Miami Herald (Sunday)

CIVIL RIGHTS HERO OF SELMA MARCH BUILT LONG CAREER IN CONGRESS

John Lewis, who carried the struggle against racial discrimina­tion from Southern battlegrou­nds of the 1960s to the halls of Congress, died Friday. He was 80.

- BY KATHARINE Q. SEELYE

U.S. Rep. John Lewis, a son of sharecropp­ers and an apostle of nonviolenc­e who was bloodied at Selma and across the Jim Crow South in the historic struggle for racial equality and who then carried a mantle of moral authority into Congress, died Friday. He was 80.

His death was confirmed in a statement by Nancy Pelosi, the speaker of the House of Representa­tives.

Lewis, a Georgia Democrat, announced on Dec. 29 that he had Stage 4 pancreatic cancer and vowed to fight it with the same passion with which he had battled racial injustice. “I have been in some kind of fight — for freedom, equality, basic human rights — for nearly my entire life,” he said.

On the front lines of the bloody campaign to end Jim Crow laws, with blows to his

body and a fractured skull to prove it, Lewis was a valiant stalwart of the civil rights movement and the last surviving speaker from the March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom in 1963.

More than a half-century later, after the killing in May of George Floyd, a Black man in police custody in Minneapoli­s, Lewis welcomed the resulting global demonstrat­ions against police killings of Black people and, more broadly, against systemic racism in many corners of society. He saw those protests as a continuati­on of his life’s work, although his illness had left him to watch from the sidelines.

“It was very moving, very moving to see hundreds of thousands of people from all over America and around the world take to the streets — to speak up, to speak out, to get into what I call ‘good trouble,’ ” Lewis told “CBS This Morning” in June.

“This feels and looks so different,” he said of the Black Lives Matter movement, which drove the antiracism demonstrat­ions. “It is so much more massive and all inclusive.” He added, “There will be no turning back.”

He died on the same day as did another civil rights movement stalwart, the Rev. C.T. Vivian, a close associate of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.

Lewis’ personal history paralleled that of the civil rights movement. He was among the original 13 Freedom Riders, the Black and white activists who challenged segregated interstate travel in the South in 1961. He was a founder and early leader of the Student Nonviolent Coordinati­ng Committee, which coordinate­d lunch-counter sit-ins. He helped organize the March on Washington, where King was the main speaker, on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial.

Lewis led demonstrat­ions against racially segregated restrooms, hotels, restaurant­s, public parks and swimming pools, and he rose up against other indignitie­s of second-class citizenshi­p.

At nearly every turn, he was beaten, spat upon or burned with cigarettes. He was tormented by white mobs and absorbed body blows from law enforcemen­t.

On March 7, 1965, he led one of the most famous marches in American history. In the vanguard of 600 people demanding the voting rights they had been denied, Lewis marched partway across the Edmund Pettus Bridge in Selma, Alabama, into a waiting phalanx of state troopers in riot gear.

Ordered to disperse, the protesters silently stood their ground. The troopers responded with tear gas and bullwhips and rubber tubing wrapped in barbed wire. In the melee, which came to be known as Bloody Sunday, a trooper cracked Lewis’ skull with a billy club, knocking him to the ground, then hit him again when he tried to get up.

Televised images of the beatings of Lewis and scores of others outraged the nation and galvanized support for the Voting Rights Act, which President Lyndon B. Johnson presented to a joint session of Congress eight days later and signed into law Aug. 6. A milestone in the struggle for civil rights, the law struck down the literacy tests that Black people had been compelled to take before they could register to vote and replaced segregatio­nist voting registrars with federal registrars to ensure that

Black people were no longer denied the ballot.

Once registered, millions of African Americans began transformi­ng politics across the South. They gave Jimmy Carter, a son of Georgia, his margin of victory in the 1976 presidenti­al election. (A popular poster proclaimed, “Hands that once picked cotton now can pick a president.”) And their voting power opened the door for Black people, including Lewis, to run for public office. Elected in 1986, he became the second African American to be sent to Congress from Georgia since Reconstruc­tion, representi­ng a district that encompasse­d much of Atlanta.

CONSCIENCE OF CONGRESS

While Lewis represente­d Atlanta, his natural constituen­cy was disadvanta­ged people everywhere. Known less for sponsoring major legislatio­n than for his relentless pursuit of justice, he was called “the conscience of the Congress” by his colleagues.

When the House voted in December 2019 to impeach President Donald Trump, Lewis’ words rose above the rest.

“When you see something that is not right, not just, not fair, you have a moral obligation to say something,” he said on the House floor. “To do something. Our children and their children will ask us, ‘What did you do? What did you say?’ For some, this vote may be hard. But we have a mission and a mandate to be on the right side of history.”

His words resonated as well after he saw the video of a Minneapoli­s police officer kneeling on Floyd’s neck for more than eight minutes as Floyd gasped for air.

“It was so painful, it made me cry,” Lewis told “CBS This Morning.” “People now understand what the struggle was all about,” he said. “It’s another step down a very, very long road toward freedom, justice for all humankind.”

When he was younger, his words could be more militant. History remembers the March on Washington for King’s “I Have a Dream” speech, but Lewis startled and energized the crowd with his own passion.

“By the force of our demands, our determinat­ion and our numbers,” he told the cheering throng that August day, “we shall splinter the segregated South into a thousand pieces and put them together in the image of God and democracy. We must say: ‘Wake up, America. Wake up!’ For we cannot stop, and we will not and cannot be patient.”

His original text was more blunt. “We will march through the South, through the heart of Dixie, the way Sherman did,” he had written. President John F. Kennedy’s civil rights bill was “too little, too late,” he had written, demanding, “Which side is the federal government on?”

But King and other elders — Lewis was just 23 — worried that those first-draft passages would offend the Kennedy administra­tion, which they felt they could not alienate in their drive for federal action on civil rights. They told him to tone down the speech.

Still, the crowd, estimated at more than 200,000, roared with approval at his every utterance.

An earnest man who lacked the silver tongue of other civil rights orators, Lewis could be pugnacious, tenacious and single-minded, and he led with a force that commanded attention.

He gained a reputation for having an almost mystical faith in his own survivabil­ity. One civil rights activist who knew him well told The New York Times in 1976: “Some leaders, even the toughest, would occasional­ly finesse a situation where they knew they were going to get beaten or jailed. John never did that. He always went full force into the fray.”

Lewis was arrested 40 times from 1960 to 1966. He was repeatedly beaten senseless by Southern policemen and freelance hoodlums. During the Freedom Rides in 1961, he was left unconsciou­s in a pool of his own blood outside the Greyhound Bus Terminal in Montgomery, Alabama, after he and others were attacked by hundreds of white people. He spent countless days and nights in county jails and 31 days in Mississipp­i’s notoriousl­y brutal Parchman Penitentia­ry.

Once he was in Congress, Lewis voted with the most liberal Democrats, although he also showed an independen­t streak. In his quest to build what King called “the beloved community” — a world without poverty, racism or war (Lewis adopted the phrase) — he routinely voted against military spending. He opposed the Persian Gulf War of 1991 and the North American Free Trade Agreement, which was signed in 1992. He refused to take part in the “Million Man March” in Washington in 1995, saying that statements made by the organizer, Louis Farrakhan, leader of the Nation of Islam, were “divisive and bigoted.”

In 2001, Lewis skipped the inaugurati­on of George W. Bush, saying he thought that Bush, who had become president after the Supreme Court halted a vote recount in Florida, had not been truly elected.

In 2017, he boycotted Trump’s inaugurati­on, questionin­g the legitimacy of his presidency because of evidence that Russia had meddled in the 2016 election on Trump’s behalf.

That earned him a derisive Twitter post from the president: “Congressma­n John Lewis should spend more time on fixing and helping his district, which is in horrible shape and falling apart (not to mention crime infested) rather than falsely complainin­g about the election results. All talk, talk, talk — no action or results. Sad!”

Trump’s attack marked a sharp detour from the respect that had been accorded Lewis by previous presidents, including, most recently, Barack Obama. Obama awarded Lewis the Presidenti­al Medal of Freedom, the nation’s highest civilian honor, in 2011.

In bestowing the honor in a White House ceremony, Obama said: “Generation­s from now, when parents teach their children what is meant by courage, the story of John Lewis will come to mind — an American who knew that change could not wait for some other person or some other time; whose life is a lesson in the fierce urgency of now.”

TO HIS FAMILY, ‘PREACHER’

John Robert Lewis grew up with all the humiliatio­ns imposed by segregated rural Alabama. He was born Feb. 21, 1940, to Eddie and Willie Mae (Carter) Lewis near the town of Troy on a sharecropp­ing farm owned by a white man. After his parents bought their own farm — 110 acres for $300 — John, the third of 10 children, shared in the farm work, leaving school at harvest time to pick cotton, peanuts and corn. Their house had no plumbing or electricit­y. In the outhouse, they used the pages of an old Sears catalog as toilet paper.

John was responsibl­e for taking care of the chickens. He fed them and read to them from the Bible. He baptized them when they were born and staged elaborate funerals when they died.

“I was truly intent on saving the little birds’ souls,” he wrote in his memoir, “Walking With the Wind” (1998). “I could imagine that they were my congregati­on. And me, I was a preacher.”

His family called him “Preacher,” and becoming one seemed to be his destiny. He drew inspiratio­n by listening to a young minister named Martin Luther King on the radio and reading about the 1955-56 Montgomery bus boycott. He finally wrote a letter to King, who sent him a round-trip bus ticket to visit him in Montgomery, in 1958.

By then, Lewis had begun his studies at American Baptist Theologica­l Seminary (now American Baptist College) in Nashville, Tennessee, where he worked as a dishwasher and janitor to pay for his education.

In Nashville, Lewis met many of the civil rights activists who would stage the lunch counter sit-ins, Freedom Rides and voter registrati­on campaigns. They included the Rev. James Lawson Jr., who was one of the nation’s most prominent scholars of civil disobedien­ce and who led workshops on Gandhi and nonviolenc­e. He mentored a generation of civil rights organizers, including Lewis.

Lewis’ first arrest came in February 1960, when he and other students demanded service at whites-only lunch counters in Nashville. It was the first prolonged battle of the movement that evolved into the Student Nonviolent Coordinati­ng Committee.

David Halberstam, then a reporter for The Nashville Tennessean, later described the scene: “The protests had been conducted with exceptiona­l dignity, and gradually one image had come to prevail — that of elegant, courteous young Black people, holding to their Gandhian principles, seeking the most elemental of rights, while being assaulted by young white hoodlums who beat them up and on occasion extinguish­ed cigarettes on their bodies.”

SIT-INS WORKED

In three months, after repeated well-publicized sit-ins, the city’s political and business communitie­s gave in to the pressure, and Nashville became the first major Southern city to begin desegregat­ing public facilities.

But Lewis lost his family’s goodwill. When his parents learned that he had been arrested in Nashville, he wrote, they were ashamed. They had taught him as a child to accept the world as he found it. When he asked them about signs saying “Colored Only,” they told him, “That’s the way it is, don’t get in trouble.”

But as an adult, he said, after he met King and Rosa Parks, whose refusal to give up her bus seat to a white man was a flash point for the civil rights movement, he was inspired to “get into trouble, good trouble, necessary trouble.”

Getting into “good trouble” became his motto for life. A documentar­y film, “John Lewis: Good Trouble,” was released this month.

By the time of the urban race riots of the 1960s, particular­ly in the Watts section of Los Angeles in 1965, many Black people had rejected nonviolenc­e in favor of direct confrontat­ion. Lewis was ousted as chair of the Student Nonviolent Coordinati­ng Committee in 1966 and replaced by the fiery Stokely Carmichael, who popularize­d the phrase “Black power.”

Lewis spent a few years out of the limelight. He headed the Voter Education Project, registerin­g voters, and finished his bachelor’s degree in religion and philosophy at Fisk University in Nashville in 1967.

During this period he met Lillian Miles, a librarian, teacher and former Peace Corps volunteer. She was outgoing and political and could quote King’s speeches verbatim. They were married in 1968, and she became one of his closest political advisers.

She died in 2012. Lewis’ survivors include several siblings and his son, JohnMiles Lewis.

Not surprising­ly, Lewis’ long congressio­nal career was marked by protests. He was arrested in Washington several times, including outside the South African Embassy for demonstrat­ing against apartheid and at Sudan’s Embassy while protesting genocide in Darfur.

In 2010 he supported Obama’s health care bill, a divisive measure that drew angry protesters, including many from the right-wing Tea Party, to the Capitol. Some demonstrat­ors shouted obscenitie­s and racial slurs at Lewis and other members of the Congressio­nal Black Caucus.

“They were shouting, sort of harassing,” Lewis told reporters at the time. “But it’s OK. I’ve faced this before.”

 ?? CAROLYN KASTER AP ?? U.S. Rep. John Lewis, D-Ga., took the struggle against racial discrimina­tion from the 1960s South to the House of Representa­tives.
CAROLYN KASTER AP U.S. Rep. John Lewis, D-Ga., took the struggle against racial discrimina­tion from the 1960s South to the House of Representa­tives.
 ?? AL DRAGO NYT ?? U.S. Rep. John Lewis departs Capitol Hill after morning votes in Washington in 2017.
AL DRAGO NYT U.S. Rep. John Lewis departs Capitol Hill after morning votes in Washington in 2017.
 ?? AP ?? On March 7, 1965, a state trooper swings a billy club at John Lewis, right foreground, chairman of the Student Nonviolent Coordinati­ng Committee, to break up a civil rights voting march in Selma, Ala. Lewis sustained a fractured skull. Lewis died Friday at age 80.
AP On March 7, 1965, a state trooper swings a billy club at John Lewis, right foreground, chairman of the Student Nonviolent Coordinati­ng Committee, to break up a civil rights voting march in Selma, Ala. Lewis sustained a fractured skull. Lewis died Friday at age 80.

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