Santa Fe New Mexican

New film weighs legacy of civil rights leader

- By Russell Contreras

RIO RANCHO — A new documentar­y is diving into the complicate­d and sometimes contradict­ory life of James Meredith, a Black civil rights figure who helped change Mississipp­i.

Walk Against Fear: James Meredith examines the life of a U.S. Air Force veteran and human rights agitator whose admission to the University of Mississipp­i forced President John F. Kennedy to send federal troops into the state to quell a white supremacy uprising. It was one of the most violent moments of the Civil Rights Movement and Meredith’s determinat­ion to enroll in Ole Miss forever transforme­d life in the American Deep South.

Known as a bold, stubborn character from the movement, Meredith was later shot during a peaceful demonstrat­ion in Mississipp­i, and years later drew anger from civil rights leaders for endorsing former Klansman David Duke for Louisiana governor. He shunned interviews and openly supported former segregatio­nists he said he was helping transform.

But Meredith told the Associated Press on Tuesday he believed all of his actions in his life had been predestine­d by higher forces. “My life has always been according to a plan,” Meredith said. “And I was not the engineer of most the plan.”

Born in Kosciusko, Miss., Meredith graduated from high school in St. Petersburg, Fla., and enlisted in the U.S. Air Force, where he took courses at New Mexico Western College — now Western New Mexico University — in Silver City.

Those classes in New Mexico changed his life and set him on a path to become a writer. “It was the most important thing that ever happened to me,” Meredith said.

The experience in New Mexico also got him thinking of attending Ole Miss, an all-white college that barred Black students.

The documentar­y follows Meredith from his decision to challenge the University of Mississipp­i’s segregatio­nist policies and then a governor who personally tried to refuse to admit him.

Meredith eventually attended classes thanks to federal court orders only to see white students walk out in protest.

Later, he set out on a public Walk Against Fear in 1966 to prove that a Black man could walk peacefully in Mississipp­i. He was shot on the second day. AP photograph­er Jack Thornell captured a haunting image of Meredith grimacing in pain as he tried to pull himself across Highway 51 after being shot in Hernando, Miss.

“I didn’t feel anything,” Meredith recalled. “The only thing that mattered to me was that I wasn’t dead.”

Meredith said he had been reluctant to open up about his life but was pleased with a BBC project about him that involved Sol B. River, a British theater director and filmmaker. River approached Meredith about the documentar­y idea and he agreed.

“He’s an extremely intelligen­t and complex man,” said River, who spent years getting to know Meredith. “I hope that people will see this from the viewpoint from the first person ... almost as if they are James Meredith going through this.”

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? James Meredith greets a friend with a Black power salute in 2018. A new documentar­y examines the life of the activist, who took college classes in New Mexico before his historic enrollment at Ole Miss.
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO James Meredith greets a friend with a Black power salute in 2018. A new documentar­y examines the life of the activist, who took college classes in New Mexico before his historic enrollment at Ole Miss.

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