| |
Civil
rights
warrior:
the Rev.
Shuttlesworth
dies
By JAY
REEVES
Associated
Press
BIRMINGHAM,
Ala.
(AP) --
The Rev.
Fred L.
Shuttlesworth
refused
to back
down
despite
huge
risks,
enduring
arrests,
beatings
and
injuries
from
fire
hoses
aimed at
blacks
marching
for
racial
equality
in the
segregated
South of
the
early
1960s.
He died
this
week at
age 89,
lauded
for his
fearlessness
in that
fight.
When
others
feared
standing
up to
fire
hoses
and
snarling
police
dogs in
his
native
Alabama,
Shuttlesworth
soldiered
on with
his
civil
rights
campaign.
Alabama's
first
black
federal
judge,
U.W.
Clemon,
said
Shuttlesworth
flung
himself
at
injustice
well
knowing
he could
be
killed
at any
moment.
"He was
the
first
black
man I
knew who
was
totally
unafraid
of white
folks,"
said
Clemon,
a
practicing
lawyer
since
retired
from the
bench.
Shuttlesworth
died
Wednesday
at a
Birmingham
hospital.
U.S.
Rep.
John
Lewis,
another
activist
in the
civil
rights
movement
led by
the late
Rev.
Martin
Luther
King
Jr.,
called
Shuttlesworth
"fearless,
determined,
courageous."
Lewis
organized
his own
defiant
sit-ins
at
segregated
lunch
counters
in
Nashville,
Tenn.,
in his
student
days and
also met
with
arrests
and
physical
attacks.
"When
others
did not
have the
courage
to stand
up,
speak up
and
speak
out,
Fred
Shuttlesworth
put all
he had
on the
line to
end
segregation
in
Birmingham
and the
state of
Alabama,"
the
Georgia
Democrat
said.
"He was
beaten
with
chains,
his
church
was
bombed,
and he
lived
under
constant
threat
of
physical
violence."
In an
era of
seething
racial
tensions,
Shuttlesworth
survived
a 1956
bombing,
an
assault
during a
1957
protest,
chest
injuries
when
Birmingham
authorities
turned
fire
hoses on
demonstrators
in 1963,
and
countless
arrests.
He
personally
exhorted
King to
bring
his
supporters
to
Birmingham
to fight
for
equality
as the
civil
rights
movement
gained
traction.
King
would go
on to
reap
international
attention,
overshadowing
the
rest,
yet he
signaled
he
himself
admired
Shuttlesworth.
In his
1963
book
"Why We
Can't
Wait,"
King
himself
called
Shuttlesworth
"one of
the
nation's
most
courageous
freedom
fighters
... a
wiry,
energetic
and
indomitable
man."
Born
March
18,
1922,
near
Montgomery
and
raised
in
Birmingham,
Shuttlesworth
drove a
truck
for a
time,
studied
theology
by night
and was
ordained
in 1948.
He
became
pastor
of
Bethel
Baptist
Church
in
Birmingham
in 1953
and met
King in
1954 - a
year
before
Rosa
Parks
refused
to give
up her
seat on
a
Montgomery
city
bus.
Televised
scenes
of
police
dogs and
fire
hoses
being
turned
on
marchers,
even
children,
in the
spring
of 1963
helped
the rest
of the
nation
grasp
the
depth of
racial
animosities
in the
South.
Referring
to the
city's
notoriously
racist
safety
commissioner,
Shuttlesworth
would
tell
followers,
"We're
telling
ol'
`Bull'
Connor
right
here
tonight
that
we're on
the
march
and
we're
not
going to
stop
marching
until we
get our
rights."
According
to a May
1963 New
York
Times
profile
of
Shuttlesworth,
Connor
responded
to word
that
Shuttlesworth
had been
injured
by the
spray of
fire
hoses by
saying:
"I'm
sorry I
missed
it. ...
I wish
they'd
carried
him away
in a
hearse."
Fellow
civil
rights
pioneer
the Rev.
Joseph
Lowery
said of
Shuttlesworth:
"When
God made
Bull
Connor,
one of
the real
negative
forces
in this
country,
he was
sure to
make
Fred
Shuttlesworth."
In
January
1956,
King's
Montgomery
home was
bombed
while he
attended
a rally.
Months
later on
Christmas
night
1956, 16
sticks
of
dynamite
detonated
outside
Shuttlesworth's
bedroom
as he
slept at
the
Bethel
Baptist
parsonage.
No one
was
injured
in
either
bombing,
and the
day
after he
was
targeted,
Shuttlesworth
led a
protest
against
segregation
on buses
in
Birmingham.
Then in
1957, he
was
beaten
by a mob
when he
tried to
enroll
two of
his
children
in an
all-white
school
in
Birmingham.
After
the
turbulent
times
ended,
Shuttlesworth
took up
a new
chapter.
He
remained
active
in the
movement
in
Alabama
and
regularly
visited
but
moved in
1961 to
Cincinnati,
where he
was a
pastor
for most
of the
next 47
years.
In
Cincinnati,
Shuttlesworth
left
Revelation
Baptist
Church
and
became
pastor
of the
Greater
New
Light
Baptist
Church
in 1966.
In 2004,
he was
briefly
president
of the
Southern
Christian
Leadership
Conference,
resigning
after
about
three
months
complaining
board
members
were
trying
to
micromanage
the
organization.
He moved
back to
Birmingham
in
February
2008 for
rehabilitation
after a
mild
stroke.
In
November
2008,
Shuttlesworth
watched
from a
hospital
bed as
Barack
Obama
was
elected
the
nation's
first
African-American
president.
The year
before,
Obama
had
pushed
Shuttlesworth's
wheelchair
across
the
Edmund
Pettus
Bridge
in Selma
during a
commemoration
of the
Selma-to-Montgomery
voting
rights
march.
On
Wednesday,
Obama
recalled
that
moment
on the
bridge -
"a
symbol
of the
sacrifices
that he
and so
many
others
made in
the name
of
equality."
He said
Shuttlesworth's
fight
benefited
all
Americans
and
"America
owes
Reverend
Shuttlesworth
a debt
of
gratitude."
|