AROUND THE NATION
Miami Rights
HUMANITIES,
November/December 2009
Volume 30, Number 6
BY JAMES WILLIFORD On February 12, 1958, Martin Luther King Jr. addressed a packed house at the Greater Bethel AME Church in Miami. A film of the event, preserved at Miami Dade College’s Lynn and Louis Wolfson II Florida Moving Image Archives, shows a youthful King standing calmly in a neat, dark suit against an unadorned backdrop, delivering one of the most powerful speeches of his career. Its central message is expressed in short, carefully intoned sentences: “We must, and we will, be free. We want freedom now. We want the right to vote now. We do not want freedom fed to us in teaspoons over another hundred and fifty years.” Footage of King’s speech and many other important moments in Miami’s struggle for civil rights will be shown with commentary by University of Miami historian Gregory W. Bush on November 19 at the Historical Museum of Southern Florida. Covering a period from the 1950s to 1966, the film clips offer a broad perspective on the issues, events, and people that defined racial politics in the city. There are shots of demonstrators at lunch counter sit-ins and picket lines, scenes of city commissioners meeting with representatives of the black community, and interviews and press events from both sides of the integration conflict. Among such a diverse collection of footage, one would expect the national heroes of the civil rights movement to stand out. And, in conventional ways, they do: King’s rhetoric is brilliantly polished; James Farmer’s demeanor is self-assured and commanding. But Miami’s homegrown advocates and on-the-ground activists are at least as compelling as their famous contemporaries. Captured on film, the faces, voices, and words of these unsung men and women have a remarkable, and sometimes unexpected, capacity to affect and inspire.
By exploring the history of the civil rights movement in Miami through these films, the Historical Museum of Southern Florida offers a potent reminder that the effort to end racial discrimination extended far beyond the borders of Montgomery, AL, Greensboro, NC, and Washington, DC, and that the principles that drove leaders like King, Farmer, and Roy Wilkins were fully articulated in the minds and spirits of countless other Americans.
James Williford is an editorial assistant for HUMANITIES
magazine and a graduate student at Georgetown University.
HUMANITIES, November/December 2009, Volume 30, Number 6
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