Misremembering Rosa Parks
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Rosa Parks died yesterday at age 92. Over the days to come, we'll hear a lot of very-much deserved prasie for Parks' refusal to abide bigotry and her courage in the service of a cause. Unfortunately, we'll also hear a new round of recitations of the stubborn myth that Parks was an anonymous, apolitical woman who spontaneously refused to yield to authority and in so doing inspired a movement. The truth, as Aldon Morris wrote in his book The Origins of the Civil Rights Movement, is that a decade earlier
in the 1940s Mrs. Parks had refused several times to comply with segregation rules on the buses. In the early 1940s Mrs. Parks was ejected from a bus for failing to comply. The very same bus driver who ejected her that time was the one who had her arrested on December 1, 1955...She began serving as secretary for the local NAACP in 1943 and still held that post when arrested in 1955...In the early 1940s Mrs. Parks organized the local NAACP Youth Council...During the 1950s the youth in this organization attempted to borrow books from a white library. They also took rides and sat in the front seats of segregated buses, then returned to the Youth Council to discuss their acts of defiance with Mrs. Parks.

This history is not hidden. But the Times' obituary describes Parks' arrest nonetheless as an event which "turned a very private woman into a reluctant symbol and torchbearer..." Parks was certainly reluctant to see too personal valoration of her as heroine distract from the broader movement. But she was not private about her politics. And her refusal to give up her bus seat was nothing new for her. As she would later tell an interviewer, "My resistance to being mistreated on the buses and anywhere else was just a regular thing with me and not just that day."

The myth of Parks as a pre-political seamstress who was too physically worn out to move has such staying power not because there's any factual basis but because it appeals to an all-too popular narrative about how social change happens in America: When things get bad enough, an individual steps up alone, unsupported and unmediated, and spontaneously resists. And then an equally spontaneous movement follows. Such a myth makes good TV, but it's poor history.


Movement-building takes hard work, no matter how righteous the cause or how desperate the circumstances.

The pivotal moments of the 60's civil rights movement, as Morris recounts in his book, were not random stirrings or automatic responses. Most of them were carefully planned events which followed months of organizing and were conceived with an eye to political tactics and media imagery. There were even some long meetings involved.

That shouldn't be seen as a dirty little secret, because strategic organizing and planned imagery shouldn't be seen as signs of moral impurity. Organizations, like the people in them, each have their faults (Ella Baker was frequently and justifiably furious with the sexism and condescension of much of CORE's leadership). But the choice of individuals to work together and find common cause in common challenges doesn't become less pure or less honest or less noble when they choose to do it through political organizations. And there's nothing particularly progressive about a historical perspective in which Rosa Parks' defiance of racism is made less genuine by the knowledge that she was secretary of the NAACP.

The myth of Rosa Parks as a private apolitical seamstress, like the myth of Martin Luther King as a race-blind moderate, has real consequences as we face the urgent civil rights struggles of today. Seeing acts of civil disobedience like Parks' as spontaneous responses to the enormity of the injustice justifies the all-too common impulses to refuse our support for organized acts of resistance and regard organized groups as inherently corrupt. Those are impulses people like Rosa Parks had to confront and overcome amongst members of her community long before she ever made national headlines for refusing to give up her seat on the bus.

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Damn, man
By jr Oct 25th 2005 at 8:23 am EDT
I've been posting at dKos for years (user ID #1883, I believe) and I ain't NEVER been number 1 on the Recommended list there.

Great diary, and great reminder.
  
Very good
By ToddHill Oct 25th 2005 at 10:00 am EDT
I agree, great post.

TMH
  
Hit the Nail on The Head
By jg Oct 25th 2005 at 11:25 am EDT
-A
  
Indeed.
By Superduperficial Oct 25th 2005 at 2:58 pm EDT
Really great post.


Who would you guys put on the list of 'most misrepresented movement figures of all time'?


At the top, for me, would be Ghandhi and Mother Theresa. MLK has some interesting twists the more you learn, but not half as much as the above two.

An interesting thing from the MLK Jr. blog entry that JRE linked to, though:


I want to say to you as I move to my conclusion, as we talk about "Where do we go from here," that we honestly face the fact that the movement must address itself to the question of restructuring the whole of American society. There are forty million poor people here. And one day we must ask the question, "Why are there forty million poor people in America?" And when you begin to ask that question, you are raising questions about the economic system, about a broader distribution of wealth. When you ask that question, you begin to question the capitalistic economy. And I'm simply saying that more and more, we've got to begin to ask questions about the whole society. We are called upon to help the discouraged beggars in life's marketplace. But one day we must come to see that an edifice which produces beggars needs restructuring. It means that questions must be raised. You see, my friends, when you deal with this, you begin to ask the question, "Who owns the oil?" You begin to ask the question, "Who owns the iron ore?" You begin to ask the question, "Why is it that people have to pay water bills in a world that is two-thirds water?" These are questions that must be asked."



This is something MLK Jr. wrote? If so, I'm somewhat disappointed. He takes a decent premise (We should do more to help the poor in our society) and spins off from it some of the faultiest reasoning I've ever seen.

(For instance, our world that's two-thirds water just so happens to be mainly salt water, which isn't particularly useful to human ends until you have methods of desalinization; the freshwater supply, in any given part of the world, is usually outstripped by demand, making water a scarce good just like any other.)

MLK Jr. was a great man, but it's disappointing to realize that even a great man can nonetheless think so sloppily.
Good post...
By TKeck Oct 26th 2005 at 1:48 pm EDT
...I read the NYT piece and then this morning read the editorial in my local paper (San Diego Union Tribune). Found it interesting that my local paper got it right over the NYT--the most prominent newspaper in the country.

As far as the comments on Martin Luther King, I think he was trying to point out that in the richest country in the world--people are still going hungry and thirsty. And in fact we have the power to change that, but choose not. And to address systemic poverty as King was trying to do would call into question the nature our economy. King was no moderate. He was radically against racism, injustice and poverty.
Heh Indeed
By Assamite36 Nov 1st 2005 at 12:42 am EST
King's views on affirmative action, war, and poverty are widely hidden, not because people might think less of his "sloppy thoughts", but because the Powers That Be are afraid that if people knew that such a highly-respected - no, REVERED civil rights figures such as King supported such radical causes, they might be more inclined to support such causes. And that's a no-no.

And yes, Gandhi did earn support from the Nazis in order to help gain Indian independence. But hey, what are ya gonna do?
  
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