Jeanna Shepard

The Time Is Always Now To Stand Up for Racial Equality

I was 22. In September I would start a jam-packed nine-month masters program at Columbia University’s Graduate School of Journalism.

I am a card-carrying member of the American Civil Liberties Union. I first joined after the summer of 1964. Or I should say because of the summer of 1964.

I was 22. In September I would start a jam-packed nine-month masters program at Columbia University’s Graduate School of Journalism. To get my feet wet, the school fathers got me a job as a weekly neighborhood newspaper editor in a section of New York city. After six weeks on the job, my feet weren’t just wet, they were also burning, so I quit.

I was outraged working for a bigoted publisher. What was bubbling below the surface burst into flames on July 16. A building superintendent in Manhattan’s Upper East Side decided to hose kids off his stoops and shouted the ‘N’ word. African-American boys from the Bronx retaliated, throwing bottles. James Powell, 15, pursued the superintendent when off-duty police Lieut. Thomas Gilligan rushed across the street. The white officer fired the first shot in the air and the next two into the teenager. Witnesses claim there was no immediate attempt to call an ambulance. Witnesses were sketchy about the actual sequence of events. There is no debate what happened after Powell died.

Harlem erupted into six nights of protests and violence. Anger spread not only through Harlem, which sits between the shooting site and the victim’s home, but all across New York city neighborhoods. At the end of the conflict, reports counted one dead, 118 injured, 465 arrested. The African-American community was incensed. The NYPD was demoralized. Ironically the ‘Harlem Riot’ happened two weeks after President Johnson signed into law the 1964 Civil Rights Act. Outlawing discrimination based on race, color, sex, religion and nationality, it was the most sweeping measure ever adopted by the U.S. to guarantee racial justice — allegedly.

The following week that hot July, the publisher informed me that Lieutenant Gilligan lived across the street from the paper.

“Go see if you can interview him,” he said.

I swallowed hard and made the call. The officer diplomatically refused. But that didn’t stop the publisher from making up a front page glorifying Gilligan and the NYPD.

“They should give this guy a parade,” said the publisher. “These people need to be taught a lesson; they’re wreaking havoc with our history.”

A few minutes later, my summer job was history.

During the fall and winter of 1964 and into the spring of 1965, my time at Columbia continued to be a battleground of racial injustice, rent strikes, anti-discrimination protests, and the murder of Malcolm X. At the same time, front pages burned with brutality in the South along the bloody path to the Voting Rights Act of 1965, recently dismantled by the U.S. Supreme Court.

Because of what happened in Harlem, Project Uplift was created for the following summer, 1965. A well-meaning but one-sided attempt to prevent the recurrence of riots, this short-term program did not include police training. This plan to benefit Harlem youth was hatched as an anti-poverty experiment by social welfare officials in the Johnson administration under the umbrella of the ‘Great Society’.

Toward the end of 1964, my school assignment was to go to the office of Harlem Youth Opportunities Unlimited to report on this initiative. This was one of the program’s administering organizations and was started by respected psychologists Kenneth Clark and Mamie Phipps Clark. Its director was Cyril deGrasse Tyson, father of astrophysicist Neil. What he explained to me was impressive.

The long-term intent was to give skills and opportunities to break out of poverty. Thousands of young people went to work running summer camps, planting gardens and trees, repairing damaged buildings, learning construction and printing a newspaper. There were also jobs in the arts, from a theatre program run by playwright Amiri Baraka (then known as LeRoi Jones) to dance workshops. All this was paid work.

Although Project Uplift was successful in the short-term, it was short-lived. After one summer, it was defunded. What could have served as a pilot for the whole country became a mere footnote. There were no riots in Harlem that summer, but their youth had been seduced and abandoned. Lack of preparation, a rush to implementation, internal power struggles doomed the continuation of the project — a chance for impact scuttled on a quick-fix speed bump.

But why not benefit from the mistakes and make bigger and wiser plans? The Great Society had a better chance to live up to its name if it hadn’t dropped the ball. That ball has been bouncing ever since, untouched.

We throw bandages at poverty. We use cosmetics to cover the institutional wound. We show no commitment to do something long-term. Change is too arduous. With each breach of the human condition we offer thoughts and prayers. Thoughts and prayers might as well translate as “See you later” or “Until next time.”

There is no facing the music. No changing the dance. Just thoughts and prayers. Just turn the page with the hope some “author” will descend from a cloud of conscience to rewrite the ending.

A whole population of humanity should not have to make demands for respect, dignity, equality. What we need is compassion and education in our schools, houses of worship, corporate offices, law enforcement and military services, and our governments.

While waiting for a climate change among Americans, I support the ACLU as it protects rights, defends the Constitution and fights racism in courtrooms across the country. In the past three years its membership quadrupled, soaring toward two million. Closer to home, I’ve joined the Martha’s Vineyard Social Justice Leadership Foundation, a non-membership group whose mission is to empower Island groups and individuals to transform racial and social injustices through grant-making, education and advocacy.

When will we live up to our ideals? When will the Golden Rule be more than a slogan? We have to do more than hope.

Arnie Reisman and his wife, Paula Lyons, regularly appear on the weekly NPR comedy quiz show, Says You! He also writes for the Huffington Post.

Comments

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Fri, 07/03/2020 - 06:17

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Jack Aquinnah

A great piece, thanks for this as we celebrate freedom and justice for all Americans.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Fri, 07/03/2020 - 06:36

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Mary Ann Romain Northampton, MA (former Vineyard native)

Wonderful article. Speaks to so how long so many of us have had our heads buried in the sand. Thank you for this personal history lesson!

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Fri, 07/03/2020 - 15:17

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Michele chaussabel New suffolk, Long Island,NY

Bravo, Arnie, well said. I’ve been thinking lately: Plus ça change, plus c’est la même chose. It’s worth the fight, though. Let’s keep it up.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Fri, 07/03/2020 - 15:27

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Warren Woessner Edgartown

Hi Arnie - Thanks for taking us down a trip down memory lane, a journey too many of us would like to forget, rather than to learn from.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Fri, 07/03/2020 - 22:06

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Laura Sher Lincoln

I am in lock step with you. Thanks for articulating it so well. Say hello to July!

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Sat, 07/04/2020 - 08:17

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Gerald Jones Edgartown

Arnie, thanks for a big role in helping us all see the need to unpack stuff....we have so much work to do...and your story helps a lot.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Sat, 07/04/2020 - 11:55

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Nat Segaloff Los Angeles

A fine and principled article, and important for the Vineyard Gazette to run it. Fortunately, social media can keep issues like this alive between news cycles. The problem is keeping them alive past elections.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Sat, 07/04/2020 - 17:28

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Chad OB

The solution is to strengthen families and especially fatherhood. The destruction of the black family is what has put our nation in peril. Welfare policies and public housing allowed us to "give a man a fish" but we did not "teach a man to fish". This gent calls for more spending - we've spent trillions.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Sat, 07/04/2020 - 23:19

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John Metz Somerset, New Jersey

Well said Arnie. You and I went to East High School in Denver many years ago. Though we only knew each other casually, you were one of the few white students who spoke to me with decency and respect. Thanks for sharing your story in this article.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Sun, 07/05/2020 - 09:39

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Wallace Bullock Oak Bluffs

A very insightful and necessary history lesson.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 07/07/2020 - 15:32

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Arnie Reisman Vineyard Haven

Thank you, all. Your supportive comments mean a lot to me.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Sun, 08/02/2020 - 17:38

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Patty Lyons Moriarty Pinehills, Plymouth MA

Just got around to reading this. Thank you for this perspective so well written and so demoralizing and uplifting at the same time. Hope we are all ready to open our hearts and our wallets to support the leveling the playing field and paying back for the inhumane way these people have been treated for centuries.

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