For
one of my other classes this semester, I wrote a paper about three civil rights
murders during the Mississippi Freedom Project. These murders gained much
attention because it was the first time white volunteers were targeted and
killed.
In short, the Mississippi Freedom
Project during the summer of 1964 was one answer to voting discrimination
during the civil rights movement; volunteers were called to travel to
Mississippi and register as many black voters as possible. The leaders of the NAACP
and the SNCC also realized that “white Americans would be more sympathetic to
the cause of civil rights if whites became involved in the efforts to build
democracy across the South.” So they recruited and trained white college
students and young adults and sent them into the deepest corners of Mississippi
to register African Americans voters.
Andrew
Goodman and Michael Schwerner were white volunteers from New York, and James
Chaney was a black volunteer from Meridian, Mississippi. It was the first
official day of Freedom Summer, and the men were traveling to Neshoba County to
investigate a church bombing. They were arrested for speeding and released at
10:00 in the evening. On their way out of town, their car was followed, pulled
over again, and a group of about 21 men beat and shot them.
In
the years following the murder, 18 members of the Mississippi Branch of the Ku
Klux Klan, including the sheriff and several of his deputies were arrested for
their involvement in the murders. At the original trial, however, only 7 men
were charged with “conspiracy to deny civil rights to in the murders of James
Chaney, Andrew Goodman, and Michael Schwerner.” They were Collectively
sentenced to 41 years in prison.
In
2005, the case was re-opened, and James Ray Killen, has been the only man
indicted of murder and convicted of manslaughter. Although he was credited with
being the ringleader of the mob, the jury said, “the evidence fell short of
what they needed to convict Mr. Killen, a former member of the Ku Klux Klan, of
murder.” After the trial, the relatives of one of the questioned the racial
atmosphere in the state of Mississippi when she said, “The fact that members of
this jury could have sat through that testimony” without acknowledging the
murderous acts of the Klan “indicates that there are still people unfortunately
among you who choose to look aside who choose not to see the truth.”
I
agree with what she had to say, and it was hard for me to see how little we
have progress in the last 50 years. My question for you is: Do you think there
will every be a time that the men who committed these crimes, even if they have
already passed from old age, will be held accountable for the murders?
Sadly, I think there is only so much the judicial system can do at this point. For this reason we have the responsibility to shape public memory in a way that highlights the horrendous murder of Andrew Goodman, Michael Schwerner and James Chaney and the wretched behavior of those who liked them. We can't change the courts rulings, but we can change societies attitudes toward race crimes.
ReplyDeleteThis reminds me of Emmett Till's mother, Mamie Till, and her response in an interview on her reactions to the court rulings. I remember her saying that she was not the one to bring her son's murderers to justice. After her son's murder, Mamie Till became a teacher and continued her life as an activist working to educate people about what happened to her son. She passed away in 2003, at 81, with years under her belt as a champion for children in poor neighborhoods and an activist who spent more than half her life keeping alive the memory of Emmett and the hope of bringing his killers to justice.
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