I'm going to grab a big chunk of text whole hog from another blog. I'd like to use it to illustrate something that I've been saying for a long time. There is no turning back on the Civil Rights Movement, and black Americans have further solidified their positive social capital. After Obama's acceptance speech my father sent an email entitled: HNIC. His translation: He nailed it completely. For African Americans there is that double-entendre and extra measure of pride. I share in the acknowledgement that Obama's triumph is yet another high water mark for the progress Americans of color have been making in our self-determination for many generations.
At this moment, Barack Obama's nomination and moderate acceptance speech will inherit a place in American history, we can point to the enormity of the strides made by our generation whose parents were those of Fannie Lou Hamer's. It is more than audacity and it is more than hope. It is strength, courage and wisdom taken from the few and taken up by the many.
Mary Dudziak chronicles the testimony of Hamer to Democrats in '64 back when I was three years old, and makes some observations about today vs yesterday. Indeed we can be seen as a nation of whiners as compared to what Hamer went through.
To Dudziak's editorializing about post-racial politics. I think it is a bad name and a bad idea. There is no, and there will be no post-racial politics unless and until people actually forget what race means and we lose the ability to pass racial consciousness to our children. That's bloody unlikely for another 200 years. Race has its appeal and it is for us who recognize the errors and sins or racial prejudices and the temptations of racial identity to employ our moral energies to disable it as we encounter it. There will not be some golden day, it will always be disciplined work. Yet we are fortunate to know that for so many Americans it is an ingrained habit of discipline. Toto, I don't think we're in Jim Crow Mississippi any more.
The following is from Mary Dudziak at Balkanization:
In light of Steve’s post, it’s helpful to reflect that in spite of various sorts of whining accompanying
this year’s Democratic National Convention, it is an historic moment in
more than one way. It was not so long ago that an African American
woman, Fannie Lou Hamer,
captured the nation’s attention not with a convention floor speech but
with testimony before the 1964 Credentials Committee of the DNC. Hamer was a member of the Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party delegation, which challenged the seating of Mississippi’s all-white Democratic delegation. Hamer attempted
to register to vote for the first time in 1962 at the age of
forty-four, and as a result lost her position as a sharecropper on a
plantation near Ruleville, Mississippi. She then became a field
organizer for the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee,
encouraging voter registration, and in the course of this work was
detained and beaten by police in Winona, Mississippi, resulting in
permanent kidney damage. Hamer told this story to the Credentials
Committee to make the point that African Americans were brutally
treated and disenfranchised, so the political process that resulted in
selection of the state’s delegation was illegitimate. How could the
national party seat them and ignore the representatives of
disenfranchised African Americans? Her speech was so riveting that
President Lyndon Baines Johnson called an impromptu press conference in
an effort to draw media attention away from the MFDP. Parts of Hamer’s
speech were nevertheless broadcast on the networks that evening. Mr.
Chairman, and to the Credentials Committee, my name is Mrs. Fannie Lou
Hamer, and I live at 626 East Lafayette Street, Ruleville, Mississippi,
Sunflower County, the home of Senator James O. Eastland, and Senator
Stennis. It was the 31st of August in
1962 that eighteen of us traveled twenty-six miles to the county
courthouse in Indianola to try to register to become first-class
citizens. We was met in Indianola by
policemen, Highway Patrolmen, and they only allowed two of us in to
take the literacy test at the time. After we had taken this test and
started back to Ruleville, we was held up by the City Police and the
State Highway Patrolmen and carried back to Indianola where the bus
driver was charged that day with driving a bus the wrong color. After
we paid the fine among us, we continued on to Ruleville, and Reverend
Jeff Sunny carried me four miles in the rural area where I had worked
as a timekeeper and sharecropper for eighteen years. I was met there by
my children, who told me that the plantation owner was angry because I
had gone down to try to register. After
they told me, my husband came, and said the plantation owner was
raising Cain because I had tried to register. Before he quit talking
the plantation owner came and said, "Fannie Lou, do you know - did Pap
tell you what I said?" And I said, "Yes, sir." He
said, "Well I mean that." He said, "If you don't go down and withdraw
your registration, you will have to leave." Said, "Then if you go down
and withdraw," said, "you still might have to go because we are not
ready for that in Mississippi." And I addressed him and told him and said, "I didn't try to register for you. I tried to register for myself." I had to leave that same night. On
the 10th of September 1962, sixteen bullets was fired into the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Tucker for me. That same night two girls were shot
in Ruleville, Mississippi. Also Mr. Joe McDonald's house was shot in. And
June the 9th, 1963, I had attended a voter registration workshop; was
returning back to Mississippi. Ten of us was traveling by the
Continental Trailway bus. When we got to Winona, Mississippi, which is
Montgomery County, four of the people got off to use the washroom, and
two of the people - to use the restaurant - two of the people wanted to
use the washroom. The four people that
had gone in to use the restaurant was ordered out. During this time I
was on the bus. But when I looked through the window and saw they had
rushed out I got off of the bus to see what had happened. And one of
the ladies said, "It was a State Highway Patrolman and a Chief of
Police ordered us out."... I was
carried to the county jail and put in the booking room. They left some
of the people in the booking room and began to place us in cells. I was
placed in a cell with a young woman called Miss Ivesta Simpson. After I
was placed in the cell I began to hear sounds of licks and screams, I
could hear the sounds of licks and horrible screams. And I could hear
somebody say, "Can you say, 'yes, sir,' nigger? Can you say 'yes, sir'?" And they would say other horrible names. She would say, "Yes, I can say 'yes, sir.'" "So, well, say it." She said, "I don't know you well enough." They beat her, I don't know how long. And after a while she began to pray, and asked God to have mercy on those people. And
it wasn't too long before three white men came to my cell. One of these
men was a State Highway Patrolman and he asked me where I was from. I
told him Ruleville and he said, "We are going to check this." They
left my cell and it wasn't too long before they came back. He said,
"You are from Ruleville all right," and he used a curse word. And he
said, "We are going to make you wish you was dead." I
was carried out of that cell into another cell where they had two Negro
prisoners. The State Highway Patrolmen ordered the first Negro to take
the blackjack. The first Negro prisoner ordered me, by orders from the State Highway Patrolman, for me to lay down on a bunk bed on my face. I
laid on my face and the first Negro began to beat. I was beat by the
first Negro until he was exhausted. I was holding my hands behind me at
that time on my left side, because I suffered from polio when I was six
years old. After the first Negro had
beat until he was exhausted, the State Highway Patrolman ordered the
second Negro to take the blackjack. The
second Negro began to beat and I began to work my feet, and the State
Highway Patrolman ordered the first Negro who had beat me to sit on my
feet - to keep me from working my feet. I began to scream and one white
man got up and began to beat me in my head and tell me to hush. One
white man - my dress had worked up high - he walked over and pulled my
dress - I pulled my dress down and he pulled my dress back up. I was in jail when Medgar Evers was murdered. All
of this is on account of we want to register, to become first-class
citizens. And if the Freedom Democratic Party is not seated now, I
question America. Is this America, the land of the free and the home of
the brave, where we have to sleep with our telephones off the hooks
because our lives be threatened daily, because we want to live as
decent human beings, in America? Thank you.
"Is
this America," she asked, "the land of the free and the home of the
brave, where we have to sleep with our telephones off the hooks because
our lives be threatened daily, because we want to live as decent human
beings, in America?"
More, with a link to an audio of Hamer, below the fold.
On August 22, 1964 in Atlantic City, Fannie Lou Hamer gave this testimony:
A link to an audio of Hamer’s testimony is here. An on-line documentary is here.
Hamer’s
words continue to echo across generations, and are a reminder that a
speech can have an impact. As much as the Obama campaign might wish to
put race aside to appeal to an electorate that is more comfortable
ignoring it, his speech tomorrow night and his nomination will be an
enduring episode in American racial politics. Not a sign that a
post-racial politics have been achieved, but a milestone nevertheless,
in a history that transforms American politics even though it does not
progress inevitably toward justice.
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