“We must continue to be bold, brave, and courageous, push and pull ‘til we redeem the soul of America and move closer to a community at peace with itself.” (1)
February 21, 1940–1958:
“Hands that once picked cotton now can pick a president.” (2)
• Born into Alabama sharecropper family of 10 children and grandfather, a former slave
• Grew up in solid Jim Crow rural South. Neighbor lynched
• Studied at Baptist Theological Seminary. Devoted to Rev. Dr. King’s radio sermons
• Wanted to work with Dr. King. Wrote him a letter (1958); he responded with bus ticket
Early 1960s:
“I got into trouble, good trouble, necessary trouble.” (3)
• Member of many Nashville sit-ins. City became first in U.S. to desegregate public facilities
• One of the original 13 Freedom Riders
• Founder/leader Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC)
• Organizer/speaker at Dr. King’s 1963 March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom
1965 Selma :
“Back then, I called him an outside rabble-rouser. Today, I call him one of the most courageous people I ever met.” (4)
• Led “Bloody Sunday” voting rights march of 600 people across Pettus Bridge (5)
• State troopers televised fracturing his skull and seriously beating other demonstrators
• American people shocked, led to LBJ signing the Voting Rights Act (Aug. 1965)
Time Out:
• Graduated in religion and philosophy from Fisk University
• Married Lilian Miles, Peace Corps volunteer, librarian (died 2012), one son, moved to Atlanta
1977–2020 Politics:
“I have been in some kind of fight — for freedom, equality, basic human rights — for nearly my entire life.” (6)
• 1977 — Elected member of Atlanta City Council
• 1979 — Won a Georgia House seat
• 2011 — President Obama presented the Presidential Medal of Freedom to Congressman Lewis
“Ordinary people with extraordinary vision can redeem the soul of America by getting in what I call good trouble, necessary trouble. Voting and participating in the democratic process are key. The vote is the most powerful nonviolent change agent you have in a democratic society. You must use it because it is not guaranteed. You can lose it.” (7)Notes:
(1) Congressman Lewis’ comments, shortly before he died, on the massive demonstrations following the murder of George Floyd
(2) Popular Civil Rights poster in the 1960s and 70s
(3) Rep. John Lewis, 2014
(4) Selma mayor in 1965, recalling John Lewis in 1998, while still Selma mayor
(5) Named for Edmund Pettus, a Confederate officer, later grand dragon of the Alabama KKK
(6) Rep. John Lewis, 2019
(7)
Opinion piece
written by John Lewis and published on the day of his funeral
Tom Timberman
is a lawyer, and former Foreign Service officer and economic development team leader/government adviser in war zones. He and his wife have lived in Kent County for 24 years.