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The Black Freedom Struggle

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Origins: the impact of the Cold War ' ... Roots in Christianity and in the ideas of Mahatma Ghandi. Persuasion through. Nonviolence ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Black Freedom Struggle


1
The Black Freedom Struggle
  • Origins
  • Nonviolent direct action
  • A Reluctant Government Responds
  • Race in the North
  • Black power and
  • urban uprisings

Selma, 1965
2
The South
3
Origins of the Black Freedom Struggle
  • The World War II Experience
  • The March on Washington Movement
  • African American veterans
  • Mexican American veterans
  • and the GI Forum
  • African American migration
  • Pressures on the Truman
  • Administration

A. Phillip Randolph
4
Origins the impact of the Cold War
  • hostile reaction to racial oppression in the
    U.S. among normally friendly peoples is growing
    in alarming proportions, endangering our moral
    leadership of the free and democratic nations of
    the world.
  • Dean Acheson

5
Origins
  • The NAACPs legal strategy
  • Brown v. Topeka Board of Education, 1954 and the
    struggle over compliance

6
The Montgomery Bus Boycott, 1955-56
  • Antecedents
  • Ordinary people Parks, Nixon, Robinson
  • The rise of Martin Luther King, Jr. and the SCLC

7
Non-Violent Direct Action
  • Roots in Christianity and in the ideas of Mahatma
    Ghandi
  • Persuasion through
  • Nonviolence
  • Non-cooperation
  • Civil Disobedience
  • Non-cooperation with evil is as much a moral
    obligation as is cooperation with good.

8
  • We will match your capacity to inflict suffering
    with our capacity to endure suffering. We will
    meet your physical force with soul force. We
    will not hate you, but we cannot in all good
    conscience obey your unjust laws. . . .We will
    soon wear you down by our capacity to suffer.
    And in winning our freedom, we will so appeal to
    your heart and
  • conscience that we will
  • win you in the process.

9
The beginning of nonviolent resistance
Greensboro, NC, 1960
10
CORE and the Freedom Rides
11
  • James Meredith integrates the University of
    Mississippi, 1962
  • Birmingham, 1963
  • March on Washington, 1963
  • Mississippi Freedom Democratic movement, 1964
  • Selma-Montgomery march for voting rights, 1965

12
Birmingham 1963
13
A Reluctant Government Responds
  • Civil Rights Act of 1964
  • Public accommodations
  • Education
  • Employment
  • Extended to ban sex discrimination
  • Voting Rights Act of 1965
  • Executive order affecting companies with federal
    contracts non-discrimination and affirmative
    action, 1965
  • Civil Rights Act of 1968

14
The Government Responds
15
. . . and fails to respond
  • Protection of protesters
  • Democratic Party and the Mississippi Freedom
    Democratic Party, 1964
  • Economic Deprivation and the Limitations of the
    War on Poverty

16
Race in the North Carl Stokes and Cleveland
17
Black Power
  • This is the twenty-seventh time I have been
    arrested, and I aint going to jail no more. The
    only way we gonna stop them white man from
    whuppin us is to take over. We been saying
    freedom for six years--and we aint got nothin.
    What we gonna start saying now is Black Power.
  • Stokely Carmichael, during the March against
    Fear, Mississippi, 1966

18
Black Power
  • Pride in African American culture
  • Separatism
  • Black autonomy and enterprise
  • Self-defense

19
Black Power
  • Pittsburgh Courier How great can the American
    Negro become in self esteem and personal dignity
    if his history and culture are lost, both to him
    and to his white colleagues?

20
African American Frustration
  • Desegregation and voting rights in the South, but
  • Resistance to demands for civil rights in the
    North jobs, housing, schools
  • Urban uprisings

Newark, 1967 Watts, 1965
21
Urban Rebellions
  • I felt invincible. . . .Honestly, that is how
    powerful I felt. Im not too proud of what I
    did, looking back. But I held nothing back. I
    let out all my frustrations with every brick,
    every bottle that I threw. . .I remembered
    feeling completely relieved. I unleashed all the
    emotions that had built up inside, ones I didnt
    know how to express. urban youth

22
Urban Rebellions
  • 1965 Watts
  • 1966 43 riots
  • 1967 167 riots
  • 1968 violence in 168 cities after murder of
    King 46 dead 15,000 troops patrol the streets
    of Washington, D.C.
  • 1965-68 250 dead 8,000 wounded 50,000
    arrested in nearly 300 race riots.

23
1967 Detroit Riot
43 dead, 2000 injured, 5000 homeless, 500
million in property damage.
24
The Black Freedom Struggle
  • Ordinary people risk everything, force
    governments to act
  • The end of legal segregation and discrimination
  • Overt racism no longer seen as legitimate,
    yet
  • Subtle racism
  • Economic deprivation persists
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