An excerpt from the book, “KNOW JUSTICE KNOW PEACE. Black Lives Matter (BLM) New York City Protest Photos 2020” by Bob Gore. Page 51 covers Emmit Till and how the tragic event affected Bob Gore personally.
Recalling Emmit Till
The signs recalling the murder of Emmitt Till resonated more personally with me than others. During the Jim Crow era, parents delivered two talks to their sons. The first focused on interacting the police. The other was the talk in preparation for trips south. Family safety was central to our travel plans. There was additional for me. Southern bigots labeled young male visitors from the north as outside trouble makers who are prone to violate “southern customs.” In 1955 the risks were higher.
Tensions in the south ran higher following the 1954 Supreme Court ruling calling segregated schools unconstitutional. The decision struck a raw nerve in segregationists, increasing membership in the Ku Klux Klan, White Citizen’s Councils, and the amount of lynching’s throughout the region, especially in Mississippi. The most dramatic evidence was the grotesque murder of Emmitt Till in 1955.
We were both from Chicago, near the same age, and attended integrated schools. His open-casket funeral and viewing attracted thousands including my oldest sister. Though the general market media paid little attention the national Black press provided significant coverage, and Jet Magazine carried the photo of the young man’s mutilated body on the cover. It caused outrage among Blacks across the US and opened a significant debate among the adults around one question. Should I accompany my mother and sisters to Waynesboro Georgia? Without explanation, my parents canceled our trip that year.
KNOW JUSTICE, KNOW PEACE covers the protest that took place in Brooklyn, New York City, 2020 following George Floyd’s murder. To purchase a copy, click the button below.