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[BRC-NEWS] Remember a life well lived

j w
Tue, 16 Dec 2003 13:19:57 -0800

http://www.progressive.org/mediaproject03/mprf503.html

ELLA J. BAKER
Remember a life well lived

BY BARBARA RANSBY
www.progressive.org

Today marks the 100th anniversary of Ella Josephine Baker's 
birth. Although her name may be unknown to many, this re-
markable woman was one of the most influential people in the
crusade for racial justice in America.

An untiring voice for the dispossessed, a democrat and an 
egalitarian in word and deed, Baker was a true American hero.

For more than 50 years, she traveled the breadth of this 
country organizing, protesting and advocating for social
justice. Her main concern was the plight of blacks, whose
rights, she 
argued, were the litmus test for American democracy. But she
was also concerned with the cause of labor, the poor, Latinos
and women.

Over the course of her life, she worked alongside some of the 
most well-known civil-rights leaders of the 20th century. They 
included W.E.B. DuBois, Thurgood Marshall and Martin Luther 
King, Jr.

But celebrity did not impress Baker. Instead, she placed 
emphasis on grass-roots organizing and local leadership. Her
own 
humble style is part of the reason why her contributions and 
accomplishments are less known than those of many of her male 
counterparts.

• In the 1930s, while living in Harlem, Baker was a leader of 
the cooperative movement and participated in demonstrations 
against lynching, colonialism and fascism.

• In the 1940s, she blazed a trail through Ku Klux Klan 
territory, recruiting members for the NAACP and putting her own
life at risk in the process.

• In the 1950s, she divided her time between Atlanta and New 
York, struggling against police brutality and school
segregation 
in the North, and for basic civil and human rights in the 
South. She was the first director of the Southern Christian 
Leadership Conference.

• In the 1960s she was mentor to a new generation of young 
freedom fighters. Her political protégés included Julian Bond, 
current leader of the NAACP; educator and author Bob Moses;
Bernice Johnson Reagon, founder of the musical group Sweet
Honey in the Rock; Marian Wright Edelman of the Children's
Defense Fund; and Rep. Eleanor Holmes Norton, D-D.C. All of
these individuals began their political careers in the ranks of
an organization that Baker helped found in the spring of 1960,
the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee.

Instrumental organization

SNCC grew out of the 1960 lunch-counter desegregation sit-ins 
and was instrumental in the 1961 freedom rides that broke the 
color bar on interstate trains and buses. It was the 
organizational force behind Freedom Summer in 1964, which
shuttled hundreds of Northern college students into the South
to work on voter registration and education.

SNCC engaged in bold and daring confrontations with racism. 
Many of its members were jailed and beaten, and some lost their

lives. But they helped change the racial landscape of the
nation. 
Baker was officially an adult advisor to SNCC, but she was much

more. She garnered resources, mended wounds (physical and 
emotional) and offered strategic insights. She also put the 
inexperienced young organizers in touch with local activists
throughout the region who advised, nurtured and supported them.

Her work with SNCC was the most fulfilling phase of Baker's 
long political life. But after the organization began to
unravel 
in the late 1960s, Baker continued her work on other fronts.

Tireless activist

She opposed the war in Vietnam, supported the campaign for 
Puerto Rican independence and lobbied against South African 
apartheid. She was a relentless fighter on the side of the
oppressed and downtrodden for more than a half century. The
large and diverse crowd of notables and unknowns who attended
her funeral in 1986 was testimony to this fact.

Baker never thought of herself as old, even as her hair grayed 
and her once-flawless brown skin relented to the pull of time 
and gravity.

''Being young is a state of mind,'' she once told a friend, 
``and young people are the people who want change.''

Baker wanted to change injustice, and she spent her life doing 
just that. It kept her young. Her youthful life is one well 
worth remembering.

Barbara Ransby, author of Ella Baker and the Black Freedom 
Movement, won the Joan Kelly Memorial Prize from the
Association of American Historians for the best women's history
book in 2003.

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  • [BRC-NEWS] Remember a life well lived j w