Handbook for Training in Nonviolence and Social Transformation Work Done By
Total Page:16
File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb
Load more
Recommended publications
-
Grassroots Leadership and Political Activism in a Nonhierarchical
View metadata, citation and similar papers at core.ac.uk brought to you by CORE provided by SHAREOK repository UNIVERSITY OF OKLAHOMA GRADUATE COLLEGE ELLA BAKER AND THE SNCC: GRASSROOTS LEADERSHIP AND POLITICAL ACTIVISM IN A NONHIERARCHICAL ORGANIZATION A DISSERTATION SUBMITTED TO THE GRADUATE FACULTY In partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy By Joan E. Charles Norman, Oklahoma 2007 UMI Number: 3278447 UMI Microform 3278447 Copyright 2007 by ProQuest Information and Learning Company. All rights reserved. This microform edition is protected against unauthorized copying under Title 17, United States Code. ProQuest Information and Learning Company 300 North Zeeb Road P.O. Box 1346 Ann Arbor, MI 48106-1346 ELLA BAKER AND THE SNCC: GRASSROOTS LEADERSHIP AND POLITICAL ACTIVISM IN A NONHIERARCHICAL ORGANIZATION A Dissertation APPROVED FOR THE GRADUATE COLLEGE BY ________________________ Dr. Priscilla Griffith, Chair ________________________ Dr. George Henderson ________________________ Dr. Jiening Ruan ________________________ Dr. Susan Smith-Nash ________________________ Dr. Robert Terry @ Copyright by JOAN E. CHARLES 2007 All Rights Reserved ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS I would like to thank the chair of my committee, Dr. Priscilla Griffith for being the best advocate a candidate could have. Her positive reassurances, encouragement, insightfulness, and support have helped me through the many times when I was very confused and overwhelmed. I could not have done this dissertation without Dr. Griffith’s guidance. I would like to thank the members of my dissertation committee for their expertise and insights: Thank you Dr. George Henderson, I am especially grateful for the meetings that we had in the early days when you gently pushed me to narrow my focus. -
The Coretta Scott King Virginia Hamilton Award for Lifetime
The Coretta Scott King Virginia Hamilton Award for Lifetime Achievement Jury Manual June 2016 Coretta Scott King Books Awards Committee Ethnic and Multicultural Information Exchange Roundtable American Library Association TABLE OF CONTENTS The Coretta Scott King-Virginia Hamilton Award for Lifetime Achievement Virginia Hamilton 1 The Purpose 2 Coretta Scott King Book Awards Committee Chair Responsibilities 2 JURY DUTY CSK-VHALA Jury Chair Responsibilities 2 Jury Chair’s Deliberation Checklist 4 Juror Responsibilities 5 Conflict of Interest 5 Confidentiality 5 Guidelines for Jurors 5 Relationships with Publishers 6 Duties of Jurors 6 Terms of Service and Meeting Attendance6 THE DECISION PROCESS Communication Overview 7 Guidelines for Electronic Communication 7 Access to Materials 7 Note Taking 7 Nominating Potential Award Winners8 Balloting Process8 APPENDICES A. Sample Calendar B. Criteria, Author/Illustrator Category C. Criteria, Practitioner Category D. Recommendation Form (Author/ Illustrator Award) E Jury Nomination Form (Author/Illustrator Award) F. Nomination Form (Practitioner Award) G. Book Notes H. Author/Illustrator Justification I. Balloting Process J. Ballot: Author/Illustrator K. Ballot: Practitioner L. Voting Tally Sheet: Author/Illustrator Award and Practitioner Award M. Sample Employer/Supervisor Information The Coretta Scott King-Virginia Hamilton Award for Lifetime Achievement Virginia Hamilton Born in Yellow Springs, Ohio, in 1936, Virginia Hamilton was a pioneering and innovative voice in the creation of books for children and young adults. Her distinguished and notable books feature American people of African descent. Ms. Hamilton’s thirty-five books, spanning three decades, reach across genres to include picture books, folktales, mysteries, science fiction, realistic fiction, contemporary novels and biographies. Virginia Hamilton and her husband, poet Arnold Adoff, had two children, daughter Leigh and son Jamie. -
Report of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee, May, 1960
The first meeting ef the Temperar.y STUJENT NI WITILENT , CltRJINATI NG Cll'1l'-1ITTEE was held on the campus ' •f Atlanta University, Atlanta, Georgia, on Friday and Saturday Hay 13-l.L, 1'''· Mr. i1ari•n s. Barry, Jr., of Fisk University was elected to serve as chairman, and l"lr. Henry James Thomas of Howard University was elected secretary. it the direction of the Coordinating Committee, Miss Ella J. Baker of the Southern C:tlris tian Leadership Conference was asked to compile and send out this report of the proceedings of the meeting. T A B L E ef C I N T E N T S I. Attendance an~ Agenda II. Statement ef PUrpese III . Committee Reports on: a - c ••r.i natien ~ - C•mmunicati•ns c ,- Finance IV. Netrs Release • • /! • ., • ... First Meeting .of The Temporary STUDENT NONVIOLENT COORDINATING COBl-ITT':'EE Atlanta University, Atlanta, Georgia Friday and Saturday, }~y 13 - 14, 1960 A T T E N D A N C E Students: Marion S. Barry Fisk University Nashville, Tennessee Y.i!'. David Forbes Sha-vr University Raleigh, N. C, James E. Dyer Hest Va. State College Institute, West Virginia Lonnie C. King, Jr, Morehouse College Atlanta, Georgia Bernard Lee Montgomery, Alabama Clarence lvJitchell, III Horgan State College Baltimore, Md. Charles E. HcDrew s. c. State College Orangeburg, s. c. r1i..ke Penn Ten.."1, A, & I. Nashville, Tenn. Henry James Thomas Howard University VJashington, D.. c. Virginius Thornton Va. State College Petersburg, Va. James Williams, VI. Va. State College Institute, Hest Virginia Advisors: Dr. Hartin L. -
History of the 1968 Poor People's Campaign
“Transforming Jericho Road”: Rev. Dr. M. L. King Jr.’s Critique of Charity Dr. Colleen Wessel-McCoy Kairos: The Center for Religions, Rights and Social Justice The United States observes only ten national holidays.1 Three of those days celebrate individuals: Christopher Columbus Day honors a European who in our civil mythology discovered the Americas but in reality heralded the genocide of the land’s inhabitants. George Washington’s Birthday honors our first president, who personally enslaved hundreds of African men, women and children as laborers and signed legislation supporting the enslavement of millions more nationally.2 And every third Monday in January, the nation honors the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.3 Born in Atlanta, Georgia in 1929 in the midst of strict legalized racial segregation and martyred by an assassins’ bullet in April 1968, King’s political and religious leadership in the social movements to dismantle racial segregation and voter disenfranchisement is widely remembered as heroic. But we too often remember only parts of this story. Exactly one year before his 1968 assassination, King broke his public silence about his opposition to the escalating war in Vietnam that was claiming unfathomable numbers of lives, particularly the poor, in order to meet the political and economic needs of the rich. He denounced the war as inseparable from the perpetuation of racism and poverty, domestically and globally. King said that only a ‘revolution of values’ is capable of bringing change on the scale necessary to resolve three interrelated evils: racism, poverty and war. He saw that the nation had the material means to address all three but lacked the moral will to do so, despite the biblical, theological and civil sources that supported just such action. -
Selma and the Voting Rights Act in Oral History, the Civil Rights Division by James H
Selma and the Voting Rights Act in Oral History, The Civil Rights Division By James H. Johnston You hear the name John Doar fleetingly in the recent film, Selma, which portrays the dramatic civil rights march from Selma to Montgomery, Alabama to build support for passage of the Voting Rights Act. The story is told from the perspectives of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. and President Lyndon Johnson. Most who see the film won’t know who Doar was, but his key role and that of the Civil Rights Division of the Department of Justice in converting the drama into enactment and enforcement of the Voting Rights Act are detailed in the John Doar escorting oral history of Steve Pollak, Doar’s assistant and James Meredith successor as head of the Civil Rights Division. “John was a revered leader in the [Civil Rights] Division. He was in total control…. He had attorneys out in the South -- all over the South…. John went south himself all the time… and it fell to me to manage the Division from Washington,” Steve Pollak remembered.1 John Doar was often personally present and involved in the dramatic events as a representative of federal authority and law. In the photograph above, when James Meredith broke the color barrier at the University of Mississippi in 1962, Doar walked with him onto campus. Doar was in Alabama in March 1965 enforcing Judge Frank Johnson’s order that Dr. Martin Luther King had a constitutional right to lead the march from Selma to Montgomery. The Voting Rights Act was passed in August of that year. -
Did Not Our Lord Bear the Heavy Cross of Wood to Calvary and Almost Sink Beneath
Did not our Lord bear the heavy cross of wood to Calvary and almost sink beneath it? Theology, Business, and Social Activism in the Philadelphia Quaker Community, 1907-1927 Luke McKinstry Haverford College History 400: Senior Thesis First Reader: Bethel Saler Second Reader: Emma Lapsansky Submitted: April 23, 2010 Abstract: In the early 20th century before the beginning of World War I many members of the Quaker community carried the perception that the Friends Meeting was becoming increasingly irrelevant in the city of Philadelphia. Starting with the United States entry into World War I, the Quaker Meetings in Philadelphia transformed from sanctuaries for people to nurture their inner spirits into cauldrons of ideas for an ambitious social mission. The 'total war' nature of World War I thrust the Quakers into public life. In a militarized society, how could Quakers uphold their religious commitment to peace without becoming traitors to the state? Quakers commitment to peace was the underlying fact that set them apart from civil society in the United States. Adhering to this principle in wartime forced the Quakers to set out on an ambitious program of social service and war relief, which began to turn the focus of the Meeting outward to the world around them. Called to action by the war, the Quakers became increasingly aware of the larger social problems around them. As Quakers surveyed and heard tales of the destruction in Europe, and witnessed the postwar uprisings in Germany and the United States, many became acutely concerned with the problems of economic inequality. The Quakers sought to bring about systemic reform to the capitalist system because they felt that inequitable industrial relations and the profit-seeking ambitions of business cause the ultimate evil of war. -
A Study Tour of the American Civil Rights Movement for Students in the Excel! Research Scholars Program at The
2014-2015 A study tour of the American Civil Rights Movement for students in the Excel! Research Scholars Program at the University of St. Thomas—Minnesota Students participating in the Journey for Justice Study Tour are Excel! Research Scholars. Excel! Research Scholars Director: Cynthia J. Fraction, M.A. Graduate Assistant: Courtney Crowley Mail: AQU 319 322 Aquinas Hall 2115 Summit Avenue St. Paul, MN 55105 stthomas.edu/excel The Excel! Research Scholars Program is part of the Grants and Research Office. David Steele, Ph.D. Director, Grants and Research Office Publication layout/design: Kristin Walters Photography: Kathryn Hubly (unless otherwise noted) 3 Message from the Excel! Research Scholars Director 4 Key Locations on the study tour 5-6 Reflections from staff on the tour 7-34 Student Research Papers: • Anisa Abdulkadir, “Implications of Legislatively Supported Racial Residential Segregation on Black Housing” • Priscila Barron Sanchez, “Key Legal Cases Surrounding the Civil Rights Movement” • Kamilah Ceaser, “SNCC and its Contributions to the Movement” • Tiana Daniels, “Canton, the Church, and Civil Rights” • Shannon Heitkamp, “Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.’s Speeches: A Critical Analysis” • Maxine Johnson, “Diversity in the Movement” • Quinmill Lei, “What They Conveniently Forgot to Teach in History Class” • Raymond Nkwain Kindva, “The Struggle for Racial Equality in Birmingham, Alabama” • Tyler Skluzacek, “Birmingham: Model City or Master of Disguise?” • Alexander Tsadwa, “State and Federal Clashes in the Midst of the Civil Rights Movement” Photo: As part of the Journey for Justice Study Tour, students crossed the Edmund Pettus Bridge, site of the “Bloody Sunday” protest Parting Thoughts march in 1965. 35 37 Community Service & Experience Highlights from the 2015 study tour The Civil Rights Movement is an era which represents some of the most turbulent times in America’s history. -
Stepping Into Selma: Voting Rights History and Legacy Today
Stepping Into Selma: Voting Rights History and Legacy Today Background In this 50th anniversary year of the Selma-to-Montgomery March and the Voting Rights Act it helped inspire, national media will predictably focus on the iconic images of “Bloody Sunday,” the words of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., the interracial marchers, and President Lyndon Johnson signing the Voting Rights Act. This version of history, emphasizing a top-down narrative and isolated events, reinforces the master narrative that civil rights activists describe as “Rosa sat down, Martin stood up, and the white folks came south to save the day.” But there is a “people’s history” of Selma that we all can learn from—one that is needed, especially now. The exclusion of Blacks and other people of color from voting is still a live issue. Sheriff’s deputies may no longer be beating people to keep them from registering to vote, but institutionalized racism continues. For example, in 2013 the Supreme Court ruled in Shelby v. Holder that the Justice Department may no longer evaluate laws passed in the former Confederacy for racial bias. And as a new movement emerges, insisting that “Black Lives Matter,” young people can draw inspiration and wisdom from the courage, imagination, and accomplishments of activists who went before. [From article by Emilye Crosby.] This lesson on the people in Selma’s voting rights movement is based on an effective format that has been used with students and teachers to introduce a variety of themes including the history and literature of Central America, the U.S. -
DIRECTOR's REPORT February 20, 2020
DIRECTOR’S REPORT February 20, 2020 Strategic Plan Our Mission: We are “The People’s University,” the center of learning for a diverse and inclusive community. Our Strategic Priorities: 1. Form communities of learning 2. Fight community deficits 3. Ready for the future: CPL 150 4. Cultivate a global perspective 5. Innovate for efficient and sustainable operations PUBLIC SERVICES Youth Services Programming Throughout the month of January, the Youth Services Staff lead story times and art programs to serve a variety of patron needs and interests. Programs included an adaptive Storytime for children with special needs, a Super Sleuth Readers Storytime, a find a job resume workshop program for teens, and several other story time and art lab programs for children and teens of all ages. The Cleveland Digital Public Library collaborated with Youth Services by offering Xbox games on in the digital classroom during the afterschool hours. Physical Fitness and Yoga In coordination with CPL FIT, the Cleveland Digital Public Library hosted Yoga and Core Strengthening classes three times a week. Classes average 35 attendees per week and include library staff and patrons. Open Mic Poetry Literature/OCFTB Librarian Evone Jeffries hosted a Cleveland Public Poetry open mic poetry session on January 11th. Knitting at PAL Popular Library Manager Sarah Flinn and Public Administration Library Assistant Monica Musser hosted a knitting class for City Hall employees and PAL patrons. Knitting club members are working on baby blankets. Genealogy and Family History The Center for Local & Global History hosted a Genealogy and Family History Research Clinic facilitated by the African American Genealogy Society of Greater Cleveland on January 11th. -
SNCC Meeting Minutes, July 14, 1961
STUDENT NONVIOLENT COORDINATING COMMITTEE MEETING July l h-16; 1961.., Baltimore, M:i .. 1. Introductions and Announcements: Staff SNCC Members were invited to join picketing of the Baltimore Gas and Electric Company and the c. & P. Telephone Company, by the Jackie Robinson Youth Council of the NAACP, because of racially discriminatory emplqyment practices. 2. Office Report -Administrative Secretary SNCC has $2,016 in standing account. The additional fun:is came contacts through the office. 3. Area Reports Area reports were heard from Tennessee, Maryland, South Carolina an:i Virginia by SNCC Jfernbers. The administrative secretary reported on Georgia, Mississippi, Arkansas, Kentuck,y, Alabana, Florida, Missouri, Texas and North Carolina. 4. Review of the Minutes The minutes were received as read. 5. Report on Status "f Freedom Riders, Jackson, Mississippi, Charles M. Sherrod, Field Secretary Report: The Freedom Ride Coordinating Committee met en June 27, 196lv General measures were discussed and finally one specific project was introduced. Mt-• Sherrod urged the Committee to finance an effort to involve Jackson citizens in the Freedom Rides • This meant the establishment of an o£fice on a trail basis for three weeks at which time there would be an attempt to overflew the jails as previously planned. Further details included the salaries of Marion Barry, and James :Seval to be paid by the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, a sum of 135.00 a week each; for room and board to be paid by CORE and the upkeep of the Jackson office by CORE. The group has been active i..'"l. Jackson recruiting people to join the freedom rides and has received considerable support from the young people of the community. -
Selma Online Teaching Guide Sara Wicht
SELMA Selma Online Teaching Guide Sara Wicht. Teaching Tolerance, Southern Poverty Law Center Steven J. Niven. Hutchins Center for African and African American Research, Harvard University Grade Level 7th to 12th Grade Last Updated: April 6, 2020 Downloadable PDF Support for teachers facilitating in-classroom learning based on the Selma curriculum. Freely available to the public via download from the Selma Online website: www.selmaonline.org Table of Contents Section One: How to Use This Guide 3 Essential Questions 3 Learner Objectives 4 Section Two: Preparing to Teach the Civil Rights Movement 5 Section Three: Before Viewing 7 About the Voting Rights Movement 7 Emancipation in 1865, through Reconstruction (1865-1877), Redemption (1877-1890), and Jim Crow (1877-1965) 7 History of voting rights after 1865 7 Reconstruction and Broken Promises 10 Black Voter Registration In The South 1940–2000 11 Black Legislators in the South: 1868–1900 13 Timeline of Events 14 Why Selma? 18 The Places 18 Section Four: During Viewing 20 The Groups 20 Pro-Voting Rights Groups 20 Anti-Voting Rights Groups 20 The People 21 Strategies and Tactics 23 Organizing 25 Laws & Constitution 26 The impact of the Voting Rights Act: What Happened after 1965? 27 Expanding Numbers of Black Legislators in the South 28 The Voting Rights Act 1965 - 2019 29 Section Five: Watching Selma 31 Watch and Respond 31 Selma: Movies as History 36 Section Six: Do Something 38 The Vote Today 38 Voting in Your Community 38 Voter Turnout 38 Voter Suppression or Voter Fraud 39 Voter Disenfranchisement 40 Section Seven: Related Resources 43 Answer Keys 46 2 Section One: How to Use This Guide Selma Online highlights the events in Selma, Alabama, during the voting rights movement of the 1960s as a turning point in the longer history of voting rights in the United States. -
This Nation Has Never Honestly Dealt with the Question of a Peacetime Economy”: Coretta Scott King and the Struggle for a Nonviolent Economy in the 1970S
Souls A Critical Journal of Black Politics, Culture, and Society ISSN: 1099-9949 (Print) 1548-3843 (Online) Journal homepage: http://www.tandfonline.com/loi/usou20 “This Nation Has Never Honestly Dealt with the Question of a Peacetime Economy”: Coretta Scott King and the Struggle for a Nonviolent Economy in the 1970s David P. Stein To cite this article: David P. Stein (2016) “This Nation Has Never Honestly Dealt with the Question of a Peacetime Economy”: Coretta Scott King and the Struggle for a Nonviolent Economy in the 1970s, Souls, 18:1, 80-105, DOI: 10.1080/10999949.2016.1162570 To link to this article: https://doi.org/10.1080/10999949.2016.1162570 Published online: 01 Jun 2016. Submit your article to this journal Article views: 1366 View Crossmark data Full Terms & Conditions of access and use can be found at http://www.tandfonline.com/action/journalInformation?journalCode=usou20 Souls Vol. 18, No. 1, January–March 2016, pp. 80–105 BLACK WOMEN’S LABOR: ECONOMICS, CULTURE, AND POLITICS “This Nation Has Never Honestly Dealt with the Question of a Peacetime Economy”: Coretta Scott King and the Struggle for a Nonviolent Economy in the 1970s David P. Stein This article highlights the work of Coretta Scott King in the struggle for governmental guarantees to employment in the 1970s. In the two decades after her husband’s death, Scott King devoted herself to achieving governmental guarantees to employment and disentangling militarism and violence from the economy. For her, this was the continu- ation of the civil rights movement. Considering the efforts of Scott King highlights the class content of the long civil rights struggle after the 1960s and the contested evolution of neoliberalism.