Chattanooga Times Free Press

Civil rights icon says ban assault weapons

- BY EMILY WAGSTER PETTUS

JACKSON, Miss. — Ruby Bridges Hall, who faced threats and harassment when she integrated a southern school as a child several decades ago, said Friday she is distressed by mass shootings in U.S. schools.

“When I think about our babies today and them not being safe in school, I think that should be the next civil rights movement, you know, is to ban the assault weapons so that our babies can be safe,” Hall said.

She spoke at a gala in Jackson, Miss., where she was one of five activists being honored for advancing civil rights.

Hall, now 63, is a native of Tylertown, Miss. When she was 6 and known simply as Ruby Bridges, she became the first AfricanAme­rican child to enroll in an elementary school in New Orleans in 1960, accompanie­d by U.S. marshals. Some white parents withdrew their children, and she could only eat food brought from home because someone threatened to poison her.

The gala Friday was to celebrate the Mississipp­i Civil Rights Museum, which has been open about 2 1/2 months. Many civil rights veterans boycotted the state-sponsored dedication of the museum in December because Republican Gov. Phil Bryant invited President Donald Trump to attend.

The other honorees Friday were U.S. Rep. John Lewis of Georgia, who was deeply involved in voter registrati­on and other civil rights activities in Mississipp­i and across the South starting in the early 1960s; Rita Schwerner Bender, who demanded answers from Mississipp­i officials after her first husband, Michael Schwerner, was one of three civil-rights workers killed by Ku Klux Klansmen in the state in 1964; 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.

The first time 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’ 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 of Trump.

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