Johnson's order caused disappointment and bitterness to all of us. I
felt that as a result of the order we had been put in a very difficult
position. I felt that it was like condemning the robbed man for get-
ting robbed. It was one of the most painful decisions I ever
made—to try on the one hand to do what 1 felt was a practical
matter of controlling a potentially explosive situation, and at the
same time, not defy^ a federal court order. We had looked to the
federal judiciary in Alabama to prevent the unlawful interference
with our program to expand elective franchise for Negroes through-
out the Black Beh.
1 consulted with my lawyers and trusted advisors both in Selma
and other parts of the country and discussed what course of action
we should take. Information came in that troopers of the Alabama
State Police and Sheriff James Clark's possemen would be arrayed in
massive force across Highway 80 at the foot of Pettus Bridge in
Selma. I reflected upon the role of the federal judiciary as a protector
of the rights of Negroes. I also gave thoughtful consideration to the
hundreds of clergymen and other persons of goodwill who had come
to Selma to make a witness with me in the cause of justice by partici-
pating in our planned march to Montgomery. Taking all of this into
consideration, I decided that our plans had to be carried out and
that I would lead our march to a confrontation with injustice to
make a witness to our countrymen and the world of our determina-
tion to vote and be free.
As my associates and I were spiritually preparing ourselves for
the task ahead, Governor Collins of the Community Relations Ser-
vice and John Doar, acting assistant attorney general. Civil Rights
Division, came to see me to dissuade me from the course of action
which we had painfully decided upon.
Governor Collins affirmed and restated the commitment of
President Johnson to the achievement of full equality for all persons
without regard to race, color, or creed, and his commitment to se-
curing the right to vote for all persons eligible to do so. He men-
tioned the fact that the situation was explosive, and it would tarnish
the image of our nation if the events of Sunday were repeated. He
very strongly urged us not to march. I listened attentively to both
Mr. Doar and Governor Collins. I said at that point, "I think instead
of urging us not to march, you should urge the state troopers not to
be brutal toward us if we do march, because we have got to march."
I explained to them why, as a matter of conscience, I felt it was
necessary to seek a confrontation with injustice on Highway 80. I
felt that I had a moral obligation to the movement, to justice, to our
nation, to the health of our democracy, and above all to the philoso-
phy of nonviolence to keep the march peaceful. I felt that, if I had
not done it, the pent-up emotions would have exploded into retalia-
tory violence. Governor Collins realized at this point that we were
determined to march and left the room, saying that he would do
what he could to prevent the state troopers from being violent.
/ say to you this afternoon that I would rather die on the highways
of Alabama than make a butchery of my conscience. I say to you, when
we march, don't panic and remember that we must remain true to
nonviolence. I'm asking everybody in the line, if you can't he nonvio-
lent, don't get in here. If you can't accept blows without retaliating,
don't get in the line. If you can accept it out of your commitment to
nonviolence, you will somehow do something for this nation that may
well save it If you can accept it, you will leave those state troopers
bloodied with their own barbarities. If you can accept it, you will do
something that will transform conditions here in Alabama.
Just as we started to march, Governor Collins rushed to me and
said that he felt everything would be all right. He gave me a small
piece of paper indicating a route that I assumed Mr. Baker, public
safety director of Selma, wanted us to follow. It was the same route
that had been taken the previous Sunday. The press, reporting this
detail, gave the impression that Governor Collins and I had sat down
and worked out some compromise. There were no talks or agree-
ment between Governor Collins and me beyond the discussions I
have just described. I held on to my decision to march despite the
fact that many people in the line were concerned about breaking the
court injunction issued by one of the strongest and best judges in
the South. I feh that we had to march at least to the point where the
troopers had brutalized the people, even if it meant a recurrence of
violence, arrest, or even death. As a nonviolent leader, I could not
advocate breaking through a human wall set up by the policemen.
While we desperately desired to proceed to Montgomery, we knew
before we started our march that this human wall set up on Pettus
Bridge would make it impossible for us to go beyond it. It was not
that we didn't intend to go on to Montgomery, but that, in consider-
ation of our commitment to nonviolent action, we knew we could
not go under those conditions.
We sought to find a middle course. We marched until we faced
the troopers in their solid line shoulder to shoulder across Highway
80. We did not disengage until they made it clear they were going to
use force. We disengaged then because we felt we had made our
point, we had revealed the continued presence of violence.
On March 11, I received the shocking information that the Rever-
end James Reeb had just passed away as a result of the dastardly act
of brutality visited upon him in Selma. Those elements that had
constantly harassed us and who did their cowardly work by night,
went to the Walkers' Cafe and followed three clergymen and beat
them brutally. Two of them were from Boston—the Reverend Miller
and the Reverend Reeb—and Reverend Clark Olson was from
Berkeley, California.
This murder, like so many others, is the direct consequence of the
reign of terror in some parts of our nation. This unprovoked attack on
the streets of an Alabama city cannot he considered an isolated incident
in a smooth sea of tolerance and understanding. Rather, it is a result of
a malignant sickness in our society that comes from the tolerance of
organized hatred and violence. We must all confess that Reverend Reeb
was murdered by a morally inclement climate—a climate filled with
torrents of hatred and jostling winds of violence. He was murdered by
an atmosphere of inhumanity in Alabama that tolerated the vicious
murder of fimmy Lee fackson in Marion and the brutal beatings of
Sunday in Selma. Had police not brutally beaten unarmed nonviolent
persons desiring the right to vote on Sunday, it is doubtful whether this
act of murder would have taken place on Tuesday. This is additional
proof that segregation knows no color line. It attempts to control the
movement and mind of white persons as well as Negroes. When it can-
not dominate, it murders those that dissent.
"From Selma to Montgomery"
As soon as we had won legal affirmation on March 11 of our right
to march to Montgomery, the next phase hinged on the successful
completion of our mission to petition the governor to take meaning-
ful measures to abohsh voting restrictions, the poll tax, and police
brutality. The President and federal judiciary had spoken affirma-
tively of the cause for which we struggled. All citizens had to make
their personal witness. We could no longer accept the injustices that
we had faced from Governor Wallace. We could no longer adjust to
the evils that we had faced all of these years.
We made it very clear that this was a march of goodwill and to
stimulate the Negro citizenry of Montgomery to make use of the
new opportunity that had been provided through the federal court.
We had a legal and constitutional right to march from Selma to
Montgomery. We were very serious in saying that we planned to
walk to Montgomery, and we went through a great deal of work and
spent a lot of time planning the route, the stopping points, the tents
and where they would be. We felt this would be a privilege that
citizens could engage in as long as they didn't tie up traffic and walk
out on the main highway but on the side of the road. Rosea Wil-
liams reported to me that there were three bridges, but that one
could walk across these bridges single file rather than two or three
abreast.
Things were shaping up beautiffilly. We had people coming in
from all over the country. I suspected that we would have represen-
tatives from almost every state in the union, and naturally a large
number from the state of Alabama. We hoped to see, and we
planned to see, the greatest witness for freedom that had ever taken
place on the steps of the capitol of any state in the South. And this
whole march added drama to this total thrust. 1 think it will go down
in American history on the same level as the March to the Sea did
in Indian history.
Some of us started out on March 21 marching from Selma, Ala-
bama. We walked through desolate valleys and across tiring hills. We
walked on meandering highways and rested our bodies on rocky
byways. Some of our faces were burnt from the outpourings of the
sweltering sun. Some literally slept in the mud. We were drenched by
the rain. Our bodies were tired. Our feet were sore. The thousands of
pilgrims had marched across a route traveled by Sherman a hundred
years before. But in contrast to a trail of destruction and bloodshed,
they watered the red Alabama clay with tears of joy and love over-
flowing, even for those who taunted and jeered along the sidelines.
Not a shot was fired. Not a stone displaced. Not a window broken.
Not a person abused or insulted. This was certainly a triumphant
entry into the "Cradle of the Confederacy." And an entry destined
to put an end to that racist oligarchy once and for all.
It was with great optimism that we marched into Montgomery
on March 25. The smell of victory was in the air. Voting rights legis-
lation loomed as a certainty in the weeks ahead. Fifty thousand non-
violent crusaders from every county in Alabama and practically
every state in the union gathered in Montgomery on a balmy spring
afternoon to petition Governor Wallace.
"How long? Not long"
So I stand before you this afternoon with the conviction that segregation
is on its deathbed in Alabama and the only thing uncertain about it is
how costly the segregationists and Wallace will make the funeral.
Our whole campaign in Alabama has been centered around the
right to vote. In focusing the attention of the nation and the world
today on the flagrant denial of the right to vote, we are exposing the
very origin, the root cause, of racial segregation in the Southland.
The threat of the free exercise of the ballot by the Negro and the
white masses alike resulted in the establishing of a segregated society.
They segregated Southern money from the poor whites; they segregated
Southern churches from Christianity; they segregated Southern minds
from honest thinking; and they segregated the Negro from everything.
We have come a long way since that travesty of justice was perpe-
trated upon the American mind. Today I want to tell the city of Selma,
today I want to tell the state of Alabama, today I want to say to the
people of America and the nations of the world: We are not about to
turn around. We are on the move now. Yes, we are on the move and
no wave of racism can stop us.
We are on the move now. The burning of our churches will not
deter us. We are on the move now. The bombing of our homes will not
dissuade us. We are on the move now. The beating and killing of our
clergymen and young people will not divert us. We are on the move
now. The arrest and release of known murderers will not discourage us.
We are on the move now.
Like an idea whose time has come, not even the marching of mighty
armies can halt us. We are moving to the land of freedom.
Let us therefore continue our triumph and march to the realization
of the American dream. Let us march on segregated housing until every
ghetto of social and economic depression dissolves and Negroes and
whites live side by side in decent, safe, and sanitary housing.
Let us march on segregated schools until every vestige of segregated
and inferior education becomes a thing of the past and Negroes and
whites study side by side in the socially healing context of the classroom.
Let us march on poverty until no American parent has to skip a
meal so that their children may eat. March on poverty until no starved
man walks the streets of our cities and towns in search of jobs that do
not exist.
Let us march on ballot boxes, march on ballot boxes until race
baiters disappear from the political arena. Let us march on ballot boxes
until the Wallaces of our nation tremble away in silence.
Let us march on ballot boxes until we send to our city councils, state
legislatures, and the United States Congress men who will not fear to
do justice, love mercy, and walk humbly with their God. Let us march
on ballot boxes until all over Alabama God's children will be able to
walk the earth in decency and honor.
For all of us today the battle is in our hands. The road ahead is not
altogether a smooth one. There are no broad highways to lead us easily
and inevitably to quick solutions. We must keep going.
My people, my people, listen! The battle is in our hands. The battle
is in our hands in Mississippi and Alabama, and all over the United
States.
So as we go away this afternoon, let us go away more than ever
before committed to the struggle and committed to nonviolence. I must
admit to you there are still some difficulties ahead. We are still in for a
season of suffering in many of the black belt counties of Alabama, many
areas of Mississippi, many areas of Louisiana.
I must admit to you there are still jail cells waiting for us, dark and
difficult moments. We will go on with the faith that nonviolence and
its power transformed dark yesterdays into bright tomorrows. We will
be able to change all of these conditions.
Our aim must never be to defeat or humiliate the white man but
to win his friendship and understanding. We must come to see that the
end we seek is a society at peace with itself, a society that can live with
its conscience. That will be a day not of the white man, not of the black
man. That will be the day of man as man.
I know you are asking today, "How long will it take?" I come to
say to you this afternoon however difficult the moment, however frus-
trating the hour, it will not be long, because truth crushed to earth will
rise again.
How long? Not long, because no lie can live forever.
How long? Not long, because you still reap what you sow.
How long? Not long, because the arc of the moral universe is long,
but it bends toward justice.
How long? Not long, because mine eyes have seen the glory of the
coming of the Lord, trampling out the vintage where the grapes of wrath
are stored. He has loosed the fateful lightning of his terrible swift sword.
His truth is marching on.
He has sounded forth the trumpets that shall never call retreat. He
is lifting up the hearts of men before His judgment seat. Oh, be swift,
my soul, to answer Him. Be jubilant, my feet. Our God is marching on.
As the trains loaded and the buses embarked for their destina-
tions, as the inspired throng returned to their homes to organize the
final phase of political activity which would complete the revolution
so eloquently proclaimed by the word and presence of the multitude
in Montgomery, the scent of victory in the air gave way to the stench
of death. We were reminded that this was not a march to the capital
of a civilized nation, as was the March on Washington. We had
marched through a swamp of poverty, ignorance, race hatred, and
sadism.
We were reminded that the only reason that this march was pos-
sible was due to the presence of thousands of federalized troops,
marshals, and a federal court. We were reminded that the troops
would soon be going home, and that in the days to come we had to
renew our attempts to organize the very county in which Mrs. Viola
Liuzzo was murdered. If they murdered a white woman for standing
up for the Negro's right to vote, what would they do to Negroes who
attempted to register and vote?
Certainly it should not have been necessary for more of us to
die, to suffer jailings and beatings at the hands of sadistic savages in
uniforms. The Alabama voting project had been total in its commit-
ment to nonviolence, and yet people were beginning to talk more
and more of arming themselves. The people who followed along the
fringe of the movement, who seldom came into the nonviolent
training sessions, were growing increasingly bitter and restless. But
we could not allow even the thought or spirit of violence to creep
into our movement.
Wh en we marched from Selma to Montgomery, Alabama, I re-
member that we had one of the most magnificent expressions of the
ecumenical movement that I've ever seen. Protestants, Catholics,
and Jews joined together in a beautiful way to articulate the injus-
tices and the indignities that Negroes were facing in the state of Ala-
bama and all over the South on the question of the right to vote. I
had seen many clergymen come to the forefront who were not there
some years ago. The march gave new relevance to the gospel. Selma
brought into being the second great awakening of the church in
America. Long standing aside and giving tacit approval to the civil
rights struggle, the church finally marched forth like a mighty army
and stood beside God's children in distress.
Stalwart nonviolent activists within our ranks had brought about
a coalition of the nation's conscience on the infamous stretch of
highway between Selma and Montgomery. The awakening of the
church also brought a new vitality to the labor movement, and to
intellectuals across the country. A little known fact was that forty of
the nation's top historians took part in the march to Montgomery.
One can still hear the tramping feet and remember the glowing
eyes filled with determination and hope which said eloquently, "We
must be free," a sound which echoed throughout this nation, and
yes, even throughout the world. My mind still remembers vividly
the ecumenicity of the clergy, the combined forces of labor, civil
rights organizations, and the academic community which joined our
ranks and said in essence, "Your cause is morally right, and we are
with you all the way."
After the march to Montgomery, there was a delay at the airport
and several thousand demonstrators waited more than five hours,
crowding together on the seats, the floors, and the stairways of the
terminal building. As I stood with them and saw white and Negro,
nuns and priests, housemaids and shop workers brimming with vi-
tality and enjoying a rare comradeship, I knew I was seeing a micro-
cosm of the mankind of the future in that moment of luminous and
genuine brotherhood.
"Selma brought us a voting bill"
In his address to the joint session of Congress on March 15, 1965,
President Johnson made one of the most eloquent, unequivocal, and
passionate pleas for human rights ever made by a President of the
United States. He revealed an amazing understanding of the depth
and dimension of the problem of racial justice. His tone and his
delivery were sincere. He rightly praised the courage of the Negro
for awakening the conscience of the nation. He declared that the
national government must by law insure every Negro his full rights
as a citizen. When he signed the measure, the President announced
that, "Today is a triumph for freedom as huge as any victory that's
ever been won on any battlefield. Today we strike away the last
major shackle of fierce and ancient bonds."
We were happy to know that our struggle in Selma had brought
the whole issue of the right to vote to the attention of the nation. It
was encouraging to know that we had the support of the President
in calling for immediate relief of the problems of the disinherited
people of our nation.
When SCLC went into Selma in January 1965, it had limited
objectives. It sought primarily to correct wrongs existing in that
small city. But our adversaries met us with such unrestrained brutal-
ity that they enlarged the issues to a national scale. The ironic and
splendid result of the small Selma project was nothing less than the
Voting Rights Act of 1965. For the aid Governor Wallace and Sheriff
Clark gave us in our legislative objectives, SCLC tendered them its
warm appreciation.
In conclusion, Selma brought us a voting bill, and it also brought
us the grand alliance of the children of hght in this nation and made
possible changes in our pohtical and economic life heretofore un-
dreamed of With President Johnson, SCLC viewed the Voting
Rights Act of 1965 as "one of the most monumental laws in the
history of American freedom." We had a federal law which could be
used, and use it we would. Where it fell short, we had our tradition
of struggle and the method of nonviolent direct action, and these
too we would use.
Let us not mark this great movement only by bloodshed and brutal-
ity. We certainly can never forget those who gave their lives in this
struggle and who suffered in jail, but let us especially mark the sacri-
fices of Jimmie Lee Jackson, Rev. James Reeb, and Mrs. Viola Liuzzo
as the martyrs of the faith. Cities that had been citadels of the status
quo became the unwiUing birthplace of a significant national legisla-
tion. Montgomery led to the Civil Rights Acts of 1957 and 1960;
Birmingham inspired the Civil Rights Act of 1964; and Selma pro-
duced the Voting Rights Act of 1965.
When President Johnson declared that Selma, Alabama, is joined
in American history with Lexington, Concord, and Appomattox, he
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