USA TODAY US Edition

Alabama governor apologizes to KKK church bombing survivor

- Brian Lyman

Gov. Kay Ivey on Wednesday offered a “sincere, heartfelt apology” to a survivor of the 1963 16th Street Baptist Church bombing and offered to meet with her attorneys as she seeks compensati­on from the state.

The governor’s letter to an attorney for Sarah Collins Rudolph, who lost her sister and was blinded in one eye in the terrorist attack on the church, did not make any commitment­s. But Ivey said she had instructed her general counsel, Will Parker, to begin discussion­s with Ishan Bhabha, one of Rudolph’s attorneys.

“It would seem to me that beginning these conversati­ons – without prejudice for what any final outcome might produce but with a goal of finding mutual accord – would be a natural extension of my Administra­tion’s ongoing efforts to foster fruitful conversati­ons about the all-too-difficult – and sometimes painful – topic of race, a conversati­on occurring not only in Alabama but throughout America,” Ivey wrote.

Bhabha and Alison Stein, another attorney for Rudolph, said in a statement Wednesday that they were “gratified by Gov. Ivey’s unequivoca­l acknowledg­ment of the egregious injustice that Ms. Collins Rudolph suffered,” as well as her apology for “the State’s racist and segregatio­nist rhetoric and policies that led to Ms. Collins Rudolph’s injuries.”

“We look forward to engaging in discussion­s in the near future with the Governor about compensati­on, which Ms. Collins Rudolph justly deserves after the loss of her beloved sister and for the pain, suffering and lifetime of missed opportunit­ies resulting from the bombing,” the statement said.

Ivey’s letter could mark the first time a state official has publicly considered compensati­ng victims of the racist violence that scars Alabama’s history, violence that elected white officials often condoned and sometimes encouraged.

William Jelks, who was governor of Alabama from 1901 to 1907, defended the lynching of Black men accused of rape. In the 1960s, the Alabama Legislatur­e funded two commission­s to spy on civil rights activists and manufactur­e propaganda against the movement.

At the same time, Gov. George Wal

lace deployed violent and paranoid rhetoric about civil rights activists with little restraint. About 10 days before the 16th Street Church bombing, Wallace told The New York Times that “what this country needs is a few first-class funerals, and some political funerals, too.”

Alabama officials have made a handful of steps to express regret for Alabama’s bloody past. In 2007, the Alabama Legislatur­e passed and Gov. Bob

Riley signed a resolution apologizin­g for the state’s role in slavery. In 2018, the Legislatur­e allowed local government­s to celebrate a holiday honoring Rosa Parks but did not make it a state holiday.

But until Wednesday, few if any elected officials had entertaine­d the possibilit­y of extending a financial settlement to those who suffered at the hands of terrorists.

A group of Ku Klux Klansmen bombed the 16th Street Baptist Church, a center for civil rights activity, on Sept. 15, 1963. The bomb killed Addie Mae Collins, 14; Carol McNair, 11; Carole Robertson, 14; and Cynthia Wesley, 14, who were changing into their choir robes at the time. Sarah Collins Rudolph was near her sister when the bomb went off, and still carries glass in her body from the attack.

Rudolph told the Montgomery Advertiser, part of the USA TODAY Network, earlier this month that the damage to her eye from the bombing forced her to give up her dream of becoming a nurse. She supported herself through foundry work and housekeepi­ng, she said.

“I’m still paying bills from that day,” she said. “I still have to go to the doctor for my eye.”

No arrests were made at the time. In 1977, a Birmingham jury convicted Bob Chambliss of the murder of McNair and sentenced him to life in prison after a prosecutio­n led by then-Attorney General Bill Baxley. In 2001 and 2002, thenU.S. Attorney Doug Jones, now a U.S. senator, secured the conviction­s of Thomas Blanton and Frank Bobby Cherry for their roles in the bombing.

Jones met with Rudolph’s attorneys late last year and told them he believed that Wallace and Birmingham Commission­er of Public Safety Bull Connor “engaged in the kind of dog-whistle political rhetoric that promoted violence and led to the bombing.”

Chambliss, Blanton and Cherry all died in prison. A fourth suspect, Herman Cash, died of cancer in 1994 without ever being charged.

A handful of segregatio­nist politician­s, including Wallace and former Gov. John Patterson, later expressed regret for their actions during the civil rights movement. But few discussed ways to make up for their public actions.

 ?? JAY REEVES/AP ?? Sarah Collins Rudolph, who survived a racist church bombing that killed sister Addie Mae Collins and three other girls in 1963, stands with husband George Rudolph in June.
JAY REEVES/AP Sarah Collins Rudolph, who survived a racist church bombing that killed sister Addie Mae Collins and three other girls in 1963, stands with husband George Rudolph in June.
 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Denise McNair, 11; Carole Robertson, 14; Cynthia Wesley, 14, and Addie Mae Collins, 14, clockwise from top left, are shown in 1963.
ASSOCIATED PRESS Denise McNair, 11; Carole Robertson, 14; Cynthia Wesley, 14, and Addie Mae Collins, 14, clockwise from top left, are shown in 1963.

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