The Unfinished
Work of the Civil Rights Movement
Jan 18, 2021
Director of Mission and Ministry, Cristo Rey Jesuit Baltimore
In the wake of the insanity and
destruction on the part of right wing terrorists at the Capitol on Jan 6, 2021,
we must reflect and realize what the Civil Rights movement of the 1960s was all
about, what it achieved, and how far we still have to go.
Early in his public life, Rev. Martin
Luther King, Jr., just 27 years old, in the midst of the Montgomery Bus Boycott
in 1956, clearly articulated what the movement being born was all about: “The
end is reconciliation, the end is redemption; the end is the creation of the
beloved community.”[i]
The Civil Rights movement was one
of the most startling and transformative social revolutions in history. I was born in 1955, a few weeks before Rosa
Parks refused to give up her seat.
There’s no connection between the two events except in my own mind. But the point is that I was born into a United
States where segregation was legal, lethal and largely unquestioned. And if you did question the status quo of
race relations, racists would too often kill you. The Civil Rights Memorial in Alabama honors
38 martyrs who gave their lives for the cause. [ii]
The peaceful, non-violent methods
of the movement forced white Americans to realize their own morally
objectionable beliefs, attitudes and discrimination. The dignity and courage of the non-violent
protesters, many of them young adults of college age, called the white majority
to conversion and recognition of the justice of the African American
community’s call for equality.
The Civil Rights Act was signed in
July of 1964. I was eight years
old. In less than a decade, the USA went
from a segregated land to a community where we moved much closer to “liberty
and justice for all.”
Prime beneficiaries of the movement
were not just American blacks. White
opponents to the Civil Rights act added “sex” to Title VII of the Bill’s protections,
thinking that would increase votes against it.
Along with “race, color, religion and national origin,” discrimination
on the basis of sex would now be illegal.
The racists’ plan backfired, and the bill passed, changing the lives of
all Americans for the better.
Ruth Ginsberg and the bio-pic, “On
the Basis of Sex,” would never have happened without the Civil Rights Act. Athletic programs for women in colleges
across America would not exist. Laws
prohibiting marital rape would not be on the books. Women would have no recourse if they did not
receive equal pay for equal work. And
Kamala Harris would never have been elected Vice President.
Still, today women make only $0.82
cents for every $1.00 men make.[iii] And racial disparities between different
racial groups stubbornly persist. Median Family
Income USA 2019 was $68,703 with Asians/PI: $98,174; Whites: $76,057; Latinos: $56,113
and Blacks: $45,438. [iv]
African Americans and
Latinos/as are dying from Covid at a much higher rate than whites. Saddest of all is the reality that black
women and their babies die at twice the rate of white women and their babies.[v] “Good!” I can hear some troglodyte racist
mutter as he or she reads that sad fact.
Such overt and ugly racism is having a renaissance in the USA these
days. I hope those days are numbered. But Jan 6th revealed hordes of dangerously
misinformed people who will willingly believe lies and the liars who tell them. They stoke the fires of hate.
True Americans, the majority of the
320 million citizens of the USA, celebrate racial and cultural diversity. Anyone who strives to know and serve the true
and living God welcomes the progress this country has made in the past sixty years.
African American Jesuit George
Murry, Bishop of Youngstown Ohio, described the world our loving God desires
for all. It is a world where we not just
get along, but form the beloved community envisioned by the Prophet from
Atlanta.
“Imagine
pulling people in from every neighborhood, from every walk of life, compelling
them to sit down and share a meal together. You would have black and white and
brown all together, rich and poor, gay and straight, progressive and
conservative. Everyone’s mind would be blown when a vegan found a way to share
a meal with a carnivore rancher, when a Black Lives Matter activist chuckled at
the joke told by a Confederate flag-wearing Harley rider, and when a Trump
enthusiast asked an undocumented immigrant to pass the tortillas. Somewhere in all of the mixing and relating,
the Holy Spirit moves! God’s blessed community looks like a smorgasbord of
humanity, in heaven and on earth. That’s not to say that it is OK to hold onto
our biases, even our moral failings, but we grow past them together.”[vi]
Like the good bishop, Abraham
Lincoln, in his first Inaugural address called us to be friends, and not allow
our differences to devolve into enmity. “We are not enemies,
but friends. We must not be enemies. Though passion may have strained, it must not
break our bonds of affection. The mystic
chords of memory will swell when again touched, as surely they will be, by the
better angels of our nature.”[vii]
Let’s honor Rev. King who gave his
life for justice and truth. Let’s follow
the better angels of our nature and grow past our prejudices. Let’s reconcile, redeem one another, and
bring into being the beloved community.
[ii] Civil Rights Memorial https://www.splcenter.org/what-we-do/civil-rights-memorial/civil-rights-martyrs
[iii] AAUW. The Simple Truth about the Gender
Pay Gap. The Simple Truth about the Pay Gap (aauw.org)
[iv] Census Bureau. Income and Poverty in the United States:
2019. September 15, 2020 https://www.census.gov/library/publications/2020/demo/p60-270.html
and https://www.census.gov/library/stories/2020/09/poverty-rates-for-blacks-and-hispanics-reached-historic-lows-in-2019.html
[v] Linda Villarosa, “The Hidden Toll: Why are
Black Mothers and Babies in the United States Dying…” The New
York Times Magazine. April 15,
2018. Pp.30-39. Why America’s Black Mothers and Babies Are in a Life-or-Death
Crisis - The New York Times (nytimes.com)
[vi]
University of Scranton Graduation. May 2018.
http://news.scranton.edu/articles/2018/05/news-grad_U2018_BishopMurry_Speech.shtml