Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

A shameful past

Lynching finally considered a federal crime

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It took 120 years and nearly 5,000 innocent deaths, but Congress finally acknowledg­ed the nation’s inexcusabl­e past by approving legislatio­n to make lynching a hate crime under federal law.

The shame of taking more than a century to classify one of the most barbaric acts of hatred as a federal crime remains a stain on the legislativ­e process, but the Emmett Till Antilynchi­ng Act at least takes a stand against future instances of bigotry and racial violence.

Rep. Bobby Rush, D-Ill., who introduced the bill, said it would belatedly bring justice for Emmett Till and the thousands of other lynching victims.

Emmett, a black 14-year-old, was brutally tortured and lynched in Mississipp­i in 1955, supposedly for whistling at a white woman in a grocery store. His death shocked the nation and helped drive the growing civil rights movement.

Despite the moral outrage, Congress remained steadfastl­y opposed to classifyin­g lynchings as federal crimes. The rationale from opponents, largely from Southern states, was that such crimes were matters for the state to handle, not the federal government.

There’s no small measure of contemptib­le hypocrisy to be found there, considerin­g that lynchings largely went unprosecut­ed in the South for decades. From 1882 to 1968, 4,743 people were lynched in the United States, of which 3,446 were black, according to statistics compiled by the NAACP. Many of the nearly 1,300 white people who were lynched died because they had the audacity to help a black person or because they took a moral stand against lynchings.

The first effort at federal antilynchi­ng legislatio­n came in 1900 under a proposal from North Carolina Republican Rep. George Henry White, the lone black member of Congress. The bill failed, as would some 200 similar proposals over the next 12 decades. Even while Congress found the will to pass the Civil Rights Act, the anti-lynching bills stalled, falling victim to the debate over whether the states or federal government should have jurisdicti­on in such crimes.

While lawmakers debated, the lynchings went on, often viewed as community gatherings, a spectacle to be seen and photograph­ed. Archived photos show black men hanging from trees, or their bodies being burned, often with crowds of white people standing by and smiling for the camera.

The anti-lynching legislatio­n passed nearly unanimousl­y in the House, as did similar legislatio­n last year in the Senate. Though largely symbolic — the last recorded lynching in the United States took place in 1981 — it represents a long-overdue tribute to those who were killed not for a crime, but for the color of their skin.

House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer, D-Md., in urging the passage of the bill, said: “It’s never too late to do the right thing and address these gruesome, racially motivated acts of terror that have plagued our nation’s history.”

He’s right, but shame on us as a nation for taking so long to do the right thing.

 ?? Associated Press ?? This undated file photo shows Emmett Till, a 14-year-old black Chicago boy, whose body was found in the Tallahatch­ie River near the Delta community of Money, Miss., Aug. 31, 1955.
Associated Press This undated file photo shows Emmett Till, a 14-year-old black Chicago boy, whose body was found in the Tallahatch­ie River near the Delta community of Money, Miss., Aug. 31, 1955.

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