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KVOS Special: The Color of Black

  • One of the severest problems in the South
  • is brutality practiced by law enforcement officers,
  • such as an incident that occurred
  • to me about a year and a half ago in Plaquemine, Louisiana.
  • It was there that I had been in jail
  • at the time of the March on Washington
  • and was unable to be in Washington
  • at that historic march.
  • After getting out of jail in Plaquemine, Louisiana,
  • I was confronted with a lynch mob, a most unusual lynch mob.
  • It was composed of the state law enforcement
  • officers, state troopers, who were riding horseback, roaming
  • through the streets, kicking open doors in the Negro
  • community, and screaming for my blood, screaming, come on out.
  • They tear gassed a church in which 200 or 300 people
  • were congregated.
  • I was in that church.
  • We were forced out of the church by tear gas
  • into a parsonage, the minister's home next door.
  • And from there, we were forced into the yard by tear gas,
  • and from the yard back into the parsonage
  • and back into the yard.
  • If any Negro was seen in the street
  • during that night in Plaquemine, Louisiana,
  • he was run down by state troopers, beaten with a club,
  • and stuck with an electric cattle prod,
  • told to get up and run, and run down again
  • and told that they would let him go if he would tell them
  • where I was.
  • We finally managed to escape into a funeral home
  • a half block away by crawling through tall grass.
  • We got to the funeral home, but there was no respite there.
  • The state troopers soon kicked open
  • the back door of that place, still screaming for my blood.
  • Finally, I managed to escape, but only
  • after using two hearses, one as a decoy and the other with me
  • in it.
  • The decoy was used to pull state troopers away
  • from the roadblocks that they had set up.
  • And it worked.
  • I was then put in the back of the second hearse
  • and sped toward New Orleans where
  • we held a press conference and described what had transpired
  • and announced that I was returning
  • to Plaquemine the next day.
  • And if the state troopers had a warrant for my arrest,
  • I would be there to be served with it
  • and to find out what the charges were.
  • The next day, we discovered that they had no warrant at all.
  • That is James Farmer, a gentleman
  • who should know about racial relations in the Southern
  • United States.
  • Mr. Farmer is the head of the Congress of Racial Equality
  • in the United States and a gentleman
  • who has probably been in jail because of his actions
  • more than any of us will ever think of being in jail.
  • Tonight, Channel 12 Special is going
  • to talk to Mr. Farmer about some of the real issues
  • in the fight for equality in the United States.
  • How many times have you been in jail, or can you tell us?
  • Oh, I've been in about eight or nine different jails
  • on four arrests.
  • Does this--
  • In Mississippi, I was placed in four different jails, including
  • the state penitentiary at Parchman, the maximum security
  • unit.
  • In Louisiana, I was in two different jails
  • and in three different jails in New York
  • City at the time of the opening of the World's Fair.
  • Now, you've been in Selma recently.
  • And you were there at the time of the heightened tensions.
  • Yes.
  • How does Selma differ from any other small, white community
  • in the South, or small community in the South?
  • Well, Selma has more Negroes than it has white.
  • This is one of the distinguishing features.
  • There are such towns as Selma and such counties
  • throughout the deep South.
  • But it's also a very poor town.
  • The industries that are there are on their last legs,
  • as it were, and unemployment is very great.
  • And one usually finds that when unemployment
  • is great in any area, the racial tensions tend to heighten.
  • We've heard considerable about outside agitators.
  • People-- well, Governor Wallace has talked about--
  • if the outside agitators would stay out, our people are happy.
  • The Negroes here are happy.
  • What about this?
  • Well, nothing could be further from the truth.
  • It may be that Governor Wallace really believes that,
  • that he has been conditioned to believe that Negroes
  • are happy or content.
  • But they are not happy under segregation.
  • And they do not need outsiders to tell them
  • that they are not happy.
  • They realize it.
  • All that they do with the outside persons representing
  • the civil rights organizations is
  • to use them for the specialized skills that they have.
  • Now, in Mississippi they tell me that the state was gravely
  • concerned about its public image when the Freedom Riders first
  • went into the state in 1961, and hired a public relations firm
  • to try to correct that image.
  • The public relations firm sent two of its brightest young men
  • down there.
  • They studied the situation and came up with a plan of action.
  • They would put one Negro on television
  • and let him tell all the American people
  • how happy Negroes are in Mississippi, and how
  • they love segregation, and how good the white people treat
  • them.
  • They sat him down in the studio and told him
  • that people all over the country were watching his face
  • and would be listening to his voice.
  • And he should tell them that.
  • He said, just a minute.
  • I have a question to ask.
  • Did you say they can hear me all over the country, in New
  • York, and Washington State, and California, and Chicago?
  • They said, yes.
  • He then leaned toward the microphone and said, help!
  • [LAUGHS] Well, the Negro has been subjected
  • to this for over 100 years.
  • We're now on what you call phase two of the revolution.
  • That's right.
  • Why hasn't this happened before?
  • What is responsible for it coming up now in the '60s?
  • Why has the Negro stayed down so long?
  • Well, I think there are a number of reasons.
  • One reason was the Supreme Court decision of 1954
  • and the school desegregation cases,
  • which set the legal framework for a real push
  • to eliminate racial discrimination.
  • For the first time in 1954, the US Supreme Court
  • said that segregation is, per se, discrimination
  • and is therefore unconstitutional.
  • Other reasons are World War II in which the Negro soldiers who
  • were fighting were told that they
  • were fighting against the master race theory of Nazism.
  • And inevitably, they began to ask themselves,
  • what about the master race theory back home?
  • So did their friends and relatives.
  • A second reason is the increasing education
  • of Negro youth.
  • As the youngsters are going to school in larger numbers
  • and studying the foundations of American democracy
  • where it says, for example, we hold these truths
  • to be self-evident that all men are created free and equal,
  • inevitably they ask themselves, well, what about me?
  • Don't these things mean me too?
  • A third reason is Africa.
  • As the new nations of Africa have begun to emerge,
  • Negroes have looked to that continent with greater pride
  • and have had more awareness of having come from something,
  • having some roots, and therefore, the ability
  • to go somewhere.
  • A national pride we have, Afro-Americans.
  • That's right.
  • Yes, many Negroes considering themselves Afro-Americans
  • and being proud of being black rather than ashamed
  • of their skin color, as had been true for a long period of time.
  • Do you think education is pretty much a key to Negro equality?
  • Education is very important indeed.
  • We have to define what we mean by education here.
  • Many people say that the whole race problem
  • will be solved by education.
  • What many of them mean then is, we should do nothing else.
  • We should have no action.
  • We should have no Selmas, no Montgomerys, and so forth
  • But obviously it is true that there
  • is a great gap between the education of Negroes
  • and the education of whites because
  • of the inferior segregated schools
  • to which most Negroes have gone in the South
  • and in Northern cities as well.
  • So it's now important for us to have
  • a massive program of remedial education
  • to repair the damage that has been done
  • to our youngsters, Negro youngsters, Puerto Rican
  • youngsters, Mexican-American youngsters, Indian youngsters,
  • white youngsters in Appalachia and other areas
  • who have been damaged by inferior education.
  • This gets down to the War on Poverty, I think, doesn't it?
  • It does indeed.
  • It's my belief that it ought to be a major part
  • of the anti-poverty program.
  • And I've taken the occasion to talk with President Johnson
  • several times about it.
  • He's expressed great interest and has
  • asked that we submit memoranda to him outlining
  • how such a program could work.
  • I have now sent three memoranda to the president on it.
  • And we are hopeful that it will be incorporated
  • into the anti-poverty program.
  • How significant is the new voting rights legislation
  • that is being considered?
  • It will be very significant indeed,
  • because there are several million Negroes who
  • are disenfranchised in the South because of their race
  • or their color, which means they are taxed
  • without representation, which means that they have little
  • or no voice in their political life and political destiny.
  • If the voter rights bill is a strong one
  • and is enacted into law without weakening amendments,
  • then it will make a great political change in the South.
  • What we'll find is that the politicians who are racists
  • will either change their views or will be replaced.
  • This leads to the question, will the Negro
  • try to replace all the white lawmakers with Negro lawmakers?
  • No, he will not.
  • I see no evidence at all, no indication whatsoever
  • that Negroes would vote out all whites
  • and vote in only Negroes.
  • I think they will vote out those persons who are opposed
  • to civil rights and equality.
  • They will vote in persons irrespective
  • of their race or their color who have the right point of view
  • and are in favor of equality, and democracy, and decency.
  • Like a lobbying group, then, you exert
  • pressure for those who see your philosophy.
  • Precisely.
  • Negroes are more concerned with the point
  • of view of the candidate than they are
  • with the race of a candidate.
  • How do you feel about the voting rights legislation?
  • Are you happy with it?
  • Will it do the job totally.
  • Well, it is a good legislation as it stands now,
  • but it needs considerable strengthening
  • in a number of ways.
  • For example, the 50% provision now says that if less than 50%
  • of the citizens of any state were registered last November
  • or voted in the election, then the federal law
  • becomes applicable and federal registrars are appointed.
  • Well, that's not adequate, because there
  • are some states in the South, such as Arkansas, Tennessee,
  • Texas, and Florida, where more than 50% of the people
  • were registered and did vote.
  • Yet there are counties in those states where Negroes
  • are discriminated against.
  • I, then, suggest that we have a provision in the legislation
  • which would allow 20 people who have been discriminated
  • against in voting rights to petition
  • the Department of Justice.
  • And if the Department of Justice after investigation
  • finds that there is justification
  • for the complaint, then federal registrars should be sent in.
  • What about the legislation of understanding?
  • We hear this argument frequently that you
  • can pass all the laws in the world,
  • but it isn't going to help one man understand another,
  • or treat him any better, or think of him any differently?
  • Well, the law is a very great help, obviously.
  • The law cannot keep a man from hating me,
  • it may not make him love me, but it can keep him from lynching
  • me.
  • And that is terribly important, as far as I'm concerned.
  • Well, I think we need to understand
  • that the law does not try to legislate the evil out
  • of men's hearts.
  • What it tries to do is to control men's practices
  • so that whatever evil of prejudice exists within them
  • is not allowed to damage other people.
  • And this is a very important function.
  • Now, legally I would have a right to dislike a man.
  • The law couldn't touch me.
  • Legally I'd have a right to hate him.
  • I suppose I'd even have a right legally to wish him dead.
  • But I wouldn't have a right legally to kill him.
  • Then it's a function of the law to step in and say,
  • whatever evil is in your heart must not
  • be allowed to damage this man.
  • Do you think this eventually, over the decades, will lead
  • to softening of these opinions?
  • The--
  • Oh, I think it will.
  • I think it will very much for two specific reasons.
  • One reason, that most people don't want to be law offenders.
  • And if the law says that this is right,
  • then most people will tend to comply with it.
  • And the law in itself will convince them of its rightness.
  • And second, we believe that if you
  • can, by laws, or by direct action, or by negotiation,
  • eliminate this practice of segregation,
  • break down the barriers, that is, then at least people
  • can come into contact and have an opportunity
  • to develop friendships, to develop understanding.
  • In other words, while it is true that prejudice produces
  • segregation, it's also true that segregation
  • produces and perpetuates prejudice
  • by keeping people apart.
  • Have you seen any evidences of this theory
  • since the Civil Rights law was passed?
  • Well, yes.
  • We have found that in many areas in the South
  • in cities in the deep South where they had said, no, never.
  • We will never desegregate this restaurant, or this theater,
  • this lunch counter, or what have you,
  • after the law went into effect, they did desegregate.
  • And nothing has happened.
  • The place has not burned down.
  • There are no fistfights.
  • People who sit down have found it irrelevant
  • who is at a table behind them in a restaurant.
  • It's no longer important who sits across in the next table.
  • It's not important who sits there.
  • I was in a hotel in Savannah, Georgia,
  • which had been segregated before the Civil Rights Act,
  • was now desegregated.
  • There were about 50 Negroes there attending a conference.
  • There were no problems whatever.
  • How do you think the Johnson administration is doing
  • for the civil rights cause?
  • Well, I've been impressed with the Johnson administration
  • and particularly with President Johnson and his sincerity
  • and his interest in doing something
  • about solving this problem.
  • We felt that he was slow to move in the Selma crisis
  • and should have moved earlier, which
  • is the reason we built up pressure on him
  • and set the thing right at his doorstep.
  • But when he acted, he acted strongly.
  • He spoke out strongly.
  • He joined the civil rights movement.
  • And he has declared war on the Ku Klux Klan.
  • And that's been a long time coming.
  • Mr. Farmer, where is the Negro revolution headed?
  • We know that it's breaking wide open in the South.
  • How about the North?
  • Well, for a long time Northern Negroes
  • were much more apathetic than the Southern Negroes
  • and did not have the same spirit in resisting,
  • the reason being that conditions are relatively good.
  • That is, they were better than in the South.
  • Many Negroes who had come from the South to the North
  • felt that they had escaped and that
  • the obvious discrimination, the "for colored",
  • "for white" signs, and the brutality, did not exist.
  • After they remained in the North for a while, however,
  • they found that there were severe problems
  • of job discrimination, and housing discrimination, and de
  • facto school segregation, that is, school segregation based
  • upon residential segregation.
  • The civil rights revolution thus began in the South.
  • It began a few years ago with the sit-ins, the student
  • sit-ins in the South, and the Freedom Rides, and so forth.
  • Now, it has spread north.
  • You may recall that in the spring and summer of 1963
  • there were massive demonstrations,
  • not only in the South, but also in the North.
  • In the North there were many large picket lines
  • around construction sites, for example,
  • protesting discrimination in the building trades
  • and the construction industry.
  • Likewise, there have been school boycotts
  • in a number of cities in the North protesting segregation
  • in the schools.
  • Will this intensify in the coming year or in the months
  • ahead?
  • There's no question about it.
  • The civil rights revolution is now
  • across the board, North, South, East, and West.
  • And I think that this trend will continue
  • until we have been victorious.
  • And by victorious, I mean that America lives up
  • to its promise and its aspirations of democracy,
  • and we have really an open society,
  • a society of friends, where what the person can do
  • and what he can become is not restricted
  • by the color of his skin.
  • Let me ask you, when do you foresee an end
  • to the revolution?
  • Well, it's difficult to say how long it'll take,
  • because there are so many factors that we do not know
  • and cannot judge.
  • We don't know how intense will be
  • the response of the federal government
  • or the American people generally.
  • But if I must give a wild guess, I
  • would say that within the next 10 or 15 years,
  • we should be over the hump and the basic part of the job
  • will be done.
  • Getting back to the North, we find
  • a lot of communities in the North, especially, that say,
  • we have no race problem.
  • Bellingham is a community that claims it has no race problem.
  • Well, yes.
  • Many communities say, we have no race problem,
  • when what they really mean is they have no Negroes.
  • If they have no Negroes or very few Negroes,
  • then obviously there is no problem in the sense
  • that there is no tension.
  • There is no issue raised.
  • But what they have found in many cases
  • is that when the Negro population increases
  • as the migration from the South to the North
  • goes on, that they do have a problem.
  • Now, before World War II there were many towns and cities,
  • particularly in the Northwest, that had no Negro population
  • and, thus, boasted that they had no race problem.
  • But during the war, Negroes came in
  • for wartime jobs and industry.
  • And for the first time they found
  • that they did have a problem, because the Negroes who came in
  • were segregated in living and were
  • discriminated against in jobs.
  • And they found that considerable racial tension existed.
  • The thought is still there, even though
  • the physical manifestation has not taken place.
  • That is right.
  • The thought is there, and the prejudice is there.
  • I think it's terribly important for all Americans
  • to search their own hearts and to find out to what extent
  • they share the prejudices that exist
  • in other parts of the country, what their attitudes are
  • toward Negroes, what image they have of Negroes,
  • whether when they think of Negroes they
  • think of an inferior people, whether they believe Negroes
  • are inferior, whether they think of Negroes as being clowns
  • or buffoons, such as we used to see very often in the movies,
  • the Stepin Fetchits and so on.
  • The image.
  • The image.
  • The stereotyped image.
  • Or whether we think of Negroes as happy-go-lucky contented
  • people who sit under the magnolia trees in the South,
  • and strum their guitars, and sing sweetly of the hereafter.
  • If these are the images, then they are wrong.
  • Have our schools been partly at fault in creating that image?
  • The textbook writers?
  • The schools have been very much at fault. The textbooks used
  • in high schools and in colleges dealing with American history
  • do not portray accurately the role and the contribution
  • of Negroes to American history and the building of America.
  • They present, instead, an image of Negroes
  • during slavery as being generally acquiescent people
  • who accepted their role in slavery
  • and made perfect slaves, ignoring the fact
  • that there were slave revolts led by slaves,
  • and that there was the Underground Railroad where
  • slaves ran away from home to escape North at great risk
  • to themselves.
  • Not only the textbooks used in high schools and colleges,
  • but also books used in elementary schools
  • and pre-school books used by smaller children
  • frequently portray Negroes as carriers of bags,
  • as porters, exclusively, or as janitors who sweep
  • and mop and scrub the floors.
  • And this tends to plant the idea in the minds of the young.
  • And they grow up then with the stereotyped image of Negroes.
  • Could the press be partly at fault here, the mass media?
  • Well, it is, I think, to a great extent.
  • We find still in many cities that there
  • are racial designations attached to crime stories.
  • In other words, if a crime small or large
  • is committed by a person who happens to be a Negro,
  • then he is indicated--
  • he is described as Jon Jones, Negro.
  • The same is not done with white persons who commit crimes.
  • We don't say Anthony Smith of English descent, or Irish,
  • or Scandinavian, or German, or Italian.
  • We just give the name.
  • When we began this program you were telling
  • about an experience in Plaquemine, Louisiana,
  • an experience that I think none of us had ever heard of.
  • And I am sure there must be thousands
  • of other experiences every day, every week of this type.
  • Is the press doing its job in this respect?
  • In other words, we read reports.
  • We see television reports where there are killings, where
  • there are mass demonstrations.
  • But what about the deprivation of rights
  • that are not being reported?
  • Well, there are, as you indicate,
  • many such instances of brutality, of denial
  • of human rights.
  • And they occur daily in the deep South.
  • They do not come to the attention of the public.
  • The press does not cover them unless there
  • has been a death or great beatings,
  • violence of that sort, or mass arrests.
  • Most of the incidents go unnoticed indeed.
  • Selma, for example, would not have gotten the attention which
  • it did get had it not been for the masses of people who
  • were in the street, and for the arrest of Dr. King,
  • and for the brutality that the state police and the sheriff's
  • deputies used against Negroes when
  • they attempted to march to Montgomery on that
  • first Sunday.
  • Would the revolution be as effective
  • or the civil rights movement be as effective
  • as it is had you not received the press coverage you
  • have received, however?
  • Obviously, it would not.
  • I think that television particularly has been helpful.
  • The student sit-ins in the South in 1960, for example,
  • would not have spread, in all probability,
  • as they did had it not been for the television coverage
  • which they received.
  • Many youngsters in other parts of the South
  • saw on the television screen what their co-partners were
  • doing in other parts of the South, and asked themselves,
  • why shouldn't we do the same?
  • Then they hit the streets and began demonstrating.
  • So television helped it to spread.
  • And it has helped people all over the country
  • to realize the depth of the problem
  • and the intensity of the feeling.
  • And thus, their consciences have been stirred,
  • and their intellects alivened.
  • Tell us a little bit about CORE, Mr. Farmer, direct action,
  • nonviolence, something that--
  • what makes you willing to put your life on the line?
  • Well, CORE is an organization dedicated
  • to non-violent direct action.
  • It was founded in 1942.
  • And I am proud to say I was one of the founders of it
  • many years ago.
  • And it's an interracial organization,
  • national in scope, which uses techniques such as those that
  • were developed by Gandhi in India
  • as the Indians fought for an end to colonialism
  • and for self-determination.
  • Now, it is our conviction that if a person is opposed
  • to an evil, such as racial segregation or discrimination,
  • he has a responsibility to try to withdraw himself
  • from participation in that evil and to try
  • to bring the evil to an end.
  • This means, in other words, that he has a responsibility
  • to place his body between the evil practice
  • and the perpetrators of the evil,
  • and thus, try to stop the practice of the evil.
  • Now, all of us are afraid, of course.
  • We would be lying if we said that when we go to Selma, when
  • we go to Montgomery, when we face a lynch mob,
  • we are not frightened.
  • We are frightened.
  • But there is a determination which
  • outweighs that fear, a determination
  • to do something against the problem that completely
  • submerges the fear.
  • What does a cattle prod feel like?
  • Well, it gives you quite a shock.
  • It's an instrument about so long that is battery operated
  • and transistorized.
  • And when it touches the skin, it gives you quite a shock.
  • It is used to move cattle, normally.
  • Balky cattle are stuck with it, and they will move.
  • Now, when a human being is stuck with it,
  • he gets an equal shock.
  • And he will move too.
  • It is not dangerous in the sense that it won't kill you
  • unless you have a bad heart.