honored not only our embattled Negroes, but the overwhelming major-
ity of the nation, Negro and white. The victory in Selma is now being
written in the Congress. Before long, more than a million Negroes will
be new voters—and psychologically, new people. Selma is a shining
moment in the conscience of man. If the worst in American life lurked
in the dark streets of Selma, the best of American democratic instincts
arose from across the nation to overcome it.
27
WATTS
As soon as we began to see our way clear in the South, the shock and
horror of Northern riots exploded before our eyes and we saw that
the problems of the Negro go far beyond mere racial segregation. The
catastrophe in Los Angeles was a result of seething and rumbling
tensions throughout our nation and, indeed, the world.
AUGUST 11-15, 1965
Widespread racial violence in Los Angeles results in more than 30
deaths
AUGUST 17
King arrives in Los Angeles at the invitation of local groups
AS we entered the Watts area of Los Angeles, all seemed quiet, but
there could still be sensed raging hostiHty which had erupted in
volcanic force in the days previous. What had been an inferno of
flame and smoke a few nights before was now an occupied territory.
National Guardsmen in groups of three and four stood posted on
each street corner. People, black and white, meandered through the
charred remains of the Watts business district.
1 had been warned not to visit. We were told that the people
were in no mood to hear talk of nonviolence. There had been wild
threats hurled at all Negro leaders and many were afraid to venture
into the area. But I had visited Watts on many occasions and re-
ceived the most generous of acclamations. One of the most respon-
sive and enthusiastic gatherings I ever saw was our meeting in Watts
during the "Get-Out-the-Vote" tour in 1964. So, despite the warn-
ings, I was determined to hear firsthand fi-om the people involved,
just what the riot was all about.
Let me say first of all that I profoundly deplore the events that have
occurred in Los Angeles in these last few tragic days. I believe and have
said on many occasions that violence is not the answer to social conflict
whether it is engaged in by white people in Alabama or by Negroes in
Los Angeles. Violence is all the more regrettable in this period in light of
the tremendous nonviolent sacrifices that both Negro and white people
together have endured to bring justice to all men.
But it is equally clear, as President Johnson pointed out yesterday,
that it is the job of all Americans "to right the wrong from which such
violence and disorder spring." The criminal responses which led to the
tragic outbreaks of violence in Los Angeles are environmental and not
racial. The economic deprivation, racial isolation, inadequate housing,
and general despair of thousands of Negroes teaming in Northern and
Western ghettoes are the ready seeds which gave birth to tragic expres-
sions of violence. By acts of commission and omission none of us in this
great country has done enough to remove injustice. I therefore humbly
suggest that all of us accept our share of responsibility for these past
days of anguish.
"Stirring of a deprived people"
After visiting Watts and talking with hundreds of persons of all walks
of life, it was my opinion that the riots grew out of the depths of
despair which afflict a people who see no way out of their economic
dilemma.
There were serious doubts that the white community was in any
way concerned. There also was a growing disillusionment and re-
sentment toward the Negro middle class and the leadership which it
had produced. This ever-widening breach was a serious factor which
led to a feeling on the part of ghetto-imprisoned Negroes that they
Were alone in their struggle and had to resort to any method to gain
attention to their plight.
The nonviolent movement of the South meant little to them
since we had been fighting for rights which theoretically were already
theirs; therefore, I believed what happened in Los Angeles was of
grave national significance. What we witnessed in the Watts area was
J.
the beginning of a stirring of a deprived people in a society who
had been by-passed by the progress of the previous decade. I would
minimize the racial significance and point to the fact that these were
the rumblings of discontent from the "have nots" within the midst
of an affluent society.
The issue of poHce brutality loomed as one of major significance.
The slightest discourtesy on the part of an officer of the law was a
deprivation of the dignity that most of the residents of Watts came
west seeking. Whether it was true or not, the Negro of the ghetto
was convinced that his dealings with the police denied him the dig-
nity and respect to which he was entitled as a citizen and a human
being. This produced a sullen, hostile attitude, which resulted in a
spiral of hatred on the part of both the officer and the Negro. This
whole reaction complex was often coupled with fear on the part of
both parties. Every encounter between a Negro and the police in the
hovering hostility of the ghetto was a potential outburst.
A misguided fire truck, a conflict in arrest, a sharp word between
a store owner and customer—the slightest incident can trigger a riot
in a community, but events converge in such a cataclysmic manner
that often the situation seems to be the result of a planned organized
attempt at insurrection. This was the term used by Mayor Sam
Yorty—an insurrection staged by a group of organized criminals.
I am afraid that this was too superficial an explanation. Two
separate and distinct forces were operating in Los Angeles. One was
a hardened criminal element incapable of restraint by appeals to
reason or discipline. This was a small number in contrast to the large
number involved. The larger group of participants were not criminal
elements. I was certain that the majority of the more than four thou-
sand persons arrested in Los Angeles were being arrested for the first
time. They were the disorganized, the frustrated, and the oppressed.
Their looting was a form of social protest. Forgotten by society,
taunted by the affluence around them, but effectively barred from
its reach, they were acting out hostilities as a method of relief and to
focus attention.
The objective of the people with whom I talked was consistently
work and dignity. It was as though the speeches had been rehearsed,
but on every corner the theme was the same. Unless some work
could be found for the unemployed and underemployed, we would
continually face the possibility of this kind of outbreak at every
encounter with police authority. At a time when the Negro's aspira-
tions were at a peak, his actual conditions of employment, educa-
tion, and housing were worsening. The paramount problem is one
of economic stability for this sector of our society. All other advances
in education, family life, and the moral climate of the community
were dependent upon the ability of the masses of Negroes to earn a
living in this wealthy society of ours.
In the South there is something of shared poverty, Negro and
white. In the North, white existence, only steps away, glares with
conspicuous consumption. Even television becomes incendiary,
when it beams pictures of affluent homes and multitudinous con-
sumer products at the aching poor, living in wretched homes. In
these terms, Los Angeles could have expected riots because it is the
luminous symbol of luxurious living for whites. Watts is closer to it,
and yet farther from it, than any other Negro community in the
country. The looting in Watts was a form of social protest very com-
mon through the ages as a dramatic and destructive gesture of the
poor toward symbols of their needs.
ENCOUNTER IN WATTS
I was out in Watts during the riots. One young man said to me—and
Andy Young, Bayard Rustin, and Bernard Lee, who were with me—"We
won!" I said, "What do you mean, 'we won'? Thirty-some people dead—
all but two are Negroes. You've destroyed your own. What do you mean,
'we won'?" And he said, "We made them pay attention to us."
When people are voiceless, they will have temper tantrums like a little
child who has not been paid attention to, And riots are massive temper
tantrums from a neglected and voiceless people.
July 1967
There was joy among the rioters of Watts, not shame. They were
completely oblivious to the destruction of property in their wake.
They were destroying a physical and emotional jail; they had asserted
themselves against a system which was quietly crushing them into
oblivion and now they were "somebody." As one young man put it,
"We know that a riot is not the answer, but we've been down here
suffering for a long time and nobody cared. Now at least they know
we're here. A riot may not be the way, but it is a way." This was the
new nationalist mood gripping a good many ghetto inhabitants. It
rejected the alliance with white liberals as a means of social change.
It affirmed the fact that black men act alone in their own interest
only, because nobody really cares.
Amazingly enough, and in spite of the inflammatory assertions
to the contrary, these were not murderous mobs. They were destruc-
tive of property, but with all of the reports of thousands of violent
people on the loose, very few people were kiUed, and almost all of
them by the police. Certainly, had the intention of the mob been to
murder, many more lives would have been lost.
What I emphasized is that, in spite of all of the hostility that
some Negroes felt, and as violent and destructive as the mood tem-
porarily became, it was not yet a blind and irredeemable condition.
The people of Watts were hostile to nonviolence, but when we actu-
ally went to them and emphasized the dangers of hatred and vio-
lence, the same people cheered. Only minutes before the air had
been thick with tension, but when they were reminded of the Rev.
James Reeb and Viola Liuzzo, the martyrs of the Selma campaign,
they cheered the thought that white people can and do cooperate
with us in our search for jobs and dignity.
But let no one think that this is a defense of riots. The wake of
destruction of property where many Negroes were employed and
where many more were served consumer goods was one of the most
tragic sights I ever witnessed. It was second only to the thought of
thirty-seven persons dying needlessly in an uncontrolled tantrum of
devastation and death. This was more human loss than had been
suffered in ten years of nonviolent direct action, which produced the
revolutionary social changes in the South.
Violence only serves to harden the resistance of the white reac-
tionary and relieve the white liberal of guilt, which might motivate
him to action, and thereby leaves the condition unchanged and em-
bittered. The backlash of violence is felt far beyond the borders of
the community where it takes place. Whites are arming themselves
in Selma and across Alabama in the expectation that rioting will
spread South. In this kind of atmosphere a single drunken disorderly
Negro could set off the panic button that might result in the killing
of many innocent Negroes.
However, a mere condemnation of violence is empty without
understanding the daily violence that our society inflicts upon many
of its members. The violence of poverty and humiliation hurts as
intensely as the violence of the club. This is a situation that calls for
statesmanship and creative leadership, of which I did not see evi-
dence in Los Angeles. What we did find was a blind intransigence
and ignorance of the tremen'dous social forces that were at work
there. And so long as this stubborn attitude was maintained by re-
sponsible authorities, I could only see the situation worsening.
"A crisis for the nonviolent movement"
Los Angeles could have expected the holocaust when its officials tied
up federal aid in political manipulation, when the rate of Negro un-
employment soared above depression levels of the twenties, and
when the population density of Watts became the worst in the na-
tion. Yet even these tormenting physical conditions are less than the
full sign. California in 1964 repealed its law forbidding racial dis-
crimination in housing. It was the first major state in the country to
take away gains Negroes had won at a time when progress was visible
and substantial elsewhere, and especially in the South. California by
that callous act voted for ghettos. The atrociousness of some deeds
may be concealed by legal ritual, but the destructiveness is felt with
bitter force by its victims. When all is finally entered into the annals
of sociology; when philosophers, poHticians, and preachers have all
had their say, we must return to the fact that a person participates
in this society primarily as an economic entity. At rock bottom we
are neither poets, athletes, nor artists; our existence is centered in
the fact that we are consumers, because we first must eat and have
shelter to live. This is a difficult confession for a preacher to make,
and it is a phenomenon against which I will continue to rebel, but it
remains a fact that "consumption" of goods and services is the rai-
son d'etre of the vast majority of Americans. When persons are for
some reason or other excluded from the consumer circle, there is
discontent and unrest.
Watts was not only a crisis for Los Angeles and the Northern
cities of our nation: It was a crisis for the nonviolent movement. I
tried desperately to maintain a nonviolent atmosphere in which our
nation could undergo the tremendous period of social change which
confronts us, but this was mainly dependent on the obtaining of
tangible progress and victories, if those of us who counsel reason
and love were to maintain our leadership. However, the cause was
not lost. In spite of pockets of hostility in ghetto areas such as Watts,
there was still overwhelming acceptance of the ideal of nonviolence.
I was in touch with the White House on the matter and asked that
the President do everything in his power to break the deadlock
which had prevented the poverty program from entering Los
Angeles. I also asked that the government's efforts be vastly in-
creased toward obtaining full employment for both the Negro and
white poor in our country. The President was sensitive to this prob-
lem and was prepared to give us the kind of leadership and vision
which we needed in those turbulent times.
All in all, my visit to Watts was a tremendous help to me person-
ally. I prayed that somehow leadership and statesmanship would
emerge in the places of pubhc office, the press, the business commu-
nity, and among the Negro leadership and people of Watts, to avoid
further conflict. Such a conflict would bring only bloodshed and
shame to our entire nation's image abroad.
28
CHICAGO CAMPAIGN
It is reasonable to believe that if the problems of Chicago, the na-
tion's second largest city, can be solved, they can be solved every-
where.
JULY 26. 1965
King leads march to Chicago City Hall and addresses a rally
sponsored by Chicago's Coordinating Council of Community
Organizations (CCCO)
JANUARY 7, 1966
Announces the start of the Chicago Campaign
JULY 10
At "Freedom Sunday" rally at Soldier's Field, launches drive to
make Chicago an "open city" for housing
JULY 12-14
Racial rioting on Chicago's West Side results in two deaths and
widespread destruction
AUGUST S
Angry whites attack civil rights march through Chicago's
southwest side
AUGUST 26
Arranges "Summit Agreement" with Mayor R. Daley and other
Chicago leaders
In the early summer of 1965 we received invitations from Negro
leaders in the city of Chicago to join with them in their fight for
quality integrated education. We had watched this movement with
interest, and members of the staff of the Southern Christian Leader-
ship Conference had maintained constant communication with the
leadership. As a result of meetings between members of my staff and
leaders of Chicago civil rights organizations, I agreed to accept the
invitation to spend some time in Chicago, beginning July 24.
Later in the year, after careful deliberation with my staff, the
SCLC decided to begin a concentrated effort to create a broadly
based, vibrant, nonviolent movement in the North. Our efforts
would be directed at the social ills which plagued Chicago—the po-
tentially explosive ghetto pathology of the Northern Negro.
My concern for the welfare of Negroes in the North was no less
-than that for Negroes in the South, and my conscience dictated that
I should commit as much of my personal and organizational re-
sources to their cause as was humanly possible. Our primary objec-
tive was to bring about the unconditional surrender of forces
dedicated to the creation and maintenance of slums and ultimately
to make slums a moral and financial liability upon the whole com-
munity. Chicago was not alone among cities with a slum problem,
but certainly we knew that slum conditions there were the prototype
of those chiefly responsible for the Northern urban race problem.
"Breaking down the infamous wall of segregation"
We worked under the Coordinating Council of Community Organi-
zations, a coalition of local civil rights groups, convened by Al Raby,
a former Chicago public school teacher. Our main concentration
would be on the school issue—a fight for quality integrated educa-
tion which had been waged in that city for more than five years. This
did not mean that we would stop there, because it was painfully clear
that the school issue was merely symptomatic of a system which
relegated thousands of Negroes into economic and spiritual depri-
vation.
The only solution to breaking down the infamous wall of segre-
gation in Chicago rested in our being able to mobilize both the white
and black communities into a massive nonviolent movement, which
would stop at nothing short of changing the ugly face of the black
ghetto into a community of love and justice. Essentially it meant
removing future generations from dilapidated tenements, opening
the doors of job opportunities to aU regardless of their color, and
making the resources of all social institutions available for their up-
lifting into the mainstream of American life.
No longer could we afford to isolate a major segment of our
society in a ghetto prison and expect its spiritually crippled wards to
accept the advanced social responsibilities of the world's leading na-
tion. Birmingham, Alabama, once the most segregated city in the
South, had been our target city for public accommodations, and our
nonviolent movement there gave birth to the Civil Rights Bill of
1964. Selma, Alabama, had been our pilot city for the Voting Rights
Bill of 1965, and I had faith that Chicago, considered one of the
most segregated cities in the nation, could well become the metropo-
lis where a meaningful nonviolent movement could arouse the con-
science of this nation to deal realistically with the Northern ghetto.
We had no illusions that we could undertake alone such a mam-
moth task; therefore, our advance SCLC team headed by the Rev.
James Bevel laid the groundwork for our movement. We were con-
fident that a convergence of many forces—religious, civic, political,
and academic—would come about to demand a solution to Chica-
go's problems.
It did not require an in-depth evaluation to determine what evils
had to be eliminated from our society. Any efforts made to extend
and prolong the suffering of Negroes imprisoned in the ghetto
would be a flagrant attempt to perpetuate a social crisis capable of
exploding in our faces and searing the very soul of this nation. In
this regard, it was neither I, nor SCLC, that decided to go north, but
rather, existing deplorable conditions and the conscience of good to
the cause that summoned us.
"Lawndale was truly an island of poverty"
During 1966 I lived and worked in Chicago. The civil rights move-
ment had too often been middle-class oriented and had not moved
to the grassroots levels of our communities. So I thought the great
challenge facing the civil rights movement was to move into these
areas to organize and gain identity with ghetto dwellers and young
people in the ghetto. This was one of the reasons why I felt that in
moving to Chicago I would live in the very heart of the ghetto. I
would not only experience what my brothers and sisters experience
in living conditions, but I would be able to live with them.
In a big city like Chicago it is hard to do it overnight, but I
thought that all of the civil rights organizations had to work more
to organize the grassroots levels of our communities. There, the
problems of poverty and despair were more than an academic exer-
cise. The phone rang daily with stories of the most drastic forms of
man's inhumanity to man and I found myself fighting a daily battle
against the depression and hopelessness which the heart of our
cities pumps into the spiritual bloodstream of our lives. The prob-
lems of poverty and despair were graphically illustrated. I remember
a baby attacked by rats in a Chicago slum. I remember a young
Negro murdered by a gang in Cicero, where he was looking for a
job.
The slum of Lawndale was truly an island of poverty in the midst
of an ocean of plenty. Chicago boasted the highest per capita income
of any city in the world, but you would never believe it looking
out of the windows of my apartment in the slum of Lawndale. From
this vantage point you saw only hundreds of children playing in the
streets. You saw the light of intelligence glowing in their beautiful
dark eyes. Then you realized their overwhelming joy because some-
one had simply stopped to say hello; for they lived in a world where
Share with your friends: |