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    SNCC- The New Abolitionists

    Page 28
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      SNCC’s new radicalism comes from nowhere in the world but cotton fields, prison cells, and the minds of young people reflecting on what they see and feel. So it is expressed in no ancient books, but in odd bits of conversation, which reflect not a precise doctrine but an emotion. There is Charles Sherrod: “Our country is sitting on a powder keg…. It makes me mad, that some of us have to sweep and wait tables and work all night and go to school and they got thousands, yea, millions, yea, billions, of dollars.… We got to find ways, leverages, of moving the government. We may have to demonstrate for jobs. You know we may have to bring some bones up from the South and say: Johnson, feel my bones. You know—I’m hungry, Johnson, feel my bones!”

      And Stokely Carmichael: “Yes, I would like to see the government take over U.S. Steel, General Motors, all the big corporations. I’d like to see more than one hundred people control over 60 per cent of the industry. I’d like to see all these plantations divided up until everybody who was on the plantation had his plot of land, because like Mrs. Hamer said: “Who the hell’s land is it anyway?”

      These snatches of talk pulled out of context and out of whole lives give only a hint of what it is about SNCC that worries traditional liberalism. They suggest a kind of socialism, but to put it this way freezes what is really a fluid attitude, directed at ending deprivation and equalizing wealth, but completely open about ways to do this.

      What really makes SNCC a threat to American liberal society is that quality which makes it a threat to all Establishments, whether capitalist, socialist, communist, or whatever: its rejection of authority; its fearlessness in the face of overwhelming power; its indifference to respectability. It constantly aims to create and recreate, out of the bodies of poor and powerless people, a new force, nonviolent but aggressive, honest and therefore unmanageable. It wants to demonstrate to the nation not what kind of “system” people should believe in, but how people should live their lives. So its radicalism is not an ideology but a mood. Moods are harder to define. They are also harder to imprison.

      This makes SNCC unpredictable for the future, for it sets difficult goals for itself: to defy authority within as well as without, to resist temptations offered by friends as well as by enemies, to constantly refreshen its radicalism from springs of both anger and love. In any event, if it continues as before, it will crush accusations under the weight of its sacrifices.

      Index

      Abernathy, Ralph, 50, 53, 129, 134, 169

      Adams, Patrolman John Quincy, 119

      Aelony, Zev, 175, 183

      African nations, emergence of, 18

      Alabama

      registration laws in, 153

      Albany, Georgia, 2, 11, 146

      and U.S. government, 123, 136

      voter registration in, 123, 136

      described, 124

      test of ICC ruling in, 126–128

      truce of Dec., 1961, 131, 133

      desegregation in, 135

      federal indictments of civil rights workers in, 211–212

      Albany Movement

      formation of, 128

      boycott of buses, 133

      and Judge Elliott, 204

      Albany State College for Negroes, 125–126, 129

      Albert, Carl, 259

      Alcorn, James L., 64

      Allen, Louis, 74

      Allen, Mrs. Louis, 242

      Allen, Ralph, 138, 139, 140, 182–183

      on race, 184

      Allgood, Clarence W., 204

      American Civil Liberties Union, 197

      American Friends Service Committee, 34

      American Jewish Conference, 212

      Americans For Democratic Action, 251, 272

      Americus, Ga., 11, 182–183

      Anderson, Candie

      on sit-ins, 16

      and Nashville sit-ins, 20, 21

      on bombing of Looby home, 22–23

      Anderson, William G., 29, 128, 131

      found guilty of disorderly conduct, 134

      and federal indictments, 211–212

      Anniston, Ala., 42–44

      Ashley, Stephen, 76

      Athens, Ga., 42

      Atlanta, Ga., 2, 11, 42, 213, 238

      student movement, 17

      sit-ins, 25

      arrests in, 39

      Atlanta Conference, 37

      Atlanta Constitution, 25, 53

      Atlanta University, 34

      Attorney General. See Kennedy, Robert F.; U.S. Department of Justice

      Augusta, Ga., 42

      Baker, Ella

      background of, 32–33

      in Raleigh, 33

      in Atlanta, 34, 35

      at Highlander meeting, 59

      in Hattiesburg, 104, 106

      on role of Negroes in SNCC, 186

      at FDP state convention, 252

      Baldwin, David, 152, 155, 159

      Selma speech, 165–166

      Baldwin, James, 167

      in Selma, 152, 155, 159, 164

      Selma speech, 166

      on role of whites in civil rights movement, 186

      Barbee, William, 49

      Barnett, Ross, 196

      on Negro difference, 51

      Supreme Court ruling, 201

      Barry, Marion, 38

      and Nashville sit-ins, 19

      elected Chairman, 34

      on sit-ins, 35

      appearance before Democratic Platform Committee, 1960, 36–37

      favors direct action, 59

      holds workshops on nonviolence in McComb, 68

      Baton Rouge, La., 172–173

      Beech, Robert, 245

      Belafonte, Harry, 60, 66

      Bennett, Myrtis, 76

      Bergman, Walter, 43

      Bevel, Diane Nash, 20, 38, 44, 45, 79, 80

      favors direct action, 59

      works full time for SNCC, 60

      Bevel, James

      on direct action and violence, 14

      on Looby home bombing, 23

      works full time for SNCC, 60

      speaks in McComb, 68

      in Jackson, 79, 80

      speaks in Ruleville, 93

      injured in Selma, 263

      Bickel, Alexander, 208

      Bigelow, Albert, 42

      Biloxi, Miss., 25, 245

      Birmingham, Ala., 42, 43

      Freedom Riders arrested in, 45

      school board, 204

      bombing in, 213

      Black, Charles, 209

      Blackwell, Randolph, 89

      Block, Sam, 5

      in Greenwood, 83, 84–86, 87–88, 91

      Blues for Mister Charlie, 164

      Bond, Julian, 18, 38, 142

      and Atlanta sit-in, 17

      poem by, 35

      Boynton, Amelia, 12, 148, 161, 163, 263

      Boynton, Bruce, 148–149

      Boynton Case, 41

      Braden, Anne, 169

      Braden, Carl, 271

      Branton, Wiley, 90

      Brazier, James, 138

      Britt, Travis, 69–70

      Brooks, Paul, 47, 60, 79

      Brown, Luvaghn, 80–81, 84

      Browning, Joan, 129, 132

      Bryant, C. C., 66

      Burney, Robert, 143

      Bus boycott, 1, 18

      Cambridge, Md., 8, 11

      Cameron, John, 121

      Camilla, Ga., 11

      Campbell, Cull, 135

      Campbell, Janie, 76

      Campbell Junior College, 76

      Capell, Arthur, 153

      Carey, Gordon, 41

      Carmichael, Stokely, 40, 98, 274

      background of, 55–56

      on Parchman penitentiary, 57

      Caston, Billy Jack

      attacks Moses, 68

      trial of, 69

      owned truck Hurst drove, 73

      Chaney, James, 243, 265

      beating of, 244

      Charlotte, N.C., 213, 238

      Charlotte Observer, 52

      Chase, Oscar, 108, 114, 115–117

      Chatfield, Jack, 143, 144, 145

      shooting of, in Da
    wson, 141

      arrest in Albany, 141–142

      Chatmon, Thomas, 136

      Chattanooga, Tenn., 23

      Chestnut, J. L., 159

      Civil disobedience, 13, 28–29

      Civil Rights Act of 1866, 194

      Civil Rights Act of 1957, 206, 207

      Civil Rights Act of 1960, 206, 207

      Civil Rights Act of 1964, 206, 207–208, 230

      Civil Rights Commission, 205–206

      Clark, Jim, 12, 149, 226, 263–265

      described, 153–154

      on Freedom Day, 157–158, 161–162

      possibility of arrest of, 195–196

      Clarksdale, Miss., 11, 245

      Cleveland, Miss., 82

      Cobb, Charles, 99, 247

      Coffin, William, 53

      Colleges

      and SNCC workers, 9

      need for reform in, 231–235

      Colleges, Negro

      and sit-ins, 30

      and civil rights movement, 235–236

      Collins, Norma, 129

      Columbia, S.C., 25

      Communism

      and SNCC, 226–228, 271

      Compromise of 1877, 65, 198–199, 214

      Congress of Racial Equality (CORE), 37, 77, 81, 91, 186, 215, 239, 244, 263

      and sit-ins, 23, 29

      and Freedom Rides, 41–42, 55

      and forming of COFO, 79

      in Hattiesburg, 104–105

      and Freedom Walk, 175

      Connor, “Bull”, 44, 45

      Conway, Jack, 229

      Conwell, Kathleen, 138

      Cotton, MacArthur, 5, 70, 97, 104

      Council of Federated Organizations (COFO), 79–80, 215, 244

      Cox, Courtland, 56

      Cox, William, 204

      Crawford, James, 142–143

      Crow, Carl E., 134

      Dammond, Peggy, 138

      on gathering in Lee County, 144

      on courage in the South, 145

      Daniels, Carolyn, 12, 139

      home shot into, 141

      Danville, Va., 11, 12, 180–181

      Dawson, Ga., 11

      Day, Peggy, 13

      Debs Case, 202–203

      deLissovoy, Peter, 181–182

      Democratic National Convention, 1964, 257

      Dennis, David, 102, 105

      asks for federal protection, 90

      car shot at, 91

      Devine, Annie, 258, 260–261

      Diamond, Dion, 56, 76, 171

      bedroom fired into, 77

      arrest in Baton Rouge, 172, 174

      Diggs, Ivory, 76

      Direct action, 14, 59, 219–220

      Dissent, 235–236

      Dix, Dorothea, 225

      Dollie, Mama, 145, 146

      Donaldson, Ivanhoe

      transports food to Mississippi, 87

      in Henry-King campaign, 99, 100

      injured in Selma, 263

      Douglass, Frederick, 3, 248

      Dugger, Ronnie, 150

      Dunbar, Leslie, 207, 213

      Durden, Judge, 134

      Durr, Clifford, 169

      Durr, Virginia, 169

      Eastland, James, 93, 204

      Economic pressure

      on Negroes, 86

      Economic reform, 228–231

      Eisenhower, D. D., 199

      Elliott, J. Robert, 204

      Ellis, Frank, 204

      Ellison, Ralph, 235

      Enforcement Act of 1870, 194

      Enterprise Journal (McComb), 73

      Erikson, Erik

      on identity crisis, 5, 6, 7

      on young rebels, 14

      Eubanks, Leotus, 76

      Evans, Rowland, 269

      Evers, Medgar, 93, 213

      Ex parte Siebold, 243

      The Faith of a Heretic, 2

      Farmer, James, 1

      and Freedom Rides, 42, 51

      on Freedom Riders and jails, 57

      testifies before Credentials Committee, 253

      urges FDP to accept administration compromise, 255

      Federal Bureau of Investigation, 210, 211, 242–243

      failure of agents to act, 193, 195, 206

      and civil rights crises, 196

      Fellowship of Reconciliation, 41

      Ferry, W. H., 230

      Field Foundation, 58, 81

      Fleming, Carl, 148, 179

      Food Drive, Mississippi, 86–88

      Forman, James, 11, 18–19, 81, 83, 142, 216, 231

      background of, 5, 60

      deliberate harshness of, 8

      chosen Executive Secretary, 60, 268

      asks President Kennedy for protection in Mississippi, 90

      in Greenwood, 91, 92

      in Ruleville, 93

      in Hattiesburg, 111, 112–113, 117

      in Albany, 127, 129

      in Selma, 149, 151, 152, 155, 158, 160, 161–162, 165

      Frankfort, Ky., 25

      Free expression, 224–225

      Freedom Ballot Campaign

      directed by Moses, 99–101

      Freedom Chorus, 4

      Freedom Democratic Party

      formation of, 251

      state convention, 251

      in Atlantic City, 253

      votes to reconsider administration compromise, 255–257

      philosophy behind, 256–257

      and seating of Mississippi Congressmen, 257, 260–261

      its protest politics, 261–262

      Freedom Ride, 42

      Freedom Singers, 132

      Freedom schools, 247, 249

      Freedom Walk, 175–180, 193

      Gaines, Shirley, 135

      Gaither, Tom, 23, 24, 39, 79

      and Freedom Rides, 41

      Garrison, William Lloyd, 3, 8, 9, 237

      Gay, Ben, 126

      Geiger, Jack, 246

      Georgia

      as area of activity, 11

      Glover, Jesse James, 97

      Gluckstadt, Miss., 250

      Gober, Bertha, 132, 136

      jailed and expelled, 128–129

      arrest at railway terminal, 130

      Golden Rule (ship), 42

      Goldwater, Barry, 256

      Goodman, Andrew, 243, 265

      Gordon, Bruce, 156

      Gore, Bob, 175, 177

      Gray, Fred, 179

      Gray, Victoria, 121, 258, 260–261

      Green, Edith, 253–254, 257, 259

      Greenberg, Jack, 202

      Greene, George, 91

      Greensboro, N.C., 2

      first sit-in, 16

      effect of sit-in, 17–18

      Greenville, Miss., 2, 11, 82

      Greenwood, Miss., 11, 12, 13, 82–83, 245. See also Leflore County

      Gregory, Dick, 213

      aids in food drive, 88

      in Greenwood, 92

      in Selma, 150–151

      Gregory, Lillian, 150

      Guyot, Lawrence, 5, 84, 95, 102, 104, 106

      background of, 107

      on whites in civil rights movement, 187

      and Freedom Democratic Party, 252, 261

      Haley, Richard, 175

      Hall, Blanton, 128–129

      Hall, Prathia, 12

      in Selma, 154, 157

      Hamer, Fannie Lou, 13, 188, 196, 253, 260–261, 268, 274

      joins Movement, 93–94

      arrest in Winona, 94

      becomes field secretary, 95–96

      in Hattiesburg, 103, 104, 113

      runs for Congress, 121

      in Washington, 242

      in Atlantic City, 253

      contests election of Jamie L. Whitten, 257

      Hancock, Milton, 92, 115

      Hansen, Bill, 135, 182, 193

      on march to Jackson, 175

      excerpts from diary, 177–178

      arrest in Alabama, 180

      marriage to Negro, 185–186

      Hardy, John, 58, 66

      and McComb school, 58

      beaten by registrar of Walthall County, 70–71

      shotgun fired into bedroom of, 77

      Harrington,
    Michael, 228

      Harris, Don, 182

      Harris, Elijah, 134

      Harris, Fred, 98

      Harris, Jesse, 104, 268

      at trial of Diane Bevel, 80–81

      on march to Jackson, 175

      Harris, Robert J., 243

      Harris, Rutha, 132

      Harris, Walter, 134

      Hattiesburg, Miss., 2, 11, 101

      Hayden, Casey, 177, 182

      Hayden, Sandra, 10, 239

      background of, 12–13

      in Albany, 129, 133–134

      Hayden, Tom, 77, 129, 133–134

      Hayes, Curtis, 68, 76, 82, 102

      Heilbroner, Robert, 230

      Henry, Aaron, 105, 263

      protests shooting of Travis, 90

      damage to home and drugstore, 91, 92

      runs for Governor, 99, 250

      and Freedom Democratic Party, 252–255, 261

      Higgs, William, 203, 243

      Highlander Folk School, 58–59

      Holloway, Frank, 50, 51–52

      Hollowell, Donald, 134

      Holly Springs, Miss., 81–82, 245

      Holman, Carl, 29

      Holsaert, Faith, 144

      Holt, Len, 34, 180

      Houston, Texas, 25

      Howe, Mark, 244

      Hugh, Matthew, 92

      Humphrey, Hubert, 253–254

      Hurst, E. H., 68, 72, 73, 74

      Identity crisis, 5–7

      Indianola, Miss., 245

      Industrial Workers of the World, 262

      Interstate Commerce Act of 1887, 206

      Interstate Commerce Commission ruling on terminals tested, 126–128

      Itta Bena, Miss., 96

      Jackson, Eliza, 211

      Jackson, Emanuel, 134

      Jackson, Jimmy Lee, 264

      Jackson, Miss., 11, 79, 213, 245

      violence in, 25

      and freedom rides, 40

      arrests in, 51

      jail conditions in, 52

      freedom school in, 248–249

      Jacksonville, Fla., 25

      Jail conditions, 96–97

      in Jackson, 52

      in Georgia, 132

      Javits, Jacob, 209

      Jenkins, Tim, 81

      and voter registration, 58, 59

      Jet, 66

      Johnson, Bernice, 132, 136

      Johnson, Lyndon, 36, 215, 243, 253, 256, 259

      and Selma violence, 265

      Johnson, Paul, 98, 103

      Johnson, Warren, 211

     


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