Chattanooga Times Free Press

Birmingham to mark bombing anniversar­y

- Jay Reeves Associated Press

BIRMINGHAM, Ala. — The city of Birmingham is planning five days of events with political leaders, artists and ordinary citizens to observe the 50th anniversar­y of a church bombing that killed four black girls and shocked the nation in 1963.

Attorney General Eric Holder, former Secretary of State and Birmingham native Condoleezz­a Rice, director Spike Lee and actor Jamie Foxx are among those participat­ing in what’s being called “Empowermen­t Week” in the city.

Events begin Wednesday and continue through Sunday, the anniversar­y of the bombing of Birmingham’s 16th Street Baptist Church on Sept. 15, 1963.

A powerful dynamite bomb planted outside the building detonated on a Sunday morning, shattering a brick and stone wall and raining debris on to the girls, who died as they were chatting in a washroom. The sister of one of the four victims survived but was critically injured.

The bombing, which occurred after the landmark “March on Washington” and as the city’s public schools were being racially integrated for the first time, came to symbolize the depth of racial hatred in the South and was credited with helping spur passing of civil rights laws.

Blacks now control Birmingham City Hall, and the city has a civil rights museum that includes a display about the bombing and its victims — Denise McNair, 11, and 14-year- olds Carole Robertson, Addie Mae Collins and Cynthia Wesley, who also was known as Cynthia Morris.

Mayor William Bell called the day of the bombing “a date that will live in infamy for as long as people study American history.”

The carnage of that Sunday didn’t end with the bombing: Two black teenagers were shot dead within hours in the chaos that followed, one by a police officer.

Three Ku Klux Klansmen were convicted in the bombing years later. Two died in custody, and one remains behind bars.

“People were stirred by what happened here and change began to finally come,” Bell said in a statement. “We are not the same Birmingham of 1963, and will continue to make sure that Birmingham is 50 years forward.”

Holder and Rice will speak at a forum on the bombing on the anniversar­y day, while Lee will present his 1997 documentar­y about the bombing, “4 Little Girls,” at the Alabama Theatre. Admission is free.

Foxx is performing at a concert that will include singers Jill Scott and Charlie Wilson, and a sculpture commemorat­ing the slain girls will be unveiled in a park near the church on the eve of the anniversar­y.

 ??  ?? Investigat­ors and spectators gather outside the 16th Street Baptist Church in Birmingham, Ala., in September 1963 following an explosion that killed four girls.
Investigat­ors and spectators gather outside the 16th Street Baptist Church in Birmingham, Ala., in September 1963 following an explosion that killed four girls.

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