Editor's note: Ron Walters
wrote this commentary for Issue
364 of BC that was published on February
25, 2010. Brother Ron died September 10, 2010.
My
friend George Curry reminded me of something in his article
on “Being
True to Black Historymakers” when he said that in this
year when we celebrate the 50th anniversary of the Greensboro
Sit-in that we must remember “they were not alone.” It
is true that these students were not alone, because in August
of 1958, those of us in the NAACP Youth Council of Wichita,
Kansas targeted the lunch counter at the Dockum Drug store
in the heart of town for a Sit-in demonstration because
they, like so many other establishments, did not let blacks
eat there. After about six weeks of Sit-ins that drew 20-40
young participants, we successfully desegregated, not just
Dockum Drugs, but the Rexall chain of drug stores in that
state.
A
few weeks later, the NAACP Youth Council in Oklahoma City
began its own Sit-ins, headed by Barbara Posey (today, Dr.
Barbara Jones, wife of Professor Mack Jones). Through the
entire year of 1959 they sat-in and eventually desegregated
the Katz Drug store chain in that state. At the 1960s
Convention of the NAACP they honored those of us who had
begun this movement and two of the original Greensboro students
attended the conference as members of the NAACP Youth Council.
Moreover, Joseph McNeil, a key organizer of the Greensboro
Sit-in said in an interview years later that they had heard
of the Sit-ins in the Midwest in planning their own.
In
2008, Kevin Myles, local head of the Wichita NAACP organized
the 50th Anniversary celebration and the National
Office of the NAACP recognized the Wichita Youth Council
as a spearhead of the movement. The Mayor of Wichita also
christened a small park on the main street of town for Chester
Lewis, a fighting attorney and head of the NAACP in the
1950s and 60s. And today there is a replica of a lunch
counter there, not five-hundred yards from the original
Dockum Drug store.
Youth
also made Black history this month, as a new Chair of the
NAACP Board, Roslyn Brock, was announced in the press as
taking over today. The new team of 37 year-old CEO Ben
Jealous and 44 year-old Roslyn Brock represents the passage
of the baton to a new generation of leadership and they
have already begun to use the tools of modern communication
to organize new members and to extend the brand of the organization
to new arenas of young professionals. Jealous, for example,
set up a “war room” in Washington, DC to help mobilize the
black community to participate in the action of contributing
to a health care bill and countering the formidable power
of paid lobbyists who are against it.
In
one press report about Brock, it was striking to read a
black professor suggesting that the NAACP was “searching
for relevance.” I began this discussion by not only making
a bow to Black History month with a little known factoid,
but by doing suggesting that youth today have a mandate
from their history to engage in social struggle. But today,
the Tea Party radical conservatives are mobilizing while
we are quiet. Guess which group has created the perception
that they represent a powerful national movement?
There
should be no confusion about what constitutes the black
agenda today, nor the tactics necessary to confront it.
The Tea Party folks represent a distorted White Agenda,
seeking to utilize power to maintain the status quo. As
such, they would maintain the gaps in civil rights that
still exist – citizen voting rights, felony voting rights,
police brutality, racial profiling, housing discrimination,
less access to loans. They would also maintain the gaps
in human rights -- such as health insurance and the illnesses
associated with the lack of care, educational access and
excellence, employment rate equality, home ownership security
and the like.
It
is the task of modern civil rights organizations to make
the demand that equality be achieved, that fairness be the
rule in the conduct of all American institutions. It is
their role to demand the closure of the gaps in civil and
human rights, even though much of the technical and political
work is carried out by our elected officials. It is their
job to mobilize black people and our allies, to influence
institutions to behave in ways that honor our citizenship
and humanity – in the 21st century. This is not an old
agenda, 50 years is actually a very short time.
The video below is a YouTube documentary video of the 1958 NAACP Youth
Council Sit-in in Wichita produced by television station
KPTS in Wichita, Kansas.
BlackCommentator.comEditorial
Board member, Dr. Ron Walters, was the Distinguished Leadership
Scholar, Director of the African American Leadership Center
and Professor of Government and Politics at the University
of Maryland College Park. His last book was: The Price of Racial Reconciliation (The Politics of Race and Ethnicity) (University
of Michigan Press).
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