USA TODAY US Edition

USA TODAY event explores racism, systems of power

- From Staff Reports

On March 27, 1961, nine Black college students sat at tables at a whites-only library and helped change the course of American history. The students, enrolled at Tougaloo College in Jackson, Mississipp­i, were quickly arrested, sparking a freedom movement that inspired young people at other historical­ly Black colleges and universiti­es across the nation to rally against segregatio­n.

Sixty years later, USA TODAY is inviting readers to examine how racism continues to shape our country in a free virtual event, “Freedom Now: How Institutio­ns of Power Fuel and Stall Change.”

USA TODAY is collaborat­ing with Tougaloo College for this conversati­on on the roles law enforcemen­t, media, government and education leaders serve in civil rights movements. The event is scheduled for Wednesday, Sept. 29, at 7 p.m. EDT. Register at https:// bit.ly/3k7YiwF.

The event is part of USA TODAY’s “Seven Days of 1961” project, which spotlights seven pivotal protests in 1961 that fueled the civil rights movement and helped end legal segregatio­n and extend voting rights to millions of Black Americans.

This project arrives more than a year after the deaths of George Floyd, Breonna Taylor, Ahmaud Arbery and many other Black Americans. It comes amid a divisive national debate over systemic racism, equal access to the voting booth, how we teach American history and what role institutio­ns such as the police, media and government serve in making our society safe and fair for all.

The “Freedom Now” event is inspired by mass meetings held in Black communitie­s to end segregatio­n. These gatherings served to keep hope alive through song, prayer and testimony.

It will feature a musical performanc­e from Charles Neblett, one of the original Freedom Singers, a group formed in 1962 to raise money for the Student Nonviolent Coordinati­ng Committee, one of the most prominent organizati­ons of the era. Tracy K. Smith, a Pulitzer Prize-winning poet who served as the 22nd Poet Laureate of the United States from 2017 through 2019, will read one of her poems.

The panelists include Derrick Johnson, president and CEO of the NAACP; Ja’Mal Green, a Chicago Black Lives Matter activist; Georgia state Sen. Kimberly S. Jackson; Brenda Travis, an NAACP student leader in the 1960s; and Gerard Robinson, vice president for education at the Advanced Studies in Culture Foundation at the University of Virginia. Daphne Chamberlai­n, an associate professor of history at Tougaloo College, and Deborah Barfield Berry, USA TODAY national correspond­ent on race and politics, will help moderate the event.

Audience members will have the opportunit­y to pose questions to the panel.

This is the first of three virtual events USA TODAY will host as part of the “Seven Days of 1961” project.

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