Sunday, July 17, 2022

March Book 2 by John Lewis, Andrew Aydin and Nate Powell

 "By the force of our demands, our determination and our numbers, we shall splinter the segregated South into a thousand pieces and put them back together in the image of God and democracy."

                                                                                                                John Lewis, 1963

In March Book Two, John Lewis continues the story of  he and his fellow Black Americans efforts to fight segregation and gain basic civil and human rights for all. Their story is set against the backdrop of Barack Obama's inauguration ceremony in 2009. 

As he became more involved in the civil rights movement, John's parents were humiliated at his prior arrest, so he stopped visiting so often. John F. Kennedy had defeated Richard Nixon and won the November 1960 election and the NSC began a new campaign. In 1960, when non-violent sit-ins successfully ended segregation in lunch counters in Nashville, TN,, the Nashville Student Movement (NSC) turned their attention to fast food restaurants and cafeterias. However, when they attempted to order from restaurants, they were met with violent resistance.

In February, 1961, they began action to desegregate movie theatres by repeatedly attempting to buy tickets. Ironically, Cecil B. DeMille's The Ten Commandments was playing. This action was also met with violent opposition. Rev. Will Campbell and those on the central committee questioned putting young people in harm's way, but John was determined the protests would continue. They were arrested the next evening and John spent his twenty-first birthday in jail.

The Congress of Racial Equality (CORE) wanted to test the Supreme Court Decision, Boyton v. Virginia, which outlawed segregation and racial discrimination on buses and in bus terminals. They decided to do this by having Freedom Ride 1961 with a small group of integrated students riding buses into Birmingham, Alabama. 

In April, 1961, John met his fellow freedom riders, Jim Peck, Elton Cox, Dr. Walter and Frances Berman, Jimmy McDonald, Charles Person, Ed Blankenheim, Genevieve Hughes, Albert Bigelow, Hank Thomas and their leader James Farmer. They all signed wills and then split into two groups. They also mailed their civil disobedience plans to President Kennedy, Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy, FBI Director J.Edgar Hoover and others.
 
In Rockhill, South Carolina, the group met with trouble and were attacked while police stood by and watched. John left the group after being offered an interview in Philadelphia for a volunteer program through the Quakers, in India. He planned to rejoin the Freedom Riders in Birmingham. However, his group never made it there - their bus was firebombed and the riders beaten with pipes and fists. The second bus made it to Birmingham but was also attacked. Eugene "Bull" Connor, Birmingham's Police Chief did nothing, promising the KKK they could have fifteen minutes with the riders. Dr. Bergman, still recovering from the beating in Anniston was so badly beaten in the Birmingham bus terminal, he sustained brain damage, had a stroke and was permanently paralyzed.

Determined to continue, ten riders including John Lewis set out from Nashville to Birmingham where they were met by an angry mob of white citizens. They were held on the bus for three hours and then arrested and put in jail, supposedly for their own protection. Connor arranged to take them back to Nashville, but he dropped them at the Tennessee state line, in the depths of Klan country. It was a frightening experience for John and the others. But it was to set the tone for the many sacrifices he and many others would make in order to enforce the Supreme Court ruling, to begin to rid the country of segregation and create an equal society for Black Americans.

Discussion

March Book Two takes readers from the Freedom Rides of 1961 to the March on Washington in August, 1963. In this second book of his graphic memoir, John Lewis highlights the repeated violence he and other members of the various groups fighting for equality experienced. It's difficult to comprehend the level of hatred towards Black Americans that existed in the southern United States in the 20th century, so a graphic novel seems one of the best formats to truly highlight what happened.

Lewis describes the firebombing of the Freedom Rider's buses, the physical beatings many, if not all the Freedom Riders experienced, the terror of being caught deep in Klan territory, and the attack on First Baptist Church in Montgomery, AL in which white supremacists surrounded the church and the National Guard had to be brought in.

March Book Two highlights some of the key events in the blossoming civil rights movement including the jailing of the Freedom Riders in the Mississippi State Penitentiary after they refused to pay a fine, the development of the movement into two branches, one devoted to activism, the other to registering black voters. Lewis also describes the many actions and demonstrations by the civil rights movement and those devoted to segregation: the protest against segregated swimming pools at Cairo, Illinois, the demonstration accompanying James Meredith when he became the first African-American to enroll at the University of Mississippi, the swearing in of Alabama Governor George Corley Wallace Jr., a devoted segregationist and racist in 1963, the arrest and incarceration of Martin Luther King Jr during the march on Birmingham, AL, the march of African-American children to protest segregation and their brutal treatment by Birmingham police, and the events leading up to the historic march in Washington, D.C. on August 28, 1963.
 
In his graphic memoir, Lewis doesn't shy away from portraying the violence and hatred he and most civil rights advocates encountered in the 1960's. Black Americans were beaten, harassed and murdered, often with no consequences to those perpetrating the violence. Politicians such as George Wallace, a vocal racist who believed in segregation, and who supported Jim Crow laws, were determined to prevent African Americans from obtaining any sort of equality. Many southern states refused to accept the Supreme Court decision, Boynton v. Virginia in 1960, which held that racial segregation in public transportation spaces was illegal because it violated the Interstate Commerce Act. It took the actions of the Freedom Riders, which were violently opposed, and ultimately the actions of the Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy in response to the violence, to enforce that court decision. For Lewis and others, it quickly became apparent that each step to desegregate American society was going to be difficult and require determined, forceful action. They knew they were risking their lives to create a better future for themselves and their children.

In that regard, Lewis's memoir captures the determination, courage and sacrifice civil rights activists and many others, made in the fight for civil rights. Set against their struggles in 1960, are panels that portray the swearing in of Barack Obama - the first Black American president - in 2009. It was an America George Wallace and Ross Barrett could hardly have imagined.  Lewis continues his story in March Book Three.

The back matter contains the text of John Lewis's speech to the Washington March as well as author biographies.

Book Details:

March Book Two by John Lewis, Andrew Aydin and Nate Powell
Marietta, GA: Top Shelf Productions     2015
182 pp.

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