“YOU CAN’T SPELL FORMIDABLE WITHOUT “IDA B”
The phrase
in the title of this blog is a line from a banner in the Belmont-Paul Women’s
Equality National Monument in DC that Caroline and visited in December. In this wonderful old house dedicated to the
recognition of the equality of and equity for women, there was a banner about
Ida B. Wells. The short history of Ida
B. Wells began with that line: you can’t
spell “formidable” without ida b. And
they are correct – Ida B. Wells was a powerful foremother in the struggles for
equality for people of African descent and for women. I always begin any thoughts about Black
History Month with her. She was
formidable, but she did not begin that way.
She was born
into slavery in July, 1862, in Holly Springs, Mississippi. She grew up in the era of Reconstruction,
when she began to hear that the idea of equality applied to her as an
African-American and to her as a woman.
She grew up with the idea that she was somebody, and she learned it
through her family and her church and African-American community. The bold experiment of Reconstruction was
always under attack, and it did not last long, but it took root in her heart,
in her vision of herself, and in her idea of what American life should be. She fought for this vision all of her life.
She lost both her parents to the yellow fever
epidemic in 1878. She refused to allow
her siblings to be farmed out to others, so she managed the raising of the
family. At age 16, she had to grow up
and take on her family and the world.
She would be in this stance for the rest of her life, barely 5 feet
tall, seen as inferior as a woman, and struggling to survive financially for
the first 30 years of her life. Yet she
had this fierceness about her, a drive and an expectation of being treated as a
real person and a citizen. She would
need it, because the rest of her life would be a “battle for her life,” as
Sweet Honey in the Rock once put it in a song.
And, she would lose most of the battles.
There are
many examples of this fierce dedication to equity and justice. Here’s the story of one of them. In 1875 in its last significant law for civil
rights until 1957, the U. S. Congress passed an act that forbade segregation on
public accommodations. It came two years
before the Tilden-Hayes compromise which gave Rutherford B. Hayes the
presidency in exchange for all federal troops being pulled out of the South to
officially end Reconstruction. In 1883,
the US Supreme Court ruled the Civil Rights Act of 1875 unconstitutional, and
the floodgates of segregation and re-enslavement were open fully. In the spring of 1884, Ida Wells followed her
usual pattern of purchasing a seat in the ladies car on the train on a trip out
of Memphis. After the train had pulled
out, the conductor came to collect the tickets and then informed her that she
would have to move to the car reserved for black people. 71 years before Rosa Parks, she refused to
give up her seat, and when he grabbed her and tried to pull her up from her
seat, she bit his hand and braced herself not to move – no nonviolent
resistance for her. He went to get male
reinforcements, and it took three men to throw her off the train.
Undeterred,
she took the railroad to court under Tennessee law, and the judge who heard the
case was a former Union soldier. He
ruled in her favor and awarded her $500 in damages. She was thrilled with the victory, but it was
short-lived. The railroad appealed to
the Tennessee Supreme Court, and in 1887, they overturned the verdict. Ida Wells was crestfallen and wrote in her
diary on April 11:
“I had hoped for such great things from my suit for my
people generally. I have firmly believed
all along that the law was on our side and would, when we appealed to it, give
us justice. I feel shorn of that belief
and utterly discouraged, and just now if it were possible would gather my race
in my arms and fly far away with them.”
Fortunately
for her and for us, she would re-gather her courage and her vision, and over
the next 44 years would be a fierce and dedicated leader for justice and
equity. She brings many values to us in
our time, especially in a discouraging time when the forces of white male
domination have regained their strength.
2018 is obviously a huge year for all of us, and as we think about our
future and our actions, let us remember Ida B. Wells and seek to live in her
energy and vision.
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