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EYEWITNESS TO HISTORY: THE SIEGE OF THE FREEDOM RIDERS, May 20, 1961 (6479 hits)


BERNARD LAFAYETTE, NEW YORK TIMES, May 20, 2011—Fifty years ago today I arrived in Montgomery, Ala., on a Greyhound bus. I was 20 years old and was there as one of the Freedom Riders, a racially mixed group, mostly college students, who were riding buses through the South to test the Supreme Court’s recent ban on segregation in waiting rooms and restaurants that served interstate travelers.

I was among 22 Freedom Riders on that bus. We well knew the dangers we faced in Alabama: other riders had already been attacked in Anniston and Birmingham. And indeed, when we stepped off the bus a group of hooligans surrounded us. Three of my friends, William Barbee, John Lewis and Jim Zwerg, were beaten unconscious. I suffered three cracked ribs.

The next evening, the Freedom Riders and 1,500 other people gathered at the First Baptist Church on Ripley Street, in downtown Montgomery. The Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and others from the Southern Christian Leadership Conference offered us words of encouragement and support on our journey for equality.

As the sun set, a mob of whites began to gather around the church. As the crowd grew in number — eventually as many as 3,000 people appeared — it also grew in vitriol and hostility. The crowd began hurling rocks and bricks through the stained-glass windows, and tear gas drifted through the sanctuary. While outside people flipped over cars and set them on fire, inside Dr. King tried to reach Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy to request federal protection.

All of us gathered in the church were uncertain about our safety; I certainly felt in danger. Many feared that the church would be bombed. After all, not only had Dr. King’s house been bombed with his wife, child and a family friend inside during the 1956 Montgomery bus boycott, but the very church where we were gathered had been bombed in 1957.

There was little we could do but wait and pray. We sat in the church and sang freedom songs and hymns that strengthened our spirits and soothed our fears. Occasionally, I took a deep breath to get a little relief from the pain of my fractured ribs. At times I wondered whether it would be better to be safe in jail or to be there, in the church, surrounded by a vicious mob.

Eventually Dr. King announced that he had a special mission for which he needed volunteers. The main qualification, Dr. King said, was a commitment to nonviolence. He didn’t need hotheads, or people overcome by anger. Needless to say, no one rushed the pulpit. After my experience at the bus station, I didn’t feel I could handle another mob, so I held back, too.

However, about 10 or 12 people eventually did volunteer for the mission, which Dr. King then explained. Reports had come in over the phone that a group of black men, led by armed cab drivers, were mobilizing at a nearby service station with plans to attack the mob and rescue the people trapped in the church. Some of them, no doubt, had relatives and friends in the church.

Black cab drivers were an important part of the local civil rights movement. They had helped out in the car-pooling efforts during the bus boycott. When the boycott ended, some of them formed their own cab companies to serve black customers. But they were more than just drivers: they saw themselves as part of a security force as they moved passengers around the segregated city.

Some of these men were war veterans; some were experienced hunters, and were probably more experienced with weapons than their white antagonists. Had these men attacked the mob surrounding the church, the story of the Freedom Rides would have had a much different ending.

Dr. King’s mission, then, was to persuade the cab drivers to abandon their rescue attempt, lay down their weapons and go home. His small group gathered at the front door of the church, lined up in twos. Then they walked out the doors, as if they were marching.

There was an unforgettable silence as they passed out of the church. We watched as they walked through the howling crowd; I was sure I would never see them again. And yet, for all the yelling, the mob didn’t touch them — such is the power of nonviolence.

About an hour passed. Suddenly, out of the darkness, they all reappeared, unharmed. Dr. King had convinced the cab drivers to abandon their mission. This was no small miracle. Dr. King showed through this act of courage in this most harrowing moment of the campaign that fear was not a factor for him. It was, at that point in the Freedom Rides, the greatest lesson he could have offered.

Early the next morning, with the help of the Alabama National Guard (which arrived after hours of pressure from Mr. Kennedy on the Alabama governor, John Malcolm Patterson), we were able to leave the church unharmed. Dr. King’s courageous mission to our would-be rescuers prevented great bloodshed and kept the Freedom Rides on its nonviolent course. And it showed us what the Freedom Rides, and the movement overall, were about.

The man and the movement were behind the decision by each of us to stand up and take action, even if it required extraordinary courage. If we were ever in doubt, he reminded us why we had chosen to leave the comforts of our homes, college campuses and family and friends to travel to unknown places fully aware of the possibility that we’d never return. Dr. King showed how quiet strength can overcome violence, how courage can overcome fear, how peace can overcome the most awful hate.





Bernard Lafayette Jr. is a distinguished senior scholar in residence at the Candler School of Theology at Emory University.
Posted By: Richard Kigel
Friday, May 20th 2011 at 11:11AM
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Some first class primary source material adding texture and life to a powerful chapter in our history.


Friday, May 20th 2011 at 11:12AM
Richard Kigel
All I could picture were the yellow cabs of NY taxi drivers waving their hands gesturing for the mob to move out of the way while honking their horns. That would have been something had the cab drivers had their way that night. Running people over with their cabs. Thank God that the Late Dr. King persuaded the men to abandon their rescue mission. I agree that this material told from a primary source adds lots of texture to its ability to bring this moment in history to life. Great story telling and for me that's how history should be... story telling without the dry facts that no one can digest anyway. Most people who hate history just regurgitate the information come test time anyway.

God forgive me for ranting, but I don't enjoy most Black history because its just a bunch of facts of history. It has to come a live to me in order for me to appreciate it. Notice that Brother Gaddy isn't posting his history facts ... perhaps he's on vacation ... nevertheless I don't comment on every piece he posts because some of it is just plain borrowing. History has to be told like a story... in order for it to be appreciated. I know Sister Irma will hang me up to dry for what I've said but that's ok.
Friday, May 20th 2011 at 11:31AM
Jen Fad
Jen:

I agree with you about history being reduced to a collection of facts and information.

As a fan of history and as a writer--I want to communicate to the reader the feel of what it was like to be ther from the inside. That is why I like PRMARY SOURCES, like this rememberance from BErnard Lafayette, a man who was there at the time and could tell us exactly what he saw and heard and felt as it was happening.

In my currecnt project on Phillis Wheatley, I am enjoying digging into the primary sources of history--of her own life and of the life and times of the city of Boston in the 1770's. Some amazing stuff!




Friday, May 20th 2011 at 12:11PM
Richard Kigel
@Rich, just stopped by to once again thank you for this wonderful, uplifting and educational post and to say "I" just saw an interview with one of the Freedom rider sisters on CNNNewsroom@Cnn in the last hour. It was so inspiring and such a great experience she is sharing with this generation how great our nationis and it can be even greater with each coming generation's care and unityin peace as a main goal. (smile)
Thursday, April 10th 2014 at 6:47PM
ROBINSON IRMA
(S-M-I-L-E)
Thursday, April 10th 2014 at 6:47PM
ROBINSON IRMA
...CAN YOU SAY, "ORAL HISTORY / EXTENDED FAMILY "??? lov ya (smile)
Thursday, April 10th 2014 at 6:47PM
ROBINSON IRMA
@Jen, as I watched this program I had you on my mind the whole time...and I realize I owe you an apology and here is why...

Have you read rich's book ON THE WINGS OF THE WIND..SURE IT IS FICTION which makes it even better to explain our history...Jen, we are humans and humans have every day lives just like everyone else...and this is why I owe you an apology because, I have been I believe giving you the wrong impression aht his is not every day life when we talk about our history!! And why I asked if you had read Rich's book.

do you have any idea what I am trying to say. NOw did you see this program.well like this program this movement had many different parts. Some of these people were going from point A to point B they just sat where they wanted to sit therefore all were not a direct, but an indirect part of the movement. At tis time, our part was just siting in drug stores, movie theathers or just going to a White only bath room as we passed from a drug store to an department dressing room that was white only, ect.

Jen, remember me talking about the pizza place near where I live if Black they will not wait on you...this is life Jen and this means history is always happening. We were chattel salves but we had a home life just like everyone else. In fact many slaves had more freedoms and rights then the White wife of the master's did. AGAIN TIS IS JUST EVERY DAY LIFE.

great post Rich...you are my favorite school teacher and your book is one of teh best one's on slavery I have ever read, bar none.It is so much life liven, by humans, in slavery I really don't see it as fiction just not known facts. lol (smile)
Thursday, April 10th 2014 at 6:47PM
ROBINSON IRMA
...and, even more important Jen,too many of the slave owners believed they weere doing God's work...sure it was an abuse of god's work and it always is as ling as we refuse to see each other as made in the image of God if tis is what our Bible says. BUT MOST OF ALL WE ARE HUMANS AND HUMANS BASIC NEED IS TO SURVIVE AND TO BE HAPPY.

ME, I DISLIKE DISLIKINGNG PEOPL...THE SAME WAY I BELIEVE s*x NOR MAN'S BEHAVIOR CAN EVER BE SOCIOLIZED AS IT IS ALSO DIRECTLY TIED TO ONE SURVIVLE...AND JEN ONE IS INDEPENDAN WHEN THEY CAN SAY AND BELIEVE THAT THEY ARE IN CONTROL OF THEIR OWN BEHAVIORS FROM INSIDE OF THEMSLEVES...NOT OUT SIDE...IF I BELIEVED I WAS A SINNER THEN I WOULD NOT BE WORTHY...

AND AS WE SAY IN NDB, IF I GO TO HELL I WILL TURN IT INTO TEH LAND OF TRANQUAL LIGHTS OR ANY PLACE I AM IS GOING TO BE A HAPPY PLACE, PERIOD! (SMILE)
Thursday, April 10th 2014 at 6:47PM
ROBINSON IRMA
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