NewsVine_Mariyam
Diamond Member
I found this article very insightful since I was a young child when President Kennedy was carrying out his presidential election campaign, and therefore was completely oblivious to what was going on with "the grownups". It's only in retrospect that I have begun to obtain an understanding of how politics have shaped race relations in our country and impacted the civil rights movement of the 1960s and beyond.
Please remember this is a Zone 1 topic and your adherence to those rules will be appreciated.
Please remember this is a Zone 1 topic and your adherence to those rules will be appreciated.
Before dawn, on Wednesday, October 26, 1960, Martin Luther King Jr. was sleeping in a prison cell in DeKalb County, Georgia, when sheriff deputies aimed their flashlight beams into his face and barked at him to get up. They handcuffed him, shackled his legs, and hustled him out of the cell. It was 4 a.m. Hurried along, he asked repeatedly for an explanation, but the men said nothing. With a terrible foreboding, King soon found himself seated in the back of a police car rolling into the night; the only light came from the headlamps piercing the darkness.
Like all black men, King feared the chilling portent of a late-night drive into the countryside; it had happened to others, the stories heād heard were horrific.
At home in Atlanta, Coretta King knew nothing of her husbandās ominous ride. She was six months pregnant with their third child, and she had already had an emotional week.
King hadnāt wanted to join the student-led sit-in. But the band of youths, members of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee, insisted. The SNCC was well-organized and impatient. Its target was one of Atlantaās venerable institutions, Richās department store; its goal: to desegregate the storeās snack bars and restaurants. The young activists urged King to come alongāand go to jail with themāto draw attention to their campaign. King advised the students to hold off until after the presidential election now just weeks away; but the students saw an opportunity to force the candidates to address the issue of segregation. If King were arrested with dozens of young protesters, then both contenders would have no choice but to speak out. āWe thought that with Dr. King being involved in it,ā said student leader Lonnie C. King, āwe would really see where these guys stand.ā The studentsā passionāand conscienceāwere impossible for Martin Luther King Jr. to ignore.
On that early Wednesday morning, Martin Luther King Jr. had no idea where the two deputies were taking him. An hour passed, and he realized he was deep into ācrackerā country where no one protested a lynching. By dawn, King discovered he had been granted a less evil fate as the squad car turned into the maximum security state prison in Reidsville.
But his danger was far from over. If he were put to hard labor, as the judge had ordered, he would work side by side in a road gang with ruthless white criminals, many of them killers who had nothing to lose and everything to gainānational notoriety and prison respectāby murdering a black celebrity.
On that same Wednesday morning, Senator John Kennedy phoned the governor of Georgia, Ernest Vandiver. Some quiet, back-channel way had to be found to free the civil rights leader. Kennedy was motivated by his outrage, by his sympathy for the King family, and by bald political calculation. In a meeting with Kennedy just weeks earlier, King had urged the senator to take some dramatic action to prove to blacks that his commitment to their cause was genuine. His moment had arrived. If Kennedy were able to play a decisive role in Kingās release, the black community was likely to reward him with an outpouring of support. But if he acted on Kingās behalf, he risked a vicious backlash from Southern whites. The senator had to walk a fine line: show decency to a black man without alienating the white community.
Continue reading here: JFK, MLK and the Phone Call That Changed History