WASHINGTON — Take a glance at the anniversary calendar this year and it’s clear that, in America, racial progress comes in fits and starts.
The Emancipation Proclamation declared slaves to be free 150 years ago. Within a decade, a trio of amendments to the Constitution made them citizens. Over the next century, the Supreme Court and Jim Crow segregation in the South snatched their rights away, Medgar Evers was murdered trying to get them back and Martin Luther King Jr.’s populist protests yielded laws that restored them before King, too, was killed.
Less than a year ago, the nation re-elected its first black president, a step widely considered the culmination of all this labor. President Barack Obama, the product of integration with an Ivy League education, was sent to the White House by a diverse American electorate and presides over a country where people are free to live, work, play, go to school and marry regardless of race – things that by no means were guaranteed 50 years ago.
Yet, in last week alone, a series of events illustrated just how fragile that progress really is.
The Supreme Court chipped away at that King-inspired voting rights law and others on job discrimination and affirmative action, then punted them to Congress to fix – a very divided Congress that has accomplished little since Obama first took office and which includes GOP conservatives who want to avoid voting on whether those who came to the U.S. illegally should become citizens.
This and other events percolating in American culture – George Zimmerman’s trial for shooting to death teenager Trayvon Martin and celebrity chef Paula Deen’s career meltdown because of her past use of the N-word – amounted to a gut punch for many, prompting questions about what exactly is going on.
“It’s so troubling for me, who has sort of bridged many, many years of social change, and to not see an end to this, I find it really nauseating,” said Suzy Post, 80, of Louisville, Ky., a white woman who has worked for civil rights causes since the 1950s and is now a member of the state’s Human Relations Commission.
Those sentiments were echoed June 25 by a visibly shaken collection of black and Hispanic members of Congress who bemoaned the fresh blows to the laws that helped to put many of them in office.
Original sin
“The issue of race, slavery – it’s our original sin as a nation,” said U.S. Rep. John Lewis, D-Ga., who, as a student activist, was severely, and repeatedly, beaten in the voting rights struggle of the 1960s. “It’s going to take years and maybe a generation before we end it. It’s a long, ongoing struggle. It’s the struggle of more than a lifetime.”
Where strides toward equality once were met by fire hoses or head-cracking blows from billy club-wielding police, now they can elicit racist commentary on Twitter, such as the hateful barrage over the national anthem being sung by Sebastien De La Cruz, a young Mexican-American, during the National Basketball Association finals.
Or they generate oddly placed outrage, such as criticisms of a Cheerios commercial that depicted a white mother, a black father and their biracial child.
“What I believe is happening is that, while the country’s demographic and age is changing rapidly, we as a nation have hit racial fatigue,” said Maria Teresa Kumar, co-founder of Voto Latino. “
We no longer want to discuss race and we like to believe that we’re above it. We are not.”
Uncanny parallels
Briana Bacon, 20, of Philadelphia, put it more bluntly.
“I think they’re shutting down opportunities for minorities and I think minorities are in a (expletive) place to begin with,” said Bacon, who is black and recently enlisted in the National Guard.
Civil rights leaders are unwilling to say that things today are as bad as they were in King’s heyday. But they acknowledge that there are some uncanny parallels at play. Marc Morial, president of the National Urban League, said that, in the first four months of this year, restrictive voting bills were introduced in more than half the states.
“I don’t question whether Dr. King’s dream remains viable. What one questions is whether the nation has the commitment to freedom, justice and equality of opportunity for all on a broad basis. What we currently see in the country is a tension,” Morial said.
Ben Jealous, president of the NAACP, recalled that King’s widow, the late Coretta Scott King, once observed that freedom is never really won in full; every generation must win it anew.
“The times we are living in remind us that Mrs. King was right,” Jealous said.
Political power
The United States has seen backlash against black Americans before. After the passage of the 13th, 14th and 15th amendments to the Constitution, which banned slavery, extended to blacks equal protection as citizens and granted them the right to vote, respectively, blacks experienced fairly rapid gains in political and
economic power. Southern states responded by passing laws that allowed them to circumvent the 15th Amendment.
Enter the Supreme Court in 1896 with its Plessy vs. Ferguson ruling, which declared segregation legal if accommodations for blacks are “separate but equal” to those of whites. Fifty-eight years went by before the high court would change its mind with Brown vs. Board of Education, which declared racial segregation in public schools unconstitutional.
While the Supreme Court didn’t ban the use of race in university admissions on June 24, it returned the case to a lower court and set a higher standard for the University of Texas to meet before using race in deciding who may enroll. In two other decisions that same day, the court made it harder for employees to sue businesses for retaliation and discrimination.
A day later, the high court stopped enforcement of a provision of the Voting Rights Act of 1965 that has kept states and local governments from implementing racially discriminatory election and voting laws and rules.
Equality push
Between those rulings, civil rights activists stood together across town and announced plans to use the 50th anniversary of the August 1963 March on Washington to renew the push for racial equality.
The times, they said, require it.
“We have a black president and a black attorney general but that is not achieving Dr. King’s dream,” said the Rev. Al Sharpton, the civil rights activist. “That may be a means to achieving it. Achievement is when we have one nation with equal protection under the law and equal opportunity.”
In some parts of the country, 1960s-style civil disobedience is already underway.
“Moral Monday” protests at North Carolina’s General Assembly have resulted in nearly 600 arrests since late April.
The protests began over health care access but have grown to include demonstrations over unemployment benefit reductions and proposals to toughen voter identification requirements and other rules for voting.
“It seems as though every time that we start making strides the forces that seek to dismantle any equality or any justice efforts, they rise up and they do all that they can to undermine any progress that’s made,” said the Rev. Anthony T. Spearman, 62, a small-town pastor and vice president of the NAACP’s North Carolina state conference.
Healing project
Gail Christopher, who has been leading a five-year racial healing project sponsored by the W.K. Kellogg Foundation, attributed the cyclical setbacks to the view that the country has yet to deal with its fundamental belief in a racial hierarchy.
“We are being called on as a country to do serious work on this,” Christopher said.
While the court’s rulings came down, Kellogg announced $3.8 million in grants to community groups in Mississippi that work to improve life outcomes for young men of color. Those monies come on the heels of the state’s commemoration of Evers, the state’s first NAACP field secretary, who was shot to death on June 12, 1963.
In an interview before that grim anniversary, Evers’ widow, Myrlie Evers-Williams, told The Associated Press how she thought her husband would perceive the times he did not live to see.
“I believe he would look at the landscape of this country and realize what so many of us have said: We have made progress but there’s still so much to be done and, if we don’t guard the progress we’ve made, that too will slip away,” she said.
Potential remedies
One thing Evers did envision, his widow said, was the election of a black president. That president, Obama, said June 25 he was “deeply disappointed” by the Supreme Court’s voting rights decision but it would not stop his efforts to end discrimination.
A day later, he boarded Air Force One and took off. For Africa.
He surfaced in Senegal on June 27 and visited Goree Island, a transit point for the ships that brought African slaves to America.
He said the Supreme Court “made a mistake” in gutting the Voting Rights Act and he looks forward to seeking “potential remedies” that preserve everyone’s ability to vote.
“It was the cornerstone and the culmination of years of struggle –blood, sweat, tears – and, in some cases, deaths,” Obama said.
“I might not be here as president had it not been for those who courageously helped to pass the Voting Rights Act.”
Associated Press writers Brett Barouquere in Louisville, Ky., Keith Collins in Philadelphia, Henry C. Jackson in Washington, Christopher Kardish in Raleigh, N.C, and Emily Wagster Pettus in Jackson, Miss., contributed to this report.
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