A 'Foot Soldier for Freedom'

A 'Foot Soldier for Freedom'

by Jim Amidon
January 20, 2011

Referring to himself as a “foot soldier for freedom,” Charles McLaurin
described his work in Mississippi’s Freedom Summer of 1964 to a large
crowd in the Pioneer Chapel. McLaurin’s Chapel Talk kicked off the
College’s celebration of Martin Luther King, Jr.

“The black freedom struggle in Mississippi was rescued by over 1,000
young people from the north,” said McLaurin, who joined the Student
Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC or “Snick”) as a 19 year-old.

“Their work helped sustain democracy in Mississippi.”

McLaurin and his long-time friend Tracy Sugarman were invited to Wabash
by the advisory board of the Malcolm X Institute of Black Studies to
celebrate the legacy of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.

In his Chapel Talk, McLaurin gave students on a brief history of
Mississippi’s fight for freedom, which he said began in earnest in 1961
when field secretaries from the NAACP were dispatched across the state.

“'Snick' was able to stimulate the black community and start a new kind
of movement,” McLaurin explained. “We went out to various towns in the
Delta and started Snick projects — teaching people about their rights
and registering them to vote.”

The odds were stacked against them. There were poll taxes that had to be
paid two years in advance, literacy tests to pass, and local government
officials and police were standing in the way.

“There wasn’t anyone in any official capacity in Washington or any other
place who would give us the time of day,” he said.

By 1964, the earliest SNCC members were growing tired. That’s when more
than 1,000 college students from the north — including at least three
from Wabash — descended on Oxford for training before being dispatched
across the state.

“The Freedom Summer was an effort to get our message out to the people
of America…. The young people brought us momentum to move forward and
the resources to take our message to Washington.”

McLaurin was part of a mostly black delegation that attended the
Democratic National Convention to try to unseat the segregated
delegation. During that period, the former sharecropper, Fannie Lou
Hamer, became the voice of a generation fighting racial injustice.

“I’m really proud to say that the young people’s movement made it
possible; they stimulated it and motivated it… [Those events] created a
new awakening in this nation; created the possibility of an Obama
presidency, which I never thought would happen in my lifetime.”

Listen to McLaurin’s complete Chapel Talk below or by accessing the
College’s YouTube channel.

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http://www.wabash.edu/news/displaystory.cfm?news_ID=8644%3E
Via InstaFetch

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