Texarkana Gazette

Survivor of 1979 Klan-Nazi attack hopes for a ‘justice river’

- By Martha Waggoner

GREENSBORO, N.C.—The Rev. Nelson Johnson needs no reminders of the massacre of five of his labor-activist friends almost 40 years ago—he still has the faded scar on his left arm, left by a Nazi who stabbed him as white supremacis­ts descended on a march for workers through black neighborho­ods in Greensboro.

But the violence surroundin­g the Aug. 12 march by Ku Klux Klansmen and Nazis in Charlottes­ville, Virginia, and the death of a young woman hit by a car there, brought the events of Nov. 3, 1979, in sharper focus for him. “I was horrified,” he said.

Johnson, now 74, was a member of the Workers Viewpoint Organizati­on, which planned a march through a public housing project in Greensboro before a labor conference on Nov. 3, 1979. While the focus was on workers, textile mill wages and brown lung disease, it was also billed as a “Death to the Klan” rally. Both the rally title and the organizati­on’s decision to rename itself the Communist Workers Party were mistakes, Johnson now acknowledg­es.

Nazis and Ku Klux Klansmen drove into the march and then fired at demonstrat­ors, and a report found that some demonstrat­ors also were armed and fired in response. Five marchers were killed and at least 10 people were wounded, including Johnson. Allwhite juries at two trials acquitted the Klan and Nazi members, who claimed self-defense. Testimony showed both the police and the then-Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms had been warned by informants about the Klan-Nazi plans.

Members of the Greensboro Police Department, along with Klan and Nazi members, were found liable at a civil trial for the death of one victim, and the city paid $351,000 to his family. The details were outlined in a report , completed in 2006 by the Greensboro Truth and Reconcilia­tion Commission.

A Nazi knifed Johnson’s left arm, which Johnson had used defensivel­y to prevent a more serious wound to his abdomen. A light scar, faded over 38 years, is barely visible, and Johnson can’t move one finger because where the knife sliced a muscle.

Early reports described the attack as an ambush, but the narrative changed quickly from that to one of equivalent blame for the marchers and the killers—similar to what President Donald Trump said this week about Charlottes­ville.

“To hear our president frame the issue this way was frightenin­gly familiar,” Johnson said.

Still, he’s optimistic about the public response and that of local and state leaders to the Charlottes­ville protest and death, compared to the way officials reacted in Greensboro in 1979.

“The response was much different,” he said. “The mayor, the governor, the leaders of Charlottes­ville all quickly of came to the defense of those who were brutalized and abused. Nothing approximat­ing that happened in Greensboro. And we were quickly isolated and alone.”

Change can be painful, Johnson said, but he’s convinced it is coming.

“There are going to be, in the process of social transforma­tion, suffering and tragedies,” Johnson said, standing underneath the marker. “I do think, though, that when you can transform tragedy into triumph, it forms a justice stream. And as those justice streams begin to merge, it forms a justice river.”

Rivers, Johnson said, have power to alter the landscape.

“And that’s what I think this period is calling us to,” he said.

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