The 60th
Anniversary Of The Struggle To Desegregate Little Rock, Arkansas Central High
School-Honor The “Little Rock Nine”
By Frank Jackman
The 1950s in America, in
the American South especially, were a time, like today it seems, when black people
and their allies were amping up the struggle for black civil rights. First more
publically and graphically in the South and then in the North as a result of
the landmark United States Supreme Court
decision in 1954 in Brown v. Topeka
Board Of Education (Kansas). (A
legal decision that very well may have not been decided the same way by today’s
court given its current composition) One of the first big tests of that decision
concerning public school desegregation was the attempt to desegregate Little
Rock’s Central High School. That as it turned out was no easy task between then
Governor Faubus’ attempts via the Arkansas National Guard to prohibit that attempt
to the vicious violent reactions of whites, including a large majority of their
fellow students, to President Eisenhower’s federalizing of the National Guard and
sending in the 101st Airborne to insure their safety. Yes, no
question we today should continue to honor the bravery and tenacity of the Little
Rock Nine (eight of whom are still alive to commemorate their brave actions).
Of course everybody
recognizes, to some degree, that race relations in America are not the same as
back in the 1950s (although the bar is pretty low if that is the benchmark) but
here is a cause for pause. Increasingly public school in the cities, including
in Little Rock, are becoming “re-segregated. The struggle continues but thanks
Little Rock Nine you led the way.
No comments:
Post a Comment