|
[L-I] Medgar W. Evers -- And Today: msg#00043politics.leninism.international
This is the 39th anniversary of the death of Medgar Wiley Evers of Mississippi -- a brave and honorable fighter for human rights -- and a very dear friend. His identity was Afro-American but he was significantly and very consciously part Choctaw. His assassination occurred in the context of our massive Jackson [Mississippi] Movement of 1962-63 -- and in the midst of extraordinarily brutal, violent and sanguinary repression: the full range of city and state and vigilante forces -- literally several thousands of hostile "lawmen" and thugs and a huge concentration camp at the State Fairgrounds. There are many of us who -- without falling prey to linear chronological deification -- do mark certain calendar dates faithfully. Beginning on December 12, 1962, with the historic [and very quickly suppressed] downtown Jackson picketing [myself and Eldri and four of my Tougaloo students], our well organized base for the Jackson Movement [which we had been building for months] now moved dramatically into the full-scale public arena, gathering strength and momentum initially as an extremely successful economic boycott of downtown Jackson and environs -- the economic nerve center of the Magnolia State -- and then into huge demonstrations. There are many significant dates/events through this great and very effective saga. On May 12, 1963, three of us signed a historic letter which went to all major components of the Jackson and Mississippi power structures -- and which took the Jackson Movement across the Rubicon into its next stage: large-scale and finally truly massive non-violent demonstrations. The three of us were Medgar W. Evers [Field Secretary of the Mississippi NAACP] and Mrs Doris Allison [President of the Jackson Branch of NAACP] and myself [then John R Salter, Jr as Advisor to the Jackson NAACP Youth Council -- and soon to be Strategy Committee Chair of the Jackson Movement.] Medgar was shot at 11:45 pm, Tuesday, June 11, 1963 just outside his home. We had been together in a meeting only shortly before. He died right after midnight, Wednesday, June 12. Our response to his murder was to build the Jackson Movement ever higher -- and the courageous outpouring of grassroots Black people and Black students was indeed colossal. In the end, Jackson was fundamentally cracked -- and those cracks, joined by other great efforts around the state, spread and deepened across Mississippi and far, far beyond. Medgar's murderer, Byron de la Beckwith, who was tried twice in the mid-1960s and freed via hung all-white juries, was finally convicted in 1994 and sentenced to life. He recently died in the Mississippi state penitentiary at Parchman. There are many dates for us in this particular Holy Year -- with Medgar's martyrdom at the apex. Two important points: The Jackson Movement was launched -- and proceeded bravely -- in the face of massive opposition by the formal racist enemies. But there was also substantial subversion by a significant portion of the National Office of NAACP and very much from the Kennedy administration. In a large, civil rights retrospective at Tougaloo and Millsaps colleges in late October and early November, 1979, I publicly denounced that "subversion by the corporate liberals of New York and the self-styled "pragmatism" of those splendid scoundrels residing in Camelot on the Potomac." And I hold to every word of that to this very day. Mississippi, as I've noted in my May/June 2002 "Closed Society" article in the excellent socialist journal, Against the Current, was very much totalitarian in nature. That hideous situation and comparable ones in the hard-core South changed because of the again-and-again courageous efforts by grassroots people and organizers -- and because of constructive outside pressure that came from the Nation and World Beyond. Today, the United States itself moves deeper and deeper, faster and faster, into its own and increasingly tragic Closed Society morass. And, once again -- as in all of Human History -- courageous and committed action by grassroots people and organizers, and constructive pressure from the outside World Itself, are the only means whereby this extremely dangerous and people- strangling direction will be reversed and our Journey to the Sun resumed. My recent "Closed Society" piece in Against the Current -- with a focus on our national situation of today -- is on our large social justice website, Lair of Hunterbear, at http://www.hunterbear.org/closed_society_of_mississippi__a.htm Mrs Doris Allison [now in her eighties] and I, the two surviving signers of the Rubicon-Letter of May 12, 1963, talked extensively yesterday -- as we do several times each month. She and her equally brave husband, Ben, are the God-parents of my now 20 year old grandson who lives with us here in Idaho. [He, Thomas, is himself one-half Mississippi Choctaw.] Much material on the Jackson Movement and its myriad of lessons is at several locations on my large website www.hunterbear.org I have a very substantial discussion of Medgar and his life and work in this website page, "Medgar W. Evers: Reflection and Appreciation" http://www.hunterbear.org/medgar_w.htm My own very detailed book on the Jackson struggle -- Jackson, Mississippi: An American Chronicle of Struggle and Schism -- is discussed at this website link: http://www.hunterbear.org/jackson.htm Fraternally and In Solidarity - Hunter Gray [ Hunterbear ] www.hunterbear.org ( strawberry socialism ) Protected by Na´shdo´i´ba´i´ _______________________________________________ Leninist-International mailing list Leninist-International@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx To change your options or unsubscribe go to: http://lists.econ.utah.edu/mailman/listinfo/leninist-international |
|
| <Prev in Thread] | Current Thread | [Next in Thread> |
|---|---|---|
| Previous by Date: | [L-I] Africa, Education and European Aid: 00043, Macdonald Stainsby |
|---|---|
| Next by Date: | [L-I] "Free market, enslaved people ": 00043, Charles Brown |
| Previous by Thread: | [L-I] Africa, Education and European Aidi: 00043, Macdonald Stainsby |
| Next by Thread: | [L-I] "Free market, enslaved people ": 00043, Charles Brown |
| Indexes: | [Date] [Thread] [Top] [All Lists] |
| News | FAQ | advertise |