“ETERNAL VIGILANCE IS THE PRICE OF LIBERTY”
In her
autobiography “Crusade for Justice,” so lovingly put together by her daughter
Alfreda Duster, Ida Wells entitles her last chapter “The Price of Liberty.” She begins that last chapter with the
sentence “Eternal vigilance is the price of liberty,” a quote later picked up
by President Ronald Reagan, as he sought to expand the US military budget. When she wrote it in 1928, Wells meant it as
a warning to all about the continuing power of racism in the fabric of the
American character.
She had lived through a tumultuous time in American history
– born a slave in 1862 and raised in the relative freedom of
Reconstruction, she became head of her
household at age 16 when her parents both died of yellow fever in 1878. This
was one year after federal troops were pulled out of the South in order for
Rutherford B. Hayes to be elected President.
She spent
all of her adult life fighting against the powerful forces of racism and sexism
in American life. She saw human rights
stripped and beaten and lynched away, and she saw slavery reinstated as
neo-slavery and “Jim Crow.” These rights
had been purchased at the deaths of over 700,000 people in the Civil War, but
they were allowed to be torn away, because the overt racism seen in slavery in
the South was shared by many people classified as “white” in the North. Slowly, slowly, slowly, a few gains had been
made by 1928, thanks to the dedicated work of Wells and WEB Dubois and Mary
Church Terrell and Mary Ovington and William Monroe Trotter and many
others. Yet, Wells knew that white
supremacy was at the heart of American life, and she felt that we must always
be diligent and watchful and active in regard to resisting white supremacy.
Ida Wells’
birthday is July 16, and this weekend the Ida B. Wells-Barnett Museum in Holly
Springs, Mississippi, will sponsor their annual celebration of the life and
work of Wells, as well as exhorting us all to continue to be vigilant in
seeking to preserve and to expand the idea that all people are created
equal. It is no small irony that the
Museum is in the house where Wells was born a slave, in the house named after
her master’s family, the Spires Boling House.
The Museum started in
1996, and I went
there as part of my sabbatical work on Ida Wells. I won’t be able to attend this year’s
celebration, but I do plan to go there at the end of September, after Caroline
and I attend the dedication of a memorial to the Elaine Massacre of 1919, in
which at least 237 African-Americans were killed in a slaughter to prevent
black tenant farmers from forming a union to seek higher prices for their
cotton. The dedication will be held in
my hometown of Helena, Arkansas, where 12 black men were sentenced to death
after they fired back when whites attacked them in the massacre. Wells and the NAACP and attorney Scipio Jones
worked hard to overturn their sentences, which the Supreme Court finally did in
1923 (Moore v. Dempsey). I hope to give
the Museum a copy of the book that Catherine Meeks and I are doing on Ida Wells
(“Passionate for Justice,” to be published September 17!)
In these
days of Trump, I don’t believe that any of us need to be reminded of the truth
of Ida Wells’ words: “Eternal vigilance
is the price of liberty,” both in regard to race and gender. These 16 months until the presidential and
Congressional elections will be crucial in determining the future of our
country. Because of the depth of these
repressive forces, we can never feel that we have crossed the line and left
behind the oppression that is in our heart of hearts as America, despite the
civil rights movement and despite the election of Barack Obama as
President. In my original research on
Wells 25 years ago, I remember discovering how deeply entrenched is white
supremacy in our collective hearts. As I
worked with the publisher of my first book (“While We Run This Race”), I
emphasized the parallels between the 1990’s and the 1890’s in terms of the
resurgence of white supremacy. They were
skeptical, and my editor told me that they thought that the power of race was
just about over – it was now all about class. To my dismay, they made me excise
those comparisons, and I wish that they had been correct! Events have proven otherwise.
So, yes, we
are in a difficult time, but in regard to white supremacy and patriarchy, that
is always the case. In this week to
come, let us raise a glass to the work and witness of Ida Wells, but more
importantly, let us raise our voices and our bodies to be witnesses like she
was. Eternal vigilance is the price of
liberty.
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