South Florida Sun-Sentinel (Sunday)

CONSCIENCE OF THE CONGRESS

A longtime lion of civil rights, he was the last of the Big Six activists

- By Calvin Woodward

ATLANTA — John Lewis, a lion of the civil rights movement whose bloody beating by Alabama state troopers in 1965 helped galvanize opposition to racial segregatio­n, and who went on to a long and celebrated career in Congress, died. He was 80.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi confirmed Lewis’ passing Friday night, calling him “one of the greatest heroes of American history.”

“All of us were humbled to call Congressma­n Lewis a colleague,

and are heartbroke­n by his passing,” Pelosi said. “May his memory be an inspiratio­n that moves us all to, in the face of injustice, make ‘good trouble, necessary trouble.’ ”

Lewis’ announceme­nt in late

December 2019 that he had been diagnosed with advanced pancreatic cancer — “I have never faced a fight quite like the one I have now,” he said — inspired tributes from both sides of the aisle, and an unstated accord that the likely passing of this Atlanta Democrat would represent the end of an era.

Lewis was the youngest and last

survivor of the Big Six civil rights activists, a group led by the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. that had the greatest impact on the movement. He was best known for leading some 600 protesters in the Bloody Sunday march across the Edmund Pettus Bridge in Selma.

At age 25 — walking at the head of the march with his hands tucked in the pockets of his tan overcoat — Lewis was knocked to the ground and beaten by police. His skull was fractured, and nationally televised images of the brutality forced the country’s attention on racial oppression in the South.

Within days, King led more marches in the state, and President Lyndon Johnson soon was pressing Congress to pass the Voting Rights Act. The bill became law later that year, removing barriers that had barred Blacks from voting.

“John is an American hero who helped lead a movement and risked his life for our most fundamenta­l rights; he bears scars that attest to his indefatiga­ble spirit and persistenc­e,” House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer said after Lewis announced his cancer diagnosis.

Lewis joined King and four other civil rights leaders in organizing the 1963 March on Washington. He spoke to the vast crowd just before King delivered his epochal “I Have a Dream” speech.

A 23-year-old firebrand, Lewis toned down his intended remarks at the insistence of others, dropping a reference to a “scorched earth” march through the South and scaling back criticisms of President John Kennedy. It was a potent speech nonetheles­s, in which he vowed: “By the forces of our demands, our determinat­ion and our numbers, we shall splinter the segregated South into a thousand pieces and put them together in an image of God and democracy.”

It was almost immediatel­y, and forever, overshadow­ed by the words of King, the man who had inspired him to activism.

Lewis was born on Feb.

21, 1940, outside the town of Troy, in Pike County, Alabama. He grew up on his family’s farm and attended segregated public schools.

As a boy, he wanted to be a minister, and practiced his oratory on the family chickens. Denied a library card because of the color of his skin, he became an avid reader, and could cite obscure historical dates and details even in his later years. He was a teenager when he first heard King preaching on the radio. They met when Lewis was seeking support to become the first Black student at Alabama’s segregated Troy State University.

He ultimately attended the American Baptist Theologica­l Seminary and Fisk University in Nashville, Tennessee. He began organizing sit-in demonstrat­ions at whites-only lunch counters and volunteeri­ng as a Freedom Rider, enduring beatings and arrests while traveling around the South to challenge segregatio­n.

Lewis helped found the Student Nonviolent Coordinati­ng Committee and was named its chairman in

1963, making him one of the Big Six at a tender age. The others, in addition to King, were Whitney Young of the National Urban League; A. Philip Randolph of the Negro American Labor Council; James L. Farmer Jr., of the Congress of Racial Equality; and Roy Wilkins of the NAACP. All six met at the Roosevelt Hotel in New York to plan and announce the March on Washington.

The huge demonstrat­ion galvanized the movement, but success didn’t come quickly. After extensive training in nonviolent protest, Lewis and the Rev. Hosea Williams led demonstrat­ors on a planned march of more than 50 miles from Selma to Montgomery, Alabama’s capital, on March 7, 1965. A phalanx of police blocked their exit from the Selma bridge.

Authoritie­s shoved, then swung their truncheons, fired tear gas and charged on horseback, sending many to the hospital and horrifying much of the nation. King returned with thousands, completing the march to Montgomery before the end of the month.

Lewis turned to politics in 1981, when he was elected to the Atlanta City Council.

He won his seat in Congress in 1986 and spent much of his career in the minority. After Democrats won control of the House in 2006, Lewis became his party’s senior deputy whip, a behind-the-scenes leadership post in which he helped keep the party unified.

In an early setback for Barack Obama’s 2008 Democratic primary campaign, Lewis endorsed Hillary Rodham Clinton for the nomination. Lewis switched when it became clear Obama had overwhelmi­ng Black support. Obama later honored Lewis with the Presidenti­al Medal of Freedom, and they marched hand in hand in Selma on the 50th anniversar­y of the Bloody Sunday attack.

Lewis also worked for 15 years to gain approval for the Smithsonia­n’s National Museum of African American History and Culture. Humble and unfailingl­y friendly, Lewis was revered on Capitol Hill — but as one of the most liberal members of Congress, he often lost policy battles, from his effort to stop the Iraq War to his defense of young immigrants.

He met bipartisan success in Congress in 2006 when he led efforts to renew the Voting Rights Act, but the Supreme Court later invalidate­d much of the law, and it became once again what it was in his youth, a work in progress. Later, when the presidency of Donald Trump challenged his civil rights legacy, Lewis made no effort to hide his pain.

Lewis refused to attend Trump’s inaugurati­on, saying he didn’t consider him a “legitimate president” because Russians had conspired to get him elected. When Trump later complained about immigrants from “s---hole countries,” Lewis declared, “I think he is a racist we have to try to stand up and speak up and not try to sweep it under the rug.”

Lewis said he’d been arrested 40 times in the

1960s, five more as a congressma­n. At 78, he told a rally he’d do it again to help reunite immigrant families separated by the Trump administra­tion.

“There cannot be any peace in America until these young children are returned to their parents and set all of our people free,” Lewis said in June, recalling the “good trouble” he got into protesting segregatio­n as a young man.

“If we fail to do it, history will not be kind to us,” he shouted. “I will go to the border. I’ll get arrested again. If necessary, I’m prepared to go to jail.”

In a speech the day of the House impeachmen­t vote of Trump, Lewis explained the importance of that vote.

“When you see something that is not right, not just, not fair, you have a moral obligation to say something, to do something. Our children and their children will ask us, ‘What did you do? What did you say?’ ”

While the vote would be hard for some, he said: “We have a mission and a mandate to be on the right side of history.”

Lewis’ wife of four decades, Lillian Miles, died in

2012. They had one son, John Miles Lewis.

“When you see something that is not right, not just, not fair, you have a moral obligation to say something, to do something. Our children and their children will ask us, ‘What did you do? What did you say?’ ”

 ?? MARK MAKELA/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Rep. John Lewis took a mantle of authority from a life of fighting for equality into Congress.
MARK MAKELA/THE NEW YORK TIMES Rep. John Lewis took a mantle of authority from a life of fighting for equality into Congress.
 ?? ALEX WONG/GETTY-AFP 2011 ?? Lewis is presented with the Medal of Freedom by President Barack Obama during an event at the White House.
ALEX WONG/GETTY-AFP 2011 Lewis is presented with the Medal of Freedom by President Barack Obama during an event at the White House.
 ?? AP 1965 ?? John Lewis, right, links arms with aides of Martin Luther King Jr. as King leads a march in Montgomery, Alabama.
AP 1965 John Lewis, right, links arms with aides of Martin Luther King Jr. as King leads a march in Montgomery, Alabama.
 ?? AP 1965 ?? A state trooper swings a billy club at Lewis, right, to break up a civil rights voting march in Selma, Alabama.
AP 1965 A state trooper swings a billy club at Lewis, right, to break up a civil rights voting march in Selma, Alabama.
 ?? ROBERT DUYOS/SOUTH FLORIDA SUN SENTINEL 2014 ?? Lewis, left, walks out before a speech to rally fellow Democrats about the importance of getting out to vote.
ROBERT DUYOS/SOUTH FLORIDA SUN SENTINEL 2014 Lewis, left, walks out before a speech to rally fellow Democrats about the importance of getting out to vote.
 ?? EMILY MICHOT/MIAMI HERALD 2017 ?? Lewis speaks at the 5000 Role Models of Excellence breakfast at Jungle Island on Martin Luther King Jr. Day in Miami.
EMILY MICHOT/MIAMI HERALD 2017 Lewis speaks at the 5000 Role Models of Excellence breakfast at Jungle Island on Martin Luther King Jr. Day in Miami.

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