SELMA, Ala. – Over the weekend, I was here for the commemoration of
the 43rd anniversary of the historic 1965 Selma-to-Montgomery march
that directly led to passage of the 1965 Voting Rights Act. As
expected, the Who’s Who of Black leadership was there: John Lewis,
Jesse Jackson, Al Sharpton, Martin Luther King III, Bernice King, SCLC
President Charles Steele, Congresswomen Maxine Waters and Sheila
Jackson Lee and others. It was not surprising that so many
African-American leaders came to the annual event to commemorate March
7, 1965, known as “Bloody Sunday,” when demonstrators were gassed and
clubbed as they set out on the march along Highway 80 to the state
capital. More encouraging, last weekend hundreds came from around the
country to honor the past and to recommit to the future. As I’ve
written in this column before, I was a senior at Druid High School in
Tuscaloosa, Ala. at the time of the march. After watching TV images of
John Lewis and others being savagely beaten, carloads of us drove to
Montgomery for the final leg of the march. I remember seeing James
Baldwin and Harry Belafonte for the first time and being impressed that
such luminaries would come to my home state to lend their support to
the struggle. I also remember those whom SCLC President Charles
Steele likes to refer to as “scared Negroes.” Many people who are so
vocal about civil rights today failed to answer the call of Selma. Even
after protesters were beaten – maybe because they were beaten – too
many African-Americans were afraid to show their face in Selma,
Montgomery or anywhere in between. The modern civil rights movement
provided the test of our time and far too many failed that test. This
is also a good time to reflect on a period when Whites were willing to
give their life to right a wrong. During the Selma campaign, Rev. James
Reeb, a minister from Boston, was beaten to death on a Selma street by
a group of White men. And Viola Gregg Liuzzo, a Detroit housewife, was
shot to death as she drove a group of marchers from Montgomery back to
Selma. The real stars of the civil rights movement were not
celebrities or even northerners who had traveled south to participate
in demonstrations. Rather, it was common everyday people, then called
Negroes or worst, who knew that participating in the movement could
cost them their low-paying jobs or their life. Yet, they took that risk. The
story of Selma is really the story of Jimmie Lee Jackson. His story
should be required reading for any young person growing up in the
United States. Certainly, no Black parent should rear a child without
passing along the story of Jackson, an unsung hero of the civil rights
movement. Jimmie Lee Jackson grew up in Marion, Ala., the
hometown of Coretta Scott King. Marion is the county seat of Perry
County, one of the soil-rich black belt counties clustered in the
southern part of the state. Like many counties in the region, Blacks
were prevented from voting through violence, fear and intimidation. James
Orange, a 22-year-old SCLC organizer, had arrived in Marion in early
1965 to help with a Black voter registration project. After he was
jailed, 500 African-Americans protested by marching from Zion Methodist
Church to the county jail. But before they could arrive, they were
attacked by Alabama state troopers and local policemen. In the crowd
were Jackson, 26; his mother; and his 82-year-old grandfather. Jackson
and his family retreated to a nearby café when violence erupted, but
troopers followed them. State troopers began clubbing Jackson’s
82-year-old grandfather, continuing to strike him even after he had
been knocked to the floor. When’s Jackson’s mother tried to intervene,
she was also beaten. Jumping to his mother’s rescue, young Jackson was
beaten, thrown against a cigarette machine and shot twice in the
abdomen. He died eight days later in a Selma hospital. James
Fowler, the state trooper that admitted killing Jackson, was not
indicted until last year; an all-White grand jury convened shortly
after the murder refused to indict him. Fowler is expected to finally
go on trial for murder in May or June. James Orange, the jailed SCLC
organizer, died last month after as a result of complications from
gallbladder surgery. He was 65 years old. Congressman John Lewis
succinctly captured the contributions of Jimmie Lee Jackson in a recent
statement. Lewis observed: “It was the killing of Jimmie Lee Jackson
that provoked the march from Selma to Montgomery. It was his death and
his blood that gave us the Voting Rights Act of 1965.”
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