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Charlottesville tragedy sparks civil rights memories

Jerry Mitchell
Mississippi Clarion Ledger

For many who fought in the civil rights movement, the tragedy in Charlottesville, Virginia, has reopened wounds and raised questions about a nation they thought they knew.

Myrlie Evers, widow of slain civil rights leader Medgar Evers, continues her activism.

The rise of the monster of racism has driven Myrlie Evers to tears.

“I am in a state of despair, hurt, anger and disbelief that we are at this point in America — again,” said Myrlie Evers, whose husband, Medgar, was assassinated in 1963 by a white supremacist.

“Again,” she repeated, as if hardly believing the word. “Again.”

The scenes in Charlottesville have resurrected scenes of pain in her life when a coward shot her husband in the back in the driveway of their home, and the children rushed out, crying for their father to get up, she said. “All of these things are just flashing back.”

In 1994, she finally saw her husband’s assassin convicted, and a year later, she was elected to chair the national NAACP, helping bring the historic civil rights organization back from the brink of bankruptcy.

Long retired, she believed she had come to a point in her life where her work was done.

“I’m 84 years of age, and I’m thankful for my life,” she said. “In my prayers, I ask, ‘God, is it ever over? Must we continue to go through this horrible nightmare of prejudice, racism and hatred all over again?’”

She choked up.

“My heart is full, and I don’t know what to do,” she said. “I never thought I’d be in this place again. I thought I had come through the muddy waters and come out the other side.”

Now she wonders if she is being called again to service. “If we don’t step forward,” she said, “we have no one to blame but ourselves for what the end may be.”

In recent days, the Rev. John Perkins has spent much of his time on the telephone, counseling pastors and students at the University of Virginia, where white supremacists protested.

“Real commitment,” he told the students, “is doing things you don’t like to do in the face of fear.”

After getting off the phone, the author of “Dream With Me: Race, Love and the Struggle We Must Win,” remarked that what happened in Charlottesville is a pivotal moment in history.

The brutality he saw on television made him think back to the brutality he endured in a Mississippi jail in 1970 at the hands of law enforcement because of his civil rights activism.

In that moment, if he had had a grenade, he would have pulled the pin and killed them all, he said.

He sensed their hate, and now he began to realize his own toward them, he said. “I saw that I was just as bad as them. Then I saw that we both were broken.”

He said there needs to be a discussion about Confederate monuments because some have ancestors who fought for the war and others have ancestors who were enslaved by that cause

He is reminded of the violence that surrounded the 1962 admission of James Meredith, where a French journalist penned the words, “The Civil War never came to an end.”

Hours later, that journalist, Paul Guihard, was one of the two casualties in an evening where more than 160 federal marshals were injured while protecting James Meredith, who was attempting to become the first known black student at the all-white university.

William Doyle, author of “An American Insurrection: James Meredith and the Battle of Oxford, Mississippi, 1962,” sees Charlottesville as another battle in the same war.

“Until America fully confronts and finally slays the beast of white supremacy,” he said, “it will always curse us as a nation and as a people.”

Emma Talbott, who participated in civil rights marches as a student in Louisville, Kentucky, said, “We knew we were going to change history — and we did.”

That’s why she finds what is happening today so painful, she said. “We have someone put in a position, as leader of the free world,” she said, who “has emboldened people who are full of hate.”

Despite that, “I don’t give up hope,” she said. “We’ve got to turn the country around and help it go forward.”

Joyce Ladner of Washington, D.C., who was hit with tear gas from police when she marched to protest in 1961, marvels at the progress since then.

Many civil rights and voting rights have been won, and many African Americans have moved into the middle class, corporate America and even the White House, she said.

But the former interim president of Howard University said what is happening now is “worse in a way because 50 years have passed since we waged a major struggle against segregation and Jim Crow.”

Civil rights activist Walter T. Searcy III of Nashville sees Charlottesville as a “measuring rod that fairly demonstrates that we’ve traveled one nanosecond in time from what was going on in sometimes even in the ’50s.”

The American populace has to face the matter of race, he said. “This is not going to be a battle that is won easily, if at all.”

Hollis Watkins of Jackson, one of the organizers of Freedom Summer, said what happened is a reminder of “how much sickness we have in our society.”

There is a tendency to ignore that sickness, he said. “We need to work together to build a community that’s for all people.”

Raylawni Branch, one of the first black students admitted to the University of Southern Mississippi, said continuing segregation in many churches, clubs and organizations make clear that much still needs to change.

Branch sees a few churches trying to bridge the racial gap.

“I think it’s going to take time,” she said. “All of us are going to have to work towards being good neighbors. If we’re all good neighbors, we won’t be out there with flaming torches and Nazi symbols.”

Stanley Nelson, author of “Devils Walking: Klan Murders Along the Mississippi in the 1960s,” has reported on nine killings in Mississippi and Louisiana by the White Knights of the Ku Klux Klan and the splinter assassination squad, the Silver Dollar Group.

He senses there is a rise in white supremacist activities.

“But if people will show their faces, at least you know who they are,” he said. “I worry about the folks we don’t see like the Silver Dollar Group.”

According to news reports, the “Unite the Right” demonstrators, which included white supremacists, were met in Charlottesville by counter-protesters, including anti-fascists, and violence erupted, beating and clubbing each other.

Retired U.S. Air Force Col. Albert Lassiter of Fultondale, Alabama, said it was “disappointing” that counter-protesters failed to practice the nonviolence that he and eight other Tougaloo College students did when they integrated the all-white downtown library in Mississippi’s capital in 1961.

More:New Freedom Trail marker honors Tougaloo 9

“It should have never been that way,” he said.

Charles Evers, who took over the place of his slain brother, Medgar, to head the state’s NAACP, wishes counter-protesters had ignored the Nazis and others who marched in Charlottesville — just as he and others did during the civil rights movement.

Racists and bigots remain a “small number in this country,” said Evers, who endorsed President Trump.

Unfortunately, “we keep on living in the past,” he said. “Hell, we’ve come so far in this country interracial wise, but nobody wants to admit the truth.”

In 1955, white Lutheran minister Robert Graetz and his wife, Jeannie, accepted the call to serve an all-black church in Montgomery, Alabama.

After they became involved in the Montgomery Bus Boycott, their home was bombed.

Today, the 89-year-old is at home under hospice care.

"When have we had a more violent or more negative or more hateful presidency?” he asked. “Never in our history.”

Leslie Burl McLemore, one of the founders of the Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party, said what happened is “repeating battles I thought we had won.”

Trump’s actions take “us back 100 years,” he said. “In my wildest dreams, I couldn’t imagine someone in the Oval Office saying and doing the things that Donald Trump is doing.”

Civil rights activist and lawyer Rita Schwerner Bender of Seattle is among those reeling.

“It feels like we’ve fallen back 50 years,” she said. “It really does. And that’s very frightening.”

In the summer of 1964, Klansmen killed her then-husband, Mickey, and two other civil rights workers, James Chaney and Andy Goodman.

It’s just as terrifying to hear a president condone the acts of white supremacists, she said. “He’s invited his worst devils to the party.”

Hattiesburg American staff writer Haskel Burns, Montgomery Advertiser reporter Kym Klass and video producer Michael Schwab of The Nashville Tennessean contributed to this report.

Contact Jerry Mitchell at jmitchell@gannett.com or (601) 961-7064. Follow him onFacebook andTwitter.