Chattanooga Times Free Press

Lewis honored decades after civil rights arrest

- BY EMILY WAGSTER PETTUS

JACKSON, Miss. — The first time John Lewis traveled to Mississipp­i in 1961, he was arrested and jailed with other Freedom Riders, black and white, who challenged segregatio­n in a bus station.

Lewis, who is African-American, remembers going into a restroom labeled for white men only. A Jackson police officer told him and other young people in the group to leave. They refused.

“The next words he said: ‘You’re under arrest.’ And that was my introducti­on to the state of Mississipp­i and the city of Jackson,” Lewis told The Associated Press on Thursday in a phone interview from Atlanta.

After 37 days of being locked up in sweltering local jails and a notorious state prison on the disorderly conduct charge, Lewis was released. He continued working for racial equality in Mississipp­i and across the South in the 1960s, and as chairman of the Student Nonviolent Coordinati­ng Committee, he helped organize the 1963 March on Washington. Georgia voters elected him as a Democrat to the U.S. House in 1986, and he remains in office.

Lewis, 78, returned to Mississipp­i on Friday, one of five people being honored for advancing civil rights.

A private group called Friends of Mississipp­i Civil Rights organized a gala Friday and symposium today to celebrate the new Mississipp­i Civil Rights Museum.

Lewis’ jail mug shot hangs in a gallery at the museum with those of other Freedom Riders. He was scheduled to speak at the museum’s state-sponsored opening in December but canceled his appearance because Republican Gov. Phil Bryant invited President Donald Trump.

Lewis said Thursday he has never met Trump but, “I felt that I couldn’t be there with him after he said some unbelievab­le things about individual­s and about groups — whether it’s members of the African-American community or the Latino community or the Dreamers,” younger immigrants who arrived in the country illegally as children and have been protected under President Barack Obama’s Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program, or DACA.

“I just couldn’t be there with him,” Lewis said.

The opening of the Mississipp­i Civil Rights Museum and the adjoining Museum of Mississipp­i History capped the state’s bicentenni­al observatio­n.

The two museums are in downtown Jackson and are separate entities under a single roof. They are a short distance from the bus station where Lewis and the other Freedom Riders were arrested. The general museum skims 15,000 years of history, from the Stone Age to modern times. The civil rights museum concentrat­es on the intense period of social change from 1945 to 1976.

Lewis grew up south of Montgomery, Ala., and was 15 years old when a black 14-year-old from Chicago, Emmett Till, was lynched while visiting relatives near the small town of Money, Miss. A cousin who was with Till said he had whistled at a white woman in a country store.

“I kept thinking that if something like this could happen to Emmett Till, it could happen to cousins of mine that were living in Buffalo, N.Y., or were living in Detroit, Mich., when they came to Alabama to visit during the summer,” Lewis said.

One of the other people being honored Friday for civil rights work is Rita Schwerner Bender, who demanded answers from Mississipp­i officials after her first husband, Michael Schwerner, and two other activists, James Chaney and Andrew Goodman, were killed outside Philadelph­ia, Miss., in 1964 — a case that became known by its FBI name, “Mississipp­i Burning.”

Bender, now an attorney in Seattle, said Wednesday that in accepting the award in Mississipp­i, she intends to urge people to stand up for justice.

“Most social change doesn’t happen without a demand side,” she said.

Bender said she also would emphasize the importance of public education: “How can we be a thriving democracy which provides for the intellectu­al developmen­t of all our people, for the health of our people, for our place as contributo­rs on the world stage, without high quality education?”

The other honorees are Ruby Bridges, a Tylertown, Miss., native who faced threats and ostracism when she became the first black child to integrate a public school in New Orleans in 1960; former state Rep. Robert Clark, who in 1967 became the first African-American of the 20th century to win a seat in the Mississipp­i Legislatur­e; and Democratic U.S. Rep. Bennie Thompson of Mississipp­i.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTOS ?? Rep. John Lewis, D-Ga., accompanie­d by fellow members of the Congressio­nal Black Caucus, speaks at a news conference in 2013 on Capitol Hill in Washington. Lewis worked for racial equality in Mississipp­i and across the South in the 1960s, and has been...
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTOS Rep. John Lewis, D-Ga., accompanie­d by fellow members of the Congressio­nal Black Caucus, speaks at a news conference in 2013 on Capitol Hill in Washington. Lewis worked for racial equality in Mississipp­i and across the South in the 1960s, and has been...

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