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Another Great American Died Wednesday: Rev. Fred Shuttlesworth
As saddened as we are by Wednesday's death of Apple's co-founder Steve Jobs, we should also note the passing of the Rev. Fred L. Shuttlesworth, a great American and civil rights leader who died early the same day.
In 1957 after Alabama "outlawed" the NAACP, Rev. Shuttlesworth founded the Southern Christian Leadership Conference along with the Rev. Martin Luther King and the Rev. Joseph Lowery.
Despite dozens of arrests and an uncanny ability to survive Klan bombings and savage beatings by the Birmingham police, Rev. Shuttlesworth never achieved the fame or notoriety of his colleagues in the civil rights movement. He'll never be a household name like Mr. Jobs, a technological innovator and billionaire captain of industry.
Rev. Shuttlesworth's fearless legacy of confronting Jim Crow racism with non-violent civil disobedience was more indispensable to American freedom than all of Apple's software applications combined.
Rev. Shuttlesworth was the man who plotted the controversial "Children's Crusade" -- waves of underage school children who endured water hoses, dogs and mass arrests by Birmingham's public safety commissioner Eugene "Bull" Connor. These young protesters helped fill the jails daily.
The barbaric conduct of the Birmingham police in arresting children and adults was beamed into American homes via the evening news, removing the element of denial about the severity of the nation's race problem.
Rev. Shuttlesworth also was the man who prompted MLK to be more aggressive in his confrontation of institutional racism. Although far less polished than his contemporaries, Rev. Shuttlesworth was the veteran of more appearances before the U.S. Supreme Court than any other troublemaker in American history, according to Andrew Manis, his biographer.
During the Occupy Wall Street protests, demonstrators risking arrest and sometimes manhandling by police are following the same playbook the Rev. Shuttlesworth wrote five decades ago.
Ironically, we can thank Mr. Jobs and his colleagues in the information and social media world for making the technology conveying news of the growing protest movement so ubiquitous.
Instead of waiting for the corporate media to get over its obsession with political horse races, protesters are able to get their stories across to audiences on the Internet with fewer filters. The awakening of the long-dormant American conscience will be televised after all.
"What do they want?" Herman Cain, a GOP presidential hopeful asked earlier this week during an interview with The Wall Street Journal. "I don't have facts to back this up, but I happen to believe that these demonstrations are planned and orchestrated to distract from the failed policies of the Obama administration."
Because his politics are the antithesis of Rev. Shuttlesworth's, Mr. Cain looks upon any grassroots movement that would attempt to make our political and financial spheres more accountable with deep suspicion. While admitting he has no facts to back up his paranoia, Mr. Cain has no problem giving President Obama credit for a movement far beyond his control.
"Don't blame Wall Street, don't blame the big banks," Mr. Cain said. "If you don't have a job and you are not rich, blame yourself."
Alas, the stupidity of racism has replaced the stupidity of uncritical belief in the logic of unrestrained wealth as America's biggest sin. Even a survivor of Jim Crow like Herman Cain looks contemptuously on those fighting for freedom from corporate domination.
Yesterday, I got an e-mail forward from a local activist about an event at Market Square scheduled for Oct. 15 that would redeem Rev. Shuttlesworth's faith in the American spirit:
"Last night I attended the first planning meeting for OccupyPittsburgh at the Unitarian Church in Shadyside. There were hundreds of people there!! Mostly youth, but also represented were many from the progressive community, people of color, students, organized labor, and faith-based organizations. The wonderful thing was most of these people I have never spotted on the street before. Many [are] young, educated people who are unable to find a job in this poor economy.
"The time is now to come in support of the Occupation of Wall Street against corporate greed and the 1 percent of this country that remains filthy rich while others struggle to have a decent life. Organized labor here in Pittsburgh is joining to give the movement some extra muscle. ..."
Too bad Rev. Shuttlesworth won't be around to see what happens next.
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Show All"Too bad Rev. Shuttlesworth won't be around to see what happens next."
It really is. For many the new millenium has been a huge disappointment. We can only hope he was or perhaps is still aware of the real "change" that is finally "blowing in on the wind" of public protests today. Some of us believe death is not just the end of a life but a dispersal of awareness and energy throughout the cosmos.
There is no comparsion between Rev Shuttlesworth and Steve Jobs.
Shuttlesworth risked life and limb for others.
Jobs risked life and limb of others (eg, children working at Apple factories in China) for himself.
Shuttlesworth is a true American hero.
Jobs is simply what many people in America believe a hero to be -- because that is what they have been told by the media to believe from the day they were born.
The "another" in the title suggests that Jobs was a Great American. If, however, one agrees with Philip Slater (Earthwalk) that "technology is a cancer on human culture," one will see Jobs as anything but great. In my value system Rev. Fred Shuttlesworth occupies a plane far above the likes of Jobs, so far as greatness is concerned.
Steve Jobs was a poster boy for the U.S. myth of starting a business in your garage and building it until one is a multimillionaire. There are always entrepreneurial success stories like that put out there. These back the myth of individual accomplishment. We never hear stories about those who start online (or nononline) businesses that fail, people who have a dream, "go for it," and fall flat on their financial faces. The message behind these is that if you're not a success, you just didn't have "the right stuff" and that's your fault. The system had nothing to do with it.
The reality is, of course, quite different.
Steal away, steal away, steal away to Jesus!
Steal away, steal away home,
I ain’t got long to stay here.
My Lord, He calls me,
He calls me by the thunder;
The trumpet sounds within my soul,
I ain’t got long to stay here.
Refrain
Green trees are bending,
Poor sinners stand a-trembling;
The trumpet sounds within my soul,
I ain’t got long to stay here.
My Lord, He calls me,
He calls me by the lightning;
The trumpet sounds within my soul,
I ain’t got long to stay here.
May Allah be praised
...and I am Sid Harth@sidileak.com
Thank you Tony Norman. I had never heard of Rev. Shuttlesworth. It's always nice to learn about new individuals who dedicated their life for the betterment of the country.
'To every man and woman is given'! We can be consciencious with memories, but do better being less judgemental even with a bend to comparison. The Rev. went with a full knowledge that "there is time for everything". For both men, what each did was the call - their unique ways to put to practice the story of the "talent" from the Master. The living is to honour them thus! Many do not want to believe that the Kingdom of Heaven is here at last, but believe it or not, what we see is no less than the clear signs. Our episodes: be it "occupy Wall Street" or something else show that there is time for everything. We must make right and read signs well, because the change can also be peaceful.