What was in John Lewis’ speech!

TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 3, 2013

Taylor Branch reporting: Last week, we reviewed a series of reports about John Lewis’ now-famous speech—the speech he gave, at age 23, at the March of Washington.

There was much discussion of the fact that Lewis agreed to change some parts of the original speech. But every time we turned around, we seemed to get a different account of what the speech had originally said!

The analysts still weren’t satisfied! So last Friday, we took Taylor Branch to happy hour over at Penn Station. Rather, we took his book, Parting the Waters: America in the King Years 1954-63.

We ended up spending a good chunk of the weekend with Branch’s book. But first, here’s his account concerning that now-famous speech:

According to Branch, the original version of Lewis’ speech included contributions by several other SNCC leaders. According to Branch, this is the way the language about General Sherman came in:
BRANCH (page 873): James Forman inserted references to specific outrages, such as the caning of C.B. King by the Albany sheriff, and in his swashbuckling style contributed a vision of conquest: “We will march through the South, through the heart of Dixie, the way Sherman did. We shall pursue our own ‘scorched earth’ policy and burn Jim Crow to the ground—nonviolently. We shall crack the South into a thousand pieces and put them back together in the image of democracy.” After polishing by Julian Bond and Eleanor Holmes, among others, the final draft of Lewis’ speech became a collective manifesto of SNCC’s early years.
According to Branch, “trouble over the speech began on Tuesday afternoon, the day before the march.” It started with Cardinal O’Boyle, but spread to others, with special concern about the claim in the speech that Kennedy administration’s newly proposed civil rights bill “came ‘too little too late’ and was unworthy of SNCC support.”

According to Branch, the resolution occurred the next day, underneath the Lincoln Memorial, even as the day’s speeches were being delivered. The dispute now centered on the language about the “scorched earth” march through the South.

Branch has Dr. King serving as final mediator. In Branch’s account, Dr. King correctly surmises that the “scorched earth” language wasn’t Lewis’ own.

“John, I know you as well as anybody,” Branch quotes Dr. King saying (page 879). “That doesn’t sound like you.”

Was Dr. King this all-knowing in this particular incident? We don’t know, though Branch’s book is meticulously sourced to the voluminous oral and written histories of these life-changing events. We moved from there back to Branch’s detailed accounts of the astonishing events of the 1961 Freedom Rides, where we spent a good chunk of the weekend.

If you watch that PBS documentary we recommended last week, we will suggest that you follow it up with Branch’s deeply detailed accounts of the events that program portrays. It’s hard to believe that such events ever happened on this earth, or that they could have been so widely forgotten.

Once you start, that documentary is hard to stop watching. Branch takes you deep inside the events PBS put on the screen.

6 comments:

  1. Since John Lewis has written an entire book about his experience in the civil rights movement, and devotes quite a few pages to his speech at the march, including the full text, why don't you consult what Lewis says about it instead of what somebody else says?

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  2. Our nation's elite, our liberal leaders and their tribal
    followers don't care about black kids.

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  3. How many drinks from lonely women did you wave away because you wanted to finish your %#$@ civil rights book?

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  4. I watched that documentary at your suggestion, Bob. It is indeed hard to believe such a thing happened. And it's hard to believe that there are people so dedicated to what they believe is right/good that they would do what the Freedom Riders did. I know I wouldn't. And as much as I admire them, and think them to be far greater people than I could ever hope to be, I couldn't help but think they were a little too zealous. Those last remnants of overt racism (mainly, the separate facilities for white and black in the deep south) would have faded away eventually without anyone risking life or limb. Even though such overt racism is obviously an outrage and affront to one's conscience and humanity, to my mind horrible beatings and the real risk of violent death (i.e, of the Freedom Riders) are worse than blacks in certain areas of the deep south having to use different bathrooms, etc., for another decade or two.

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    1. Everything is easy, when you don't have to do it yourself. "... for another decade or two".

      LG

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  5. Off topic, but Bob has frequently complained that liberals don't much care about educating minority children. Evidence of such is in this Washington Post editorial
    Justice Department bids to trap poor, black children in ineffective schools

    It's striking that two black officials, Holder and Obama, are supporting this action.

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