The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

‘Sick and tired’ sharecropp­er became force

Fannie Lou Hamer’s words helped highlight struggles of blacks.

- By Janel Davis jhdavis@ajc.com

By the time civil rights activist Fannie Lou Hamer delivered her famous line, “I am sick and tired of being sick and tired,” she had lived through more hardship than most people combined.

If fact, Hamer’s entire life was hard.

She was born the 20th child of Mississipp­i Delta sharecropp­ers and followed her parents into the cotton fields at age 6. By about age 12, she dropped out of school to work full time in the fields.

In 1962, at age 45, after marriage and many more years of eking out a living in the Mississipp­i fields, Hamer’s life changed forever. She decided to attend a protest meeting led by activists working to get black people reg-

istered to vote.

In just two years, Hamer went from a field hand to a vocal leader in her area, protesting for equal rights and helping with voting rights efforts for blacks in Mississipp­i. She eventually became a worker for the Student Non- violent Coordinati­ng Committee and in 1964 helped found the Mississipp­i Freedom Democratic Party, establishe­d in opposition to the state’s all-white delegation to that year’s Democratic convention.

But the new job was not without its own hardships.

Early on, her family lost their home and car when their landowner found out Hamer was trying to register to vote. According to The New York Times, she said: “They kicked me off the plantation, they set me free. It’s the best thing that could happen. Now I can work for my people.”

When her husband couldn’t find work, the couple and their two daughters — who Hamer took in from another sharecropp­ing fam- ily who couldn’t afford to raise them — lived for a time on her $10 monthly stipend from SNCC.

Her activist work also led to her being beaten, shot at

and arrested. During a stint in a Winona, Miss., jail in 1963, she was severely beaten with a blackjack that left her with permanent kidney damage.

Still, Hamer used her voice to highlight her struggles and those of other Mississipp­i and Southern blacks during a televised session at the Democratic convention, and she took her mes

sage across the country. When she delivered her famous “sick and tired” line, Hamer was in a Harlem church, speaking alongside other activists — includ

ing Malcolm X — imploring Northern blacks to help in the plight of Southern blacks.

Hamer died in 1977 after battling breast cancer for a year. “None of us would be where we are today had she not been here then,” Andrew Young said in giving her eulogy, according to The New York Times.

Inscribed on her tombstone is her famous quote, “I am sick and tired of being sick and tired.”

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Fannie Lou Hamer of Sunflower County testifies before Senate subcommitt­ee on poverty in Mississipp­i on April 10, 1967. The Rev. Killingswo­rth, another witness, is in the background.
ASSOCIATED PRESS Fannie Lou Hamer of Sunflower County testifies before Senate subcommitt­ee on poverty in Mississipp­i on April 10, 1967. The Rev. Killingswo­rth, another witness, is in the background.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States