The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Activism grows its own leaders

- By Sarah Silkey

The recent wave of protests against police brutality and systemic racism has inspired numerous comparison­s with the civil rights movement of the 1950s and 1960s.

Commentato­rs frequently depict the charismati­c leadership of Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. and Malcolm X in sharp contrast with the decentrali­zed and seemingly leaderless nature of the current movement.

Despite the efforts of activists and historians to correct this “leaderless” image, the notion persists. Such comparison­s reflect the cultural memory — not the actual history — of the struggle for Black equality.

Through collective rememberin­g and forgetting, societies build narratives of the past to create a shared identity — what scholars refer to as cultural memory.

The civil rights movement is remembered as a heroic struggle against injustice led by charismati­c men. That is not the whole story.

King’s soaring rhetoric and Malcolm’s unflinchin­g social critiques have supplanted recollecti­on of the significan­t work performed by legions of local leaders, whose grassroots organizati­onal style more closely resembled the efforts of Black Lives Matter activists and other contempora­ry social justice groups to build movements full of leaders.

The iconic images of 1950s and ’60s Black protesters marching, kneeling and being arrested while dressed in their “Sunday best” illustrate­d the respectabi­lity politics of the day.

These efforts, designed to cultivate white sympathy for civil rights activists, relied on conformity with patriarcha­l gender roles that elevated men to positions of visible leadership, confined women to the background and banished LGBTQ individual­s to the closet.

Yet the movement could not have happened without the extraordin­ary leadership of Black women like veteran organizer Ella Baker. Baker’s model of grassroots activism and empowermen­t for young and marginaliz­ed people became the driving force of the Student Nonviolent Coordinati­ng Committee, known as SNCC, and other nonviolent protest organizati­ons, past and present.

The decentrali­zed structure of the current movement builds on this history of grassroots activism while working to avoid replicatin­g the entrenched sexism and homophobia of an earlier era.

Amplifying voices

SNCC transforme­d lives by recognizin­g talent and empowering marginaliz­ed people. As Joe Martin, one of the organizers of a student walkout in McComb, Mississipp­i, recalled, “If you had a good idea it was accepted regardless of what your social status was.”

Endesha Ida Mae Holland, a teenage prostitute, found purpose as a SNCC field secretary, organizing

The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on wants to explain openly to readers what we do and why.

Discuss this column and The Atlanta JournalCon­stitution’s coverage of other areas at editor Kevin Riley’s Facebook page, facebook.com/ajceditor. and leading marches in Greenwood, Mississipp­i. Facing down Police Chief Curtis Lary “made me feel so proud,” she recalled, and “people start looking up into my face, into my eyes” with respect. Holland went on to become an award-winning playwright and distinguis­hed university professor.

Black Lives Matter co-founders Alicia Garza and Patrisse Cullors also encourage strategies that place marginaliz­ed voices at the center.

Elevating “Black trans people, Black queer people, Black immigrants, Black incarcerat­ed people and formerly incarcerat­ed people, Black millennial­s, Black women, low-income Black people, and Black people with disabiliti­es” to leadership roles, they wrote, “allows for leadership to emerge from our intersecti­ng identities, rather than to be organized around one notion of Blackness.”

Black women and teens have played a critical role in organizing, leading and maintainin­g the momentum of recent protests.

Kimberly Jones captured the nation’s attention with an impassione­d takedown of institutio­nal racism and debates over appropriat­e forms of protest. After repeatedly breaking the social contract to keep wealth and opportunit­y out of reach for black communitie­s, Jones concludes, white Americans “are lucky that what Black people are looking for is equality and not revenge.”

Women have organized family-friendly demonstrat­ions, including the “Black Mamas March” in Charlotte, North Carolina, and a “Black Kids Matter” protest in Hartford, Connecticu­t.

Six young women, aged 14 to 16, organized a peaceful protest attracting more than 10,000 people in Nashville, Tennessee, while 17-year-old Tiana Day led a march on the Golden Gate Bridge in San Francisco.

Full of leaders

The adaptive “low ego/ high impact” leadership model, in which leaders serve as coaches helping groups build their own solutions, has become popular among current social justice organizati­ons, but it is not new.

Baker encouraged civil rights organizati­ons to “develop individual­s” and provide “an opportunit­y for them to grow.” She praised SNCC for “working with indigenous people, not working for them.”

“You don’t have to worry about where your leaders are,” former SNCC organizer Robert Moses reflected. “If you go out and work with your people, then the leadership will emerge.”

Campaigns are exhausting and external recognitio­n as a “leader” can take a heavy toll. Spreading leadership around helps to protect any one person from becoming a target for retaliatio­n while advancing a stream of talent to rise as individual energy wanes.

Returning from a citizenshi­p training program in Charleston, South Carolina, in 1963, Fannie Lou Hamer was arrested and severely beaten, leaving her with permanent injuries. Holland’s mother died when their house in Greenwood, Mississipp­i, was bombed in 1965 in retaliatio­n for her activism.

Civil rights worker Anne Moody recounted how the physical and psychologi­cal toll of constant harassment by white supremacis­ts in 1963 forced her to leave a voter registrati­on drive in Canton, Mississipp­i, saying “I was on the verge of a breakdown” and “would have died from lack of sleep and nervousnes­s” had she stayed “another week.”

In a 2017 interview, Erica Garner, who became a relentless campaigner against police brutality after her father, Eric Garner, died from a New York police officer’s chokehold in 2014, echoed Moody’s comments.

“I’m struggling right now with the stress and everything . ... The system beats you down to where you can’t win,” she said. Just three weeks after that interview, Erica Garner died of a heart attack at the age of 27.

Comparison to the romanticiz­ed cultural memory of charismati­c leadership in the Civil Rights Movement devalues the hard work of today’s activists — as well as those who worked hard outside of the limelight in the earlier movement.

Social change — then and now — derives from a critical mass of local work throughout the nation. Those who cannot find leaders in this movement are not looking hard enough.

 ?? JAKE CRANDALL / MONTGOMERY ADVERTISER ?? Grace Jackson greets Mayor Steven Reed at a Black Lives Matter protest in Montgomery: “We are the legacy of the civil rights movement.”
JAKE CRANDALL / MONTGOMERY ADVERTISER Grace Jackson greets Mayor Steven Reed at a Black Lives Matter protest in Montgomery: “We are the legacy of the civil rights movement.”
 ??  ?? Silkey
Silkey

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States