Martin Luther King Jr. Special Edition (Elje JJnrtlanb (©baeruer January 19, 2000 JUNE FREEDOM DAYS M O M ENTS IN CIVIL RIGHTS HISTORY "A C A LL TO A C T IO N C18 IN HONOR OF MARTIN LUTHER KING, JR. THE CITY OF PORTLAND/MULTNOMAH COUNTY AFFIRMATIVE ACTION OFFICE Pledges a commitment to "redefining the dream for the next millennium " Nelson Rolihlahla Mandela, cofounder of South Africa's first black law firm and Nomzano Winifred Madekizela, South Africa's first black social worked were married on June114. 1958. B y J anus A dams = = In the parade of Supreme Court decisions that steadily chipped away at the legal foundation o f segrega­ tion, three cases form a collective milestone: Henderson v. United States, S w ea tt v. P ainter, a nd McLaurin v. Oklahoma State Re­ gents. Adding to their impact, the unanimous decisions reached in each o f the three cases were all handed down on the same day - June 5, 1950. Henderson v. United States'. This transportation case was brought by Alphi Phi Alpha fraternity against Southern Railway Company, which, in its dining car, assigned one table to blacks and reserved the other tables for whites only. Under the Interstate Commerce Act, passen­ gers are equally entitled to facili­ ties appropriate to the class o f ser­ vice for which they have paid. Be­ cause “the curtains, partitions, and signs” all called attention to differ­ ences in treatment by race, the Court banned dining car segregation. Sweatt v. Painter. Brought by the NAACP Legal Defense Fund, this case attacked segregated gradu­ ate schools. Faced with a legal chal­ lenge, the Texas legislature had hastily funded a black law school. But as the decision stated “The University o f Texas Law School possesses to a far greater degree those qualities...w hich make for greatness in a law school...It is difficult to believe that one who had a free choice between these schools would consider the ques­ tion close.” The Court was not ready to strike down the doctrine o f “sepa­ rate but equal” segregation, but it ordered Herman Sweatt admitted to the law school under the “equal protection” clause o f the Four­ teenth Amendment, granting rights o f citizenship to blacks. M cLaurin v. Oklahoma State B o a rd o f R egents: F u rth e r undergirding Sweatt, the Court held that once admitted, students could not be segregated within the school. Recognizing such segregation as a handicap to the African American student, the Court finally declared all graduate school racial segrega­ tion invalid. June 11, 1963: What a day. Ala­ bama Governor George Wallace announced plans to personally block admittance to the University o f Ala­ bama o f two black students - James Hood and Vivian Malone. Prompted by Wallace’s bravado, Dr. King ini­ tiated a challenge: “If the governor o f Alabama will present his body by standing in the door to preserve an evil sy stem , then P resid en t Kennedy ought to go to Tuscaloosa and personally escort the student into the university with his body!” As Wallace appeared, the president did not, but a deputy attorney gen­ eral and federal troops did. Back in Alabama, the two stu­ dents were admitted and the univer­ sity was officially desegregated un­ der federal guard. That night, JFK took to the air. Segregation, he told the nation, was morally wrong, and he outlined his proposed Civil Rights Act. Their courting days were spent in an endless round o f politics, law, school, and survival. But despite one o f apartheid’s infamous ban­ ning orders, Nelson R olihlahla M andela, c o fo u n d er o f South A frica’s first black law firm, and Nomzamo W inifred M adikizela, South Africa’s first black social worker, were married on June 14, 1958. They each remembered seeing the other for the first time when the other was unaware. He passed a bus stop, saw her waiting, and tucked her face away as a pleasant memory. She first saw the “imposing” bar­ rister in court when a friend o f hers was assaulted by police. They met in his office when she consulted his lifelong partner, Oliver Tambo. Phoning the next day, he asked her to help raise money fo rthe Treason Trial Defense Fund: “It was merely a pretext to invite her to lunch.” Nervously, she “took out every schoolgirl’s dress” and ultimately wore a friend’s dress. From then on they were together - even when they couldn’t spend much time. “ 1 was both courting her and politiciz­ ing her,” said he. “Life with him was always a life without him," said she. At that first lunch, he said, “ 1 knew right there I w anted to marry her - and told her so.” W innie added, “One day, Nelson just pulled up on the side of the road and said, ‘You know, there is a woman, a dress-m aker, you must go and see her, she is going to make your wedding gown. ’” He was given six days’ leave o f his banning order and paid the traditional bride price (lobola) to her father. After the cerem ony, a piece o f the wedding cake was wrapped up for the bride to bring to the groom ’s ancestral home for the second part o f the wedding. But that was not meant to be. Indicted for treason, he re­ turned to Johannesburg for trial. Six years later, he was sentenced to life. True to her name - Nomzamo means “one who strives” and one who undergoes trials” - she, too, endured banishm ent, prison, and constant upheaval. For twenty- seven years, she was all the world knew o f him. Still, she kept the cake - though it “crumbled a bit.” It was there when he returned from prison, a hero, in 1990. This is an excerpt from the book "Freedom Days ", Permission for reprint was given by John Wiley and Sons, Inc. “One unfortunate thing about Black Power is that it gives priority to race prejudice at a time when the impact o f automation and other forces have made the economic question fundamental for blacks and whites alike. In this context a slogan “Power for Poor People ” would be much more appropriate. ” By Martin Luther King V e r a K a t z , M ayor C ity O f P o r t l a n d B e v e r l y S t e in , C h a ir M ultn o m ah C o unty R O B E R T P H IL L IP S C ity / C o u n ty A ff ir m a t iv e A c tio n O ffic e r For employment information eontact thi Affirmative Action Office Outreach & Recruitment Unit at 823-3530 N o E x c e p tio n s N o E xc u s e s P ori I anc I Public Sc bools 501 N. Dixon (503) 0 16 2000 J I