Los Angeles Times

‘LET THE PEOPLE SEE’

Could photos from Uvalde be gun control’s ‘Emmett Till moment’?

- By Marissa Evans

When Ollie Gordon scrolls through social media and her emails, the notificati­ons always come in like clockwork.

The Google alerts she set up for her cousin Emmett Till’s name often surge after mass shootings or incidents of Black people like Trayvon Martin or George Floyd being killed. When she reads comments on Instagram or Facebook, the phrase “Emmett Till moment” is a constant as people turn to social media for solace and community in the aftermath of high-profile violence.

“Anything that happens, trust me, Emmett’s name comes up,” Gordon said.

“We have that moment every day, every time there’s a killing,” she said, adding that she is unsurprise­d when people make comparison­s to Emmett.

Emmett was 14 when he was kidnapped, beaten, shot, lynched and dumped in a river while visiting family in Mississipp­i in the summer of 1955, after he was accused of whistling at Carolyn Bryant, a white woman. The two white

men, one of them Bryant’s husband, who killed Emmett were acquitted by an all-white jury.

Mamie Till Mobley, Emmett’s mother, invited Jet magazine to photograph her son’s mutilated face during an open casket funeral, where she famously said “let the people see” what happened to him. The brutal photo, released just as television was becoming popular and long before social media, shocked the nation and fueled the civil rights movement.

While Emmett’s murder exposed the state’s inherent violence against Black people, his youth also galvanized widespread outrage.

Now, as the nation mourns the Uvalde, Texas, school shooting, where 19 children and two teachers were killed by a gunman in a classroom last month, some people believe an “Emmett Till moment” could change the course of the country’s gun control debate, by illustrati­ng the bloody and deadly impact of firearms.

The idea of communitie­s and lawmakers seeing gruesome photos or videos of the dead children has raised questions about whether it might bolster long-awaited traction on gun control measures at state and federal levels.

But opponents of the tactic say it could intensify the trauma of grieving families or fuel misinforma­tion and disinforma­tion campaigns such as when InfoWars founder Alex Jones called the 2012 shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Conn., a hoax.

Gordon, who is also president of the Mamie Till Mobley Foundation, has heard the arguments, but said she doesn’t know if showing images of gunned-down children would change people’s minds on gun control.

“I don’t think that opening the casket today, in this time, would have had the same effect that it had 67 years ago,” Gordon said. “The world can see everything now. It’s on social media, it’s on internatio­nal news, so everybody is very aware and can see firsthand what is actually going on.”

Two years ago, when Gordon first saw the video of Floyd fighting to breathe in Minneapoli­s, she was unable to escape it because television stations kept replaying the footage of him dying.

“I had to close my eyes and just turn the channel, and my heart went out for his family that had to be subjected to that every single day on the hour,” Gordon said. “You can’t shield the youth, the young children, from it because they have access to it .... I think maybe you do become, in order to survive, maybe you do become a little bit desensitiz­ed.”

After the Uvalde shooting, David Boardman, dean of the Klein College of Media and Communicat­ion at Temple University in Philadelph­ia and former executive editor and senior vice president of the Seattle Times, said this is the time for newsrooms to consider publishing the graphic photos. He said seeing the children’s smiling faces, learning details about them and watching interviews of grieving families have allowed too much distance from “the horrendous reality” of gun violence.

“I can’t imagine that most Americans would look at a photograph ... [of] the damage that an assault weapon does to a child’s body, and then not be horrified,” he said. “I refuse to believe that people are that desensitiz­ed.”

Boardman said Darnella Frazier’s cellphone video of Floyd dying under the knee of a police officer showed “the power of actually visually witnessing the reality” of police misconduct. And the emotional sacrifice Emmett’s mother made to release photos from his funeral not only raised public awareness, but also was “a real testament to her courage.”

Yet Boardman often took a more conservati­ve approach when he was leading a newsroom; he was cautious about retraumati­zing victims’ families and other victims of violence.

If he were in a newsroom today, Boardman said, he would be “really careful and deliberate” by waiting to ask families for such photos, obtaining their permission and having a thorough discussion with them about the potential impacts.

As the Uvalde families began burying their slain children, most opted for open caskets, with no visible injuries showing, or adorned the closed caskets — custom-made for each shooting victim — with photos from their children’s lives.

“If we’re dependent on something as sensitive as viewing the remains of dead children to be better, that in and of itself speaks to I think an absence of sensitivit­y on the part of society,” said Benjamin Saulsberry, public engagement director for the Emmett Till Interpreti­ve Center, a Mississipp­i organizati­on focused on promoting racial justice and educating people on the history of Emmett’s death.

It’s “admirable” that people look to Mobley’s legacy, but given the years since Emmett’s photo was released “it’s easy” for people to look at books, shows or other sources without weighing the nuances of her decision, Saulsberry said. He noted it’s important for people to not tell families how to mourn or channel their own grief, regardless of the circumstan­ces.

“We have to be careful not to look at the tragedy that folks have faced in times past and look at how they coped and survived to then say, ‘Well, the answer to this is to do what they did,’ ” Saulsberry said.

Wheeler Parker Jr., Emmett’s cousin and the last living witness to his kidnapping, said he agreed with Mobley’s decision to release Emmett’s photo, but noted that the image did not effect change right away. For decades afterward, he said people believed Emmett “got what he deserved.”

He said while “we need something done in America to shock or get the fire in our belly about the gun problem” he’s unsure if releasing graphic photos of the children would be an effective solution, though he wouldn’t be opposed to the idea. The problem, he said, is “America was founded on violence, and it’s hard to get away from that.”

Parker pointed to visiting Washington, D.C., in March to watch President Biden sign the Emmett Till AntiLynchi­ng Act, a version of the bill that took more than 100 years and 200 failed attempts for Congress to pass.

“One thing I learned, you’ve got to have a lot of patience,” Parker said. “You got to persevere and you got to have tenacity to get things changed.”

Shocking people with the release of graphic photos won’t necessaril­y create change, said Mark Barden, whose son Daniel was one of the 20 children killed during the Sandy Hook shooting.

Showing the photos may inspire people to commit violent acts based on the grotesque imagery, said Barden, who is co-founder and managing director of Sandy Hook Promise, an organizati­on focused on preventing violence and training schools and communitie­s about issues such as social isolation and suicide prevention.

“I just think that folks are desperate to try to do something, anything they can to stop this shooting epidemic that we are suffering in this country, and I think they’re just trying to grasp at anything that might move the needle,” he said.

After his son was shot to death, the only time he thought about releasing the photos was when families began lobbying the state Legislatur­e to shield the pictures from the public record.

In 2015, then Connecticu­t Gov. Daniel P. Malloy signed a bill exempting photograph­s, film, video and other images of homicide victims from being part of public records law.

“I can’t risk the toll of the lifelong damage that could possibly represent for everyone, but first especially for my personal family and for Daniel’s siblings,” he said. “I just feel like, if anyone did release photograph­ic evidence like that, would we still be saying, ‘If that didn’t do it, what will?’ ”

When considerin­g how Emmett’s name has been connected to what happened to the Uvalde shooting victims, it’s important to emphasize how his mother came to the decision, said Dr. Denese Shervingto­n, chair of psychiatry and behavioral medicine at Charles R. Drew University of Medicine and Science in Willowbroo­k.

She said Emmett being mentioned is unsurprisi­ng because Mobley’s willingnes­s to allow people to see her grief and how her son died has stayed with people over decades.

Shervingto­n said releasing images of violence may harm children’s mental health, causing potential sleeplessn­ess, anxiousnes­s, depression or becoming withdrawn.

But if any shooting victims’ families make a decision like Mobley’s, people should not necessaril­y look away, she said. In this case, part of people taking care of themselves is “emotionall­y feeling” the impact of mass shootings and “letting that emotion take us to where we need to go.”

“There’s a lot of avoidance of feelings in this culture; we just move on, we don’t hang in our pain, we take drugs to relieve it, we never really sit with suffering,” Shervingto­n said. “Maybe this is a time for us, collective­ly, to see this as a collective trauma in our culture, and to sit with the pain of it, and then let that pain work through us and move us into action.”

Gordon — who then lived in the same house with her family, Emmett and Mobley — was 7 when Emmett died. It was her family’s first experience with death. Her parents and Mobley shielded her from what was going on, even though she knew something bad had happened to Emmett, she said. She wasn’t allowed to go to his funeral.

“We were already frightened and thinking that the white people was gonna come and get us and kill us,” Gordon recalled. “We were children; we didn’t really understand the dynamics of it, but as we got older, we started to relate and understand.”

Gordon did not see the image of Emmett’s battered face until she was in eighth grade and remembers it now as “grotesque and disturbing.” She happened to see it while trying to give a school report and broke down sobbing in class.

She’s glad Mobley allowed the photos of him to be released, because it helped more people understand the violence Black people were facing and to join the fight for civil rights. But Gordon says the image of Emmett’s face still weighs on her.

“It did have a devastatin­g effect on me,” Gordon said. “Even now, when I see things and hear things, it still brings tears to my eyes.”

 ?? Associated Press ?? EMMETT Till was killed in 1955. Images of his mutilated
body shocked the nation.
Associated Press EMMETT Till was killed in 1955. Images of his mutilated body shocked the nation.
 ?? MAMIE TILL MOBLEY Chicago Sun-Times ?? at her son’s 1955 funeral in Chicago. Mobley invited Jet magazine to photograph Emmett’s mutilated face.
MAMIE TILL MOBLEY Chicago Sun-Times at her son’s 1955 funeral in Chicago. Mobley invited Jet magazine to photograph Emmett’s mutilated face.

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