Rosa
Parks, who has been called the Mother of the Civil Rights Movement, well
remembers the first time she met Septima Clark.
It was at a civil rights workshop in Tennessee in the summer of 1955.
African-Americans and sympathetic whites had begun to meet quietly, secretly,
throughout the South to plan their counterattacks against the segregation
system, and to train the new corps of volunteers for that fight. These
volunteers would come to be called civil rights workers. Septima Clark,
already a 30-year veteran of her people's struggle, was one of the trainers.
"At that time I was very nervous, very troubled in my mind about
the events that were occurring in Montgomery," Rosa Parks says. "But
then I had the chance to work with Septima. She was such a calm and dedicated
person in the midst of all that danger. I thought, 'If I could only catch
some of her spirit.' I wanted to have the courage to accomplish the kinds
of things that she had been doing for years." After the sessions
with Clark, Parks returned to Montgomery saying she had a firmness and
self-confidence she had not felt before. Three months later she refused
to give up her seat on a bus so that a white person could sit down, the
act which marks the beginning of the modern civil rights movement.
Septima Poinsette Clark had that type of inspirational effect on most
of those whom she taught; many of Septima Clark's students had that type
of effect on the rest of the world.
She was born in Charleston, South Carolina, in 1898, and until the end
of her life you could tell it from her accent; never loud...always patient
and firm. Single mother, public school teacher, quietly devout Christian,
she began organizing anti-racist activities in the Deep South in the 1920's.
She stuck through the Movement in its most difficult moments: dark nights
of fear on lonely back highways...the bombing and burning of churches
and meeting halls...the beatings and murders of friends and co-workers.
She volunteered to work in the most dangerous spots, surviving jail and
two heart attacks in the process. And she lived to witness the Movement's
greatest triumphs: the end of segregated public facilities...the passage
of the great civil rights legislation of the 1960's...the election of
African-American public officials in the South for the first time in a
hundred years.
Shortly before she sent Rosa Parks back to Montgomery and into the history
books, Septima had been fired from her job with the South Carolina public
schools when she refused to quit the local chapter of the NAACP. She had
been an NAACP member since 1919, almost from the date of its inception.
At the age of 58 and following 40 years as a public school teacher, the
thought of retirement simply never seems to have entered her mind. She
took a job as Director of Education at the Highlander Center in Tennessee,
which had long been active in the Southern struggles for unionization
and racial equality. The Center was often accused by Southern segregationists
of being run by Communists.
Septima discounted the red-baiting, saying "that was the general
feeling you got in those days whenever the races mixed." Still, becoming
a full-time civil rights worker was an immense leap in the dark for her.
"For three long months I couldn't sleep," she recalled about
the period following her arrival at Highlander. "Then at the end
of that time it seemed to me as if my mind cleared up, and I decided then
that I must have been right."
Since the end of the Civil War, the states of the Old Confederacy had
sunk in their teeth and sucked at the life of their former slaves while
the nation turned its back and looked the other way. And when these African-American
citizens got tired of their condition and said they'd had enough, the
violence broke upon them like sheets of summer rain. They lost their jobs.
They were beaten. They were jailed. Their houses were firebombed. They
were dragged from their homes in the silent screaming of the night by
ghostly men in flowing robes and hung from trees and burned, their body
parts sliced off and passed around the crowd to be put on mantelpieces
in pickle jars as souvenirs. Violence, and the threat of violence, had
kept the Black South in check for a hundred years. But by the end of the
1950's, in shanty-town villages and cross-the-track communities throughout
the South, intimidation was no longer working. The spirit of Freedom was
rising, and many were catching it.
An army of civil rights workers spread out across South, sitting in at
lunch counters, marching in the face of police dogs and riot sticks, registering
the disenfranchised. They were volatile, volcanic meteors that streaked
across the Southern skies and changed a way of life forever. Some saw
their contribution in thundering, inspirational speeches...some were quiet
pilgrims making witness to their faiths in jail cells. Septima, the lifelong
teacher, figured she'd set up a few schools to show her people how to
take advantage of the new rights that were being opened up to them.
"I just tried to create a little chaos," Septima said, explaining
her role. "Chaos is a good thing. God created the whole world out
of it. Change is what comes of it."
One area that needed changing most was the area of voting rights for African-Americans
in the South. Legally, Black Southerners had the right to vote. However,
most were kept from the polls by the various state "literacy tests."
Prospective voters were asked to read and then "interpret" a
section of the state or national constitutions. The products of inferior,
segregated school systems, many adult Blacks could barely read or write
their own names. Most did not even bother to try to register.
First through the Highlander Center and later through Martin Luther King's
Southern Christian Leadership Conference, Septima organized a series of
citizenship schools across the South to train local leaders in such skills
as how to teach reading and writing and how to pass the literacy tests.
The results were revolutionary.
"One of the fellows we were teaching in Alabama went up to the bank
in his little home town to cash a check," Septima said. "The
white man took out his pen and said, 'I'll make the X.' And the Black
fellow said, 'You don't have to make the X for me, because I can write
my own name.' The white guy says, 'My God, them niggers done learned to
write!'
"At the time, people thought I had new-fangled ideas, but I guess
those new-fangled ideas worked out, didn't they?"
Spectacularly so. The Citizenship School Movement trained more than 10,000
community leaders from 1957 to 1970 through nearly 1,000 grassroots, independent
schools that operated at one time or another in every county in South
Carolina, nearly 90 counties in Georgia, and in all of the heavily-Black
areas of the rest of the Deep South. At one point in 1964, almost 200
schools operated simultaneously. Former Atlanta Mayor Andrew Young, who
served as Septima's supervisor at SCLC, said that the Citizenship Schools
were the "foundation" of the civil rights movement, "as
much responsible for transforming the South as anything anybody did."
It was a transformation of fire and blood. Several of Septima's friends,
colleagues and students were beaten or murdered during the course of the
struggle. Police rode down on demonstrators with horses or attacked them
with dogs and fire hoses. In the most dangerous towns, civil rights workers
had to spend each night in a different home in order to stay alive. Septima
herself was arrested in a frightening, nighttime police raid on Highlander.
The civil rights center was padlocked by local officials and later set
on fire by a mob.
Septima confessed that the attacks angered her and tested her commitment
to Christian forgiveness and King's nonviolent philosophy. Once, after
policemen clubbed a group of her friends in Mississippi, she said "I
knew that I couldn't beat those men, but I wished that a chandelier would
drop on their heads.".
That fighting spirit came directly from her mother, a fiery and strong-willed
Haitian. Victoria Anderson Poinsette was fiercely proud of the fact that
she had never been a slave although she was brought up in slavery time.
She was a strict disciplinarian who left her daughter with a legacy of
straightforwardness and courage. Septima talked of her mother facing down
a white policeman near the turn of the century, shouting from her porch,
"I'm a little piece of leather but well put together, so watch out!"
"I learned from my mother not to be afraid," Septima once said.
She traveled to the most violent sections of the South, often with only
one or two companions, calm in the face of the fury, the danger never
deterring her.
But fearlessness and anger did not mix in her. "I never felt that
getting angry would do you any good other than hurt your own digestion,"
she explained. "It kept you from eating, which I liked to do."
She argued passionately with student leaders such as Stokely Carmichael
that they resist the natural urge to retaliate against the racists.
Her work brought her in contact with Dorothy Cotton, now Director of Student
Affairs at Cornell University, who taught in the Citizenship Schools and
served as a fellow staff member with Septima at SCLC. Cotton said that
Septima had the effect of changing people's lives from the instant they
first met her.
"The first time Septima saw me she sat down to drink a cup of tea
with me; she wanted to know who I was, where I was from. At the time I
was just an unknown; somebody who was attending one of her workshops.
But just by talking, she made me feel important. She did that with everybody
she met, and she met thousands and thousands of people during the Movement."
Cotton said one of her strongest memories of Septima was someone who had
great patience with the people of the various towns and rural areas who
were being.
"I was almost ready to close out a workshop at Highlander one time
when an elderly man got up to leave. I tried to stop him because I wanted
everyone to hear everything that I had to talk about. But he insisted,
and finally he just ignored me and left. Afterwards, Septima gave me a
little lecture, which she entitled 'when you got to go, you got to go.'
That's when I found out the man had to use the bathroom and just couldn't
wait." Cotton laughed. "Sometimes we got caught up in what we
were doing, but Septima never lost sight of the fact that people had everyday,
human needs that had to be satisfied, even in the midst of these great
changes that were taking place."
The patience was learned from Septima's father, a gentle man conceived
in Africa and born into slavery in Charleston. Peter Poinsette was never
embittered by the brutality and injustices he endured in slavery, and
felt until the end of his life that service to others was the world's
highest calling. Septima recalled learning three major things while sitting
around the family's pot-belly stove and listening to her father's quiet
sermons about "being truthful, strengthening other people's weaknesses,
and seeing that there is something fine and noble in everybody."
Another of Septima's students was Bernice Johnson Reagon, then a leader
of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee, now a curator with the
Smithsonian Institute, and founder of and singer with the ground-breaking Sweet
Honey in the Rock. Reagon attended
the first SCLC-sponsored Citizenship School and taught in the program
for ten years. She recalls that Septima had a deep and powerful influence
on the student activists who flooded the South during the civil rights
years. Many of them had dropped out of college in open defiance of their
parents and were suddenly thrust into violent, life-threatening situations.
"[Listening to Septima] was like having your grandmother tell you
that it's all right for you to think for yourself," Reagon said.
"She would really talk to
us about the things we were thinking about and worrying about; She made
us understand that we were part of and older, deeper struggle. She kept
a lot of people from going crazy.
"I remember her explaining about birth control," Reagon said.
"In the 60's, this was something which just wasn't talked about by
older women to younger women. She told us that she had originally been
against any kind of birth control except abstinence. But through the years
she saw so many Black women get sick and die from having too many children
too close together, and so many Black children neglected and uncared for,
and that changed her mind. She always kept her principles, but she was
able to change and grow. That's one of the things that made her special."
Septima's patience, however, did not extend to those who disrespected
the common people whose lives she was working so hard to change. When
that happened, she was quick to let her feelings be known ("That look!"
says SCLC veteran Rev. C.T. Vivian, cocking his head to one side and folding
his arms over his chest to mimic Septima's posture. "Oh my, you didn't
want her to give you that look!")..
"We had a white social worker who came to work with us, feeling that
these poverty-stricken people coming out of Alabama and Mississippi were
just so far beneath her," Septima once explained. "One time
she missed her regular plane and chartered a plane for herself to come
to a workshop, but she didn't send any money for the little people attending.
And there they came, all the way from Mississippi, starving." Septima
went on to say that "[the social worker] and I argued about that
quite a bit," and added drily that, "she didn't stay long."
Another time Septima described a South Carolina workshop where Andrew
Young and Dorothy Cotton led a group in the Movement standard "We
Shall Overcome." While Young and Cotton closed their eyes and rocked
with the spirit of the song, Septima noticed a young woman in the back
of the room, trembling and crying and refusing to join in. The woman later
explained that she'd been jailed and tortured with cattle prods during
a Georgia demonstration, and couldn't bring herself to sing the stanza
"I love everybody."
"I told Andy and Dorothy, 'You can't sing with your eyes closed.
You've got to open your eyes and see what's happening to these people.'
Andy and I had some words about that but he learned, and he grew."
Young came quickly to love Septima for her forthrightness, but many of
SCLC's other ministers resented her informal lectures. They gave her the
titles of "SCLC's Mother Conscience" and later "Queen Mother
of the Movement," but they allowed her no power. Rev. Ralph Abernathy,
second in command during the King years, tried to keep Septima out of
SCLC's executive committee meetings, and SCLC's prolific publicity machine
rarely gave the Citizenship School work its proper credit. Cotton recalls
the snickerings she received from the ministers when she told a staff
meeting that the Citizenship Schools were SCLC's most important program.
Many of the preachers who made up SCLC's ruling corps were used to women
taking a back seat in their churches and in their homes, and they did
not look lightly on a woman taking a leadership role in their organization.
They refused to give Septima the recognition she deserved.
Septima later wrote that the men on SCLC's executive staff "didn't
listen to me too well. They liked to send me into many places, because
I could always make a path in to get people to listen to what I have to
say. But those men didn't have any faith in women, none whatsoever. They
just thought that women were sex symbols and had no contribution to make."
In her last years she became an active feminist and came to understand
that she and other Movement women had been the victims of sexism. "If
you watch the movie 'From Montgomery to Memphis,' you'll notice that they
don't mention one woman going through there. Not one. You almost never
see their role put down in any of the reports about the Movement. You
just get 'Dr. so-and-so from Alabama State College did such-and-such.'"
She called sexism "one of the weaknesses of the civil rights movement."
Still, by strength of will, she endured. Long after the decline of the
Movement after King's assassination Septima continued, organizing day
care centers for low-income mothers, speaking and writing in behalf of
women's rights, criss-crossing the country to share her great knowledge
and deep social concerns with anyone who would listen. In the end, the
flame that fueled her passion for human rights and equality of justice
never dimmed or wavered...one day, it simply went out. She passed away
in December of 1987 at the age of 89.
In the last years of her life she enjoyed setting up camp on her front
porch, stuffing visitors with Southern cooking and entertaining them with
her long repertoire of stories.
She described sitting drenched and shivering in the bow of a boat headed
toward the islands off the coast of South Carolina--years before the first
bridges were built--wrapping her feet with towels to walk miles in the
frozen mud to teach in a one-room school. She spoke of the days she rode
South Carolina's two-lane highways at a time when no public restrooms
were available for Black travelers. Grandmother and public school teacher,
the only way she could relieve herself was by squatting in the bushes
on the side of the road.
She would recall two elderly Black men in a lively argument over which
one could make the prettiest "x" while signing his name. She
remembered an incident when Dr. King stood in the middle of a packed meeting,
dropping his hands to his side, making no effort to resist while a white
man beat him again and again and again in the face and the audience looked
on in horror. There were Black sharecroppers and maids trooping to the
courthouse to register to vote for the first time in their lives, and
pot-bellied white farmers in dark overalls spitting tobacco juice out
of the sides of their mouths and marveling at it all. Firebombed churches
crackled in the night--the flames leaping and licking at heaven--civil
rights workers tumbling frantically out into the street just in time to
escape the inferno. She talked of wild rides on rolling, one-lane blacktop
roads chased by strange, angry men in pickup trucks, sometimes the good
guys just getting away. Sometimes not.
In 1975, she summed up her philosophy of work in one of the specially-printed
Christmas cards she regularly sent out to hundreds of friends. "The
greatest evil in our country today is not racism, but ignorance,"
she wrote. "I believe unconditionally in the ability of people to
respond when they are told the truth. We need to be taught to study rather
than to believe, to inquire rather than to affirm."
She left a long string of honors and accomplishments: several honorary
degrees, a major book on the Martin Luther King Jr. era dedicated to her
(Parting The Waters by
Taylor Branch), and two autobiographies of her own (Echo In My Soul, now out of print, and Ready
From Within, Wild Tree Press), recipient of the Presidential Living Legacy Award, a Septima
Clark Expressway and a Septima Clark Day Care Center in her native Charleston.
In the great irony of her life, she ended up serving two terms on the
same Charleston County School Board that had once fired her.
But Septima Clark's greatest legacy was in the memories she left with
those who worked with her.
"I never saw her pass by someone who wanted to speak with her,"
said Rosa Parks. "She was always in the right place if you needed
someone to talk to. I benefited a great deal by knowing her."
As did we all.
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