).
[27]
Parker, Frank, Black
Votes Count, pp. 71-72, The University of North Carolina
Press (1990).
[28]
Dittmer, John, The
Good Doctors: the Medical Committee for Human Rights and the
Struggle for Social Justice in Health Care, pg. xi,
Bloomsbury Press, New York, (2009).
[29]
Dittmer, at xc.
[30]
Dittmer, at 271.
[31]
Sellers, p 133.
[32]
“The North was a different thing,” CORE Director
James Farmer wrote. “Civil rights organizations had
left the Northern poor to Malcolm X. … The movement
had been means oriented up until the March on Washington,
now as the poor in the streets came in, the Movement ceased
being that. Ghetto folks had been politicized by the Muslims,
by Malcolm X, and by others. They were not means oriented;
they demanded results, concrete results.” Farmer, James,
Paper delivered to the Civil Rights Conference, Carter G.
Woodson Institute, University of Virginia, May 5, 1988.
[33]
SNCC Papers.
[34]
Frye, Hardy Thomas, The
Rise of a Black Political Party: Institutional Consequences
of Emerging Political Consciousness, p 68, University
of California, Berkeley, Ph.D. Thesis (1975).
[35]
Thelwell, Michael, The
Massachusetts Review (1966).
[36]
SNCC Papers.
[37]
Barry, Marion, Memo to SNCC Executive Committee, March 15,
1966.
[38]
SNCC Papers; Ivanhoe Donaldson interview; William Hall interview,
August 8, 1990; Carson, pp. 233-234.
[39]
SNCC Papers.
[40]
Letter from Donna Richards and Robert Moses to Dr. Horace
Mann Bond, October 6, l965.
[41]
Atlanta Journal,
March 22, l966; Interview with James Bond, August 10, 1990.
The seven were John Lewis, James Bond, James Forman, Cleveland
Sellers, Willie Ricks, Judy Richardson and William Hall.
[42]
Forman, pp. 480-492.
[43]
Forman, Resistance,
pp. 25-27.
[44]
Morris, John B. ed., Black
Elected Officials in the Southern States, The Voter
Education Project of the Southern Regional Council (1969).