When courage meets candor: Lessons from the Civil Rights Movement
In the face of divisive rhetoric and a societal shift away from diversity, equity, and inclusion efforts, the leaders of the Civil Rights Movement of the 1960s have a lesson to share about perseverance and honesty.
A picketer in front of a Gadsden, Alabama, drugstore turns to answer a heckler during a demonstration in 1963.
AP/FILE
Stepping foot on Claflin University鈥檚 campus in Orangeburg, South Carolina, is walking onto 鈥淔reeland,鈥 the name that was given to the campus during the Civil Rights Movement.
It is a legacy that endures and that I experienced in Ministers鈥 Hall at Claflin, when I sat with some of the elders from the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC). Their presence inspired me, because I knew what they had done as teenagers through the sit-in movement and how it changed the world.
I had barely settled into my seat when civil rights activist Judy Richardson began to read a startling statement.聽
She and others had learned that the grant funding for the lecture series 鈥淪NCC and Grassroots Organizing鈥 had been terminated, the result of cuts to the National Endowment for the Humanities. The move was tied to broader belt-tightening by the Trump administration. But it also came amid a societal shift away from diversity, equity, and inclusion efforts that many have seen as the natural extension of the civil rights battles waged in the 1960s.
Nevertheless, Ms. Richardson and the group did what they鈥檝e done for the last 65 years 鈥 they pushed ahead with a steely determination and love in their hearts.
Over those next few hours, I sat with the elders and learned about SNCC, from their efforts to build political power to the care and concern they expressed for people who had been harmed by racism and classism. Their defiance was different from the despair that I had seen in recent months due to the current administration, and was a compelling reminder of what is birthed when courage meets candor.
What also jumped out to me was how youthful the elders looked. Ms. Richardson, reportedly 81 years old, is still vibrant and full of songs, with palpable energy. Books might say she was the former field secretary for SNCC, but those who are familiar with the work know she is a forever field secretary.
My dear Aunt Joyce has a line that she recites often: 鈥淲herever you go, represent.鈥 These SNCC members represent timeless dedication to righteousness 鈥 the resolve to stare down death and choose life. Some of those deaths were the result of government neglect, others the result of Jim Crow, under the umbrella of a nation that Martin Luther King Jr. said was 鈥渁pproaching spiritual death.鈥 Where Dr. King is with us in spirit, the elders remain, forever young and marked by those experiences.
That history, and more importantly, honesty, can help us cut through the divisive rhetoric of the present time. There are some who see the removal of social safety nets, murals, and much more as the end of a progressive era.聽
I am reminded of a familiar refrain from SNCC: 鈥淭hose who believe in freedom cannot rest.鈥 America has largely been out of tune regarding that refrain, but its greatest defenders of democracy and its tillers for a better world have not.聽
In our cover story this week, Story Hinckley introduces readers to some of those modern tillers, individuals who were moved by the injustice of George Floyd鈥檚 murder to strive for change. Momentum has been difficult to sustain, but as one source tells Story, 鈥淓ven though there has been a swing back, there are still people pushing forward.鈥
This column first appeared in the May 26, 2025, issue of 海角大神 Weekly.聽Subscribe today to receive future issues of the Monitor Weekly magazine delivered to your home.