Emmett Till 60th anniversary memorial to include family of Trayvon Martin, Michael Brown...

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stringer bell
stringer bell Members Posts: 26,212 ✭✭✭✭✭
edited August 2015 in For The Grown & Sexy
http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/ct-emmett-till-memorial-preview-met-20150827-story.html
Emmett Till memorial to include family of Trayvon Martin, Michael Brown

By Angie Leventis Lourgos
Chicago Tribune

AUGUST 27, 2015, 12:45 PM

The parents of Trayvon Martin and Michael Brown plan to take part this weekend in the 60th anniversary memorial of the murder of Emmett Till.

On Aug. 28, 1955, Till was beaten and shot for reportedly whistling at a white woman while visiting relatives in Mississippi. The body of the black 14-year-old from Chicago was discovered days later in the Tallahatchie River. The accused killers were later acquitted by an all-white jury.

They chose a public memorial rather than a private ceremony at the cemetery "because of the climate of murder, the climate of injustice, in the present time," said Airickca Gordon-Taylor, Till's cousin and co-founder of the foundation.

Participants are expected to include the mother of Trayvon Martin, an unarmed black teenager fatally shot in 2012 in Sanford, Fla., by George Zimmerman, who claimed self-defense and was found not guilty of murder; the father of Michael Brown, an unarmed black teenager fatally shot in August 2014 in Ferguson, Mo., by a white police officer who was not indicted in connection with the shooting; and the mother of Amadou Diallo, an unarmed immigrant from Guinea who was shot 41 times in 1999 by four plainclothes New York City police officers who were acquitted of all charges in his death, though his family later received a $3 million settlement in a civil lawsuit.

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  • D0wn
    D0wn Members Posts: 10,818 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    There's about to be many more ? , if we continue to remain asleep
  • Dave2one6
    Dave2one6 Members Posts: 1,669 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    He set off the civil rights movement. His mother. She had to.
  • So ILL
    So ILL Members Posts: 16,507 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    Dave2one6 wrote: »
    He set off the civil rights movement. His mother. She had to.

    Mamie Till was a rider if I've ever seen one. I have nothing but respect for how she fought and carried on for Emmett until her last day.
  • stringer bell
    stringer bell Members Posts: 26,212 ✭✭✭✭✭
    edited August 2015
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    http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2015/08/28/how-emmett-till-changed-the-world.html
    HOW EMMETT TILL CHANGED THE WORLD


    Before Trayvon Martin, Mike Brown, Eric Garner, Freddie Gray, and 12-year-old Tamir Rice, there was Emmett Till.

    Till, a 14-year-old Chicago native, was brutally beaten and lynched while visiting relatives in Money, Miss., in the summer of 1955.

    His crime? Allegedly whistling at a white woman.

    This weekend marks the 60th anniversary of the tragic murder of Emmett Till. There will be commemorative events honoring the life of the young teen in Chicago and Mississippi. And that’s because, according to Chris Benson, associate professor of African American studies and journalism at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Till’s death still resonates today.

    “The reason we are so captivated by the lynching of Emmett Till 60 years later is that it’s justice that has not been reached. It grates against our sense of justice in America that this horrible event has never been resolved,” says Benson, who co-authored the book, Death of Innocence with Till’s mother Mamie Till Mobley. “We see so many similar cases coming up in the contemporary moment that remind us of the injustice in the Emmett Till case. When we see the case of Trayvon Martin or Michael Brown or Tamir Rice, where young Black males are shot down by authority figures and nobody’s punished, it reminds us of the most celebrated case where a Black teen was killed and nobody was brought to justice.”

    History notes that Till was with a group of teenagers who had stopped at a local grocery store to buy snacks when he broke Mississippi’s racial code of conduct. Just a year earlier, the U.S. Supreme Court had announced separate but equal schools were unconstitutional in the historic Brown v. Board of education case. But things were still done a little differently in Mississippi. The state fought against any interruption in its system of segregation and often resorted to violence.

    So it was in this space that four days after his alleged “crime,” Till was kidnapped in the wee hours of the morning on Aug. 28, 1955 by two white men, Roy Bryant, husband of Carolyn Bryant, the store clerk Till allegedly whistled at, and J.W. Milam.

    Bryant and Milan tortured Till for hours. He was brutally beaten. Barbed wire tied around his neck. He was shot in the head. The young teen was weighted with a cotton gin fan and thrown in the Tallatchie River. Three days later, Till’s bloated body surfaced, his face severely disfigured. He was identified by a ring on his finger, one his mother had given him that had his father’s initials.

    When Till’s body arrived in Chicago, Mamie Till Mobley couldn’t believe her eyes. She wanted to show the world what Mississippi had done to her son, her only child. Mobley demanded an open-casket at Till’s funeral. His mutilated body was on display for five days as more than 100,000 folks lined the streets of Chicago to get a glimpse of what hate could do. The graphic images were published in Jet magazine and Black newspapers. Her decision changed the course of history.

    “Opening that casket and allowing Emmett Till’s body to lay in state allowed people to witness the horrible face of race hatred,” said Benson. “It horrified people to the extent that they had never seen anything like this and to imagine that our children could be subjected to such horrors really moved people. So opening the casket opened our eyes to the injustice in this country and the consequences of that continued injustice if we didn’t do something about it.”

    But justice would never come.

    It took just little more than an hour for an all-white male jury to acquit Bryant and Milam of the murder of Emmett Till. Months later, Look magazine paid Bryant and Milam $4,000 so they would reveal how they killed the Chicago teen.

    The fact that two white men were not convicted of murdering a young Black boy was not surprising in 1955 Mississippi. But what was surprising was the bravery and courage of Till’s uncle Mose Wright, who stood up during the trial and pointed to Bryant and Milam as the men who had kidnapped Till. It was nearly unheard of for a Black man to oppose a white man in court. In doing so, Wright put his own life in danger and immediately left Mississippi soon after.

    “Understanding the context in the South at that time, for him to do that was nothing short of courageous,” says Paula Johnson, law professor and co-director of the Cold Case Justice Initiative at Syracuse University. The initiative investigates racially -motivated murders that occurred during the civil rights era.

    “As we talk about Black Lives Matter, this is what Mamie Till Mobley was saying to us – my son’s life matters"

    Two months after Milam and Bryant were acquitted for the murder of Emmett Till, Rosa Parks refused to give up her seat on a bus, sparking the 381-day Montgomery Bus boycott and the beginning of a Civil Rights Movement led by a young minister by the name of Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr. The fight for civil rights, which had mostly been a legal strategy up until that time, had become a mass movement. Soon after there were Freedom Rides, sit-ins at lunch-counters, boycotts, demonstrations and marches. And all of this can be traced back to Emmett Till.

    “As we talk about Black Lives Matter, this is what Mamie Till Mobley was saying to us – my son’s life matters,” says Johnson. “Till was not the first lynching but it was a defining moment in so many ways. Emmett Till’s murder galvanized an activist movement of that which continues today.”

    Indeed, during the Movement for Black Lives conference in Cleveland this summer, activists of the Black Lives Matter movement honored the families of civil rights martyrs. The first image was of Emmett Till.

    Airickca Gordon-Taylor, cousin of Emmett Till and president of the Mamie Till Mobley Memorial Foundation, spoke at the Movement for Black Lives conference. She says Till kicked off the Black Lives Matter movement and noted that he was “a sacrificial lamb.”

    “There are so many parallels today to what happened in 1955 and if we’re not careful all of our rights will be stripped away again,” Gordon-Taylor told the Daily Beast. “We have to be very diligent and very mindful and we have to come together as a community to work towards putting people in positions and roles that have our best interests at heart to work toward changing these policies.”

    The Justice Department re-opened Till’s case in 2004. His body was exhumed and an autopsy was conducted but it was closed three years later due to the statute of limitations and insufficient evidence. But though no one was ever convicted for the murder of Emmett Till, his name will be forever associated with the fight for justice and civil rights. His life will not be forgotten. In fact, there are several movies being made about Emmett Till. A film based on Benson’s book will begin production next year, and it was recently announced that Jay-Z and Will Smith will produce a movie about Till for HBO.

    “In so many ways, the case of Emmett Till was the first Black Lives matter case,” says Benson. “Emmett Till is certainly a story about racial injustice. It’s a story about white supremacy. But within those elements is a recognition that this is really a story about power. Emmett Till was killed as an expression of power – power over the black body. We have to ask: What might had he been if he had lived?”
  • ThaNubianGod
    ThaNubianGod Members Posts: 1,862 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    RIP Emmett Till
    RIP Trayvon

    Mike Brown however, has no business being part of this.
  • Lurker6
    Lurker6 Members Posts: 4,508 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    Idk how i feel about this
  • The Lonious Monk
    The Lonious Monk Members Posts: 26,258 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    RIP Emmett Till
    RIP Trayvon

    Mike Brown however, has no business being part of this.

    I was thinking the same thing. That's part of the problem with the movements these days. They conflate too many things. I honestly believe Mike Brown was done wrong and deserves justice, but he's not the same as Emmett and Trayvon.
  • Delphas
    Delphas Members Posts: 2,483 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    RIP Emmett Till
    RIP Trayvon

    Mike Brown however, has no business being part of this.

    I was thinking the same thing. That's part of the problem with the movements these days. They conflate too many things. I honestly believe Mike Brown was done wrong and deserves justice, but he's not the same as Emmett and Trayvon.

    I understand where both of you are coming from thinking; homie was robbing a store, where Trayvon, Emmett, Tamir, and a host of others were completely innocent.

    However, the fact that Brown was hunted down (by a cop who had no idea about the crime he committed), murdered in cold blood, had the circumstances about his death purposely obscured and covered up, and finally, to add salt in the wound, the cop who did it not only skated free, but got a new crib and life because of it.

    Yeah, Michael Brown belongs. He ain't perfect, but he belongs.
  • stringer bell
    stringer bell Members Posts: 26,212 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    http://www.theguardian.com/world/2015/aug/29/emmett-till-civil-rights-legacy-commemorated-60-years-after
    Emmett Till: civil rights legacy commemorated 60 years after murder

    The legacy of the lynching of thousands of black people in America was recalled when the death 60 years ago in Mississippi of just one, Emmett Till, was commemorated on Friday at his gravesite in a suburban Chicago cemetery.

    Relatives and civil rights activists gathered in Burr Oak Cemetery, south of Chicago, to listen to speeches and songs, and comfort one another with hugs. A large wreath of white flowers encircled a black and white portrait of Till’s smiling face.

    Congressman Bobby Rush recalled his own mother explaining to him as an eight-year-old the “horrors” of Till’s death. He said that memory still inspires him.

    “We stand here and bear witness to the fact that the truths around Emmett Till’s murder are still truths that America refuses to recognize,” he said.

    The 14-year-old Till was visiting relatives in the cotton country of the Mississippi Delta on 24 August 1955 when witnesses said he violated the Jim Crow social code by whistling at Carolyn Bryant, a white woman working behind the counter of a store in the tiny town of Money.

    On 28 August he was kidnapped from his uncle’s home a few miles away. On 31 August his body was recovered from the Tallahatchie River, with a bullet hole in his head and severe cuts on his face. Barbed wire was wrapped around his neck and he was weighted down with a cotton gin fan.

    Among those attending the ceremony was Till’s cousin, Wheeler Parker, who as a 16-year-old witnessed three white men drag Till from the house.

    “I thought we would all die,” he said. “I’ve never been that afraid before in my life. And at 16, I was not trying to die … so you relive that and wonder what could you have done.”

    The wreath-laying ceremony followed a procession from Robert Temple Church of ? in Christ, where Till’s funeral took place.

    Till’s mother insisted on an open-casket funeral in Chicago, and Jet magazine published photos of his corpse. The brutality sparked outrage that gave urgency to the civil rights movement.

    “The casket was right there,” Parker recalled. “All I can remember is being numb, saying this is not Emmett.”

    Friday’s observance marked the start of a weekend of events aimed at remembering Till’s death and what it means today.

    Among those scheduled to participate in a Till memorial dinner are Sybrina Fulton, the mother of Trayvon Martin; and Michael Brown Sr, the father of Michael Brown, whose shooting in 2014 led to protests over police action in Ferguson, Missouri.

    “Black lives matter,” Rush said. “Black lives mattered when Emmett was killed. Black lives mattered when [Chicago Black Panther leaders] Fred Hampton and Mark Clark were killed. Black lives matter even today.”


    Movie screenings and other memorial events will be held on Thursday through Sunday in Mississippi.
  • king hassan
    king hassan Members Posts: 22,739 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    Carolyn Bryant still alive and lives in Florida I last heard. If she died they never mentioned it
  • jono
    jono Members Posts: 30,280 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    They need not mix those stories like that. Each one is individual and the only one remotely similar is Trayvon's.
  • obnoxiouslyfresh
    obnoxiouslyfresh Members Posts: 11,496 ✭✭✭✭✭
    edited August 2015
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    In 2014, Emmett Till wouldn’t be Emmett Till. I don't see any real value in distinguishing them. That's a game that is played by police to achieve their selfish outcomes at the expense of intellectually honest justice. Human rights are not contingent upon character reference and background check. So for those that feel like we should not compare Mike Brown to Emmett Till, what are we to do with the rest of our imperfect victims of police brutality? Do they matter?
  • Ajackson17
    Ajackson17 Members Posts: 22,501 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    Wait, I thought all the owners said he didn't steal from the store?
  • Trillfate
    Trillfate Members Posts: 24,008 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    In 2014, Emmett Till wouldn’t be Emmett Till. I don't see any real value in distinguishing them. That's a game that is played by police to achieve their selfish outcomes at the expense of intellectually honest justice. Human rights are not contingent upon character reference and background check. So for those that feel like we should not compare Mike Brown to Emmett Till, what are we to do with the rest of our imperfect victims of police brutality? Do they matter?

    Tell em
  • ThaNubianGod
    ThaNubianGod Members Posts: 1,862 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    In 2014, Emmett Till wouldn’t be Emmett Till. I don't see any real value in distinguishing them. That's a game that is played by police to achieve their selfish outcomes at the expense of intellectually honest justice. Human rights are not contingent upon character reference and background check. So for those that feel like we should not compare Mike Brown to Emmett Till, what are we to do with the rest of our imperfect victims of police brutality? Do they matter?
    Emmett Till and Trayvon were kids who weren't even killed by cops. Their cases were far worse, and neither of them committed any crimes. Mike Brown doesn't belong in that group. Nothing wrong pointing out police abuse in the Ferguson case, but it's sure as hell not "intellectually honest justice" to compare him to Emmett or Trayvon.
  • TRILLip Brooks
    TRILLip Brooks Members Posts: 18,150 ✭✭✭✭✭
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