The Week (US)

Editor’s letter

- William Falk

In 1955, 14-year-old Emmett Till of Chicago was visiting family in Mississipp­i when he was kidnapped by a group of white men who accused him of flirting with a white woman. They beat him bloody, gouged out his eye, shot him in the head, mutilated his body, and dumped it in the Tallahatch­ie River. (The men were later acquitted.) His mother chose to have an open-casket viewing, and to let Jet, an African-American magazine, photograph her son’s brutalized remains. “It forced America to see— for the first time—what American racism actually looked like,” said Benjamin Saulsberry, director of the Emmett Till Interpreti­ve Center in Mississipp­i. That image, and the shame and disgust it evoked, launched the civil rights era. Years of sit-ins, protests, and confrontat­ions with police finally toppled Jim Crow segregatio­n, and culminated in the Civil Rights Act of 1964. And now, after Americans watched a kneeling white police officer nonchalant­ly crush the life out of George Floyd, we’ve come to another

Emmett Till moment—a reckoning.

The passionate, multiracia­l protests that have filled the streets of more than 1,000 U.S. cities and towns will not end racism. But as Mahatma Gandhi taught, shame and moral revulsion can be powerful weapons against oppression. In the past week, we have seen police chiefs taking a knee with Black Lives Matter protesters. Cities and Congress are moving toward major reform of policing. A near-insurrecti­on broke out among current and retired generals after President Trump sought to bring in active-duty troops to “dominate” the protesters, à la Tiananmen Square. (See Controvers­y.) Confederat­e statues and flags are finally coming down. In a Monmouth University poll, 76 percent of Americans called racism “a big problem” in the U.S.—up 26 points since 2015. No one can unsee the knee on George Floyd’s neck, or unhear his cry, “I can’t breathe.” Change is slow, and change is wrenching, but change is coming.

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