For Friday’s discussion of voter registration and the Selma to Montgomery March, select one of the following questions and post a brief (one or two paragraph) response to it. Just use the questions as a jumping off point; if you’d like to go in a different direction, feel free to do so. You can also use these questions to write a response paper.
“Selma Freedom Day”:
1. This first selection, from James Forman’s autobiography, gives some background on the ongoing voter registration work in Selma, AL. Why does Forman see the advertisement he begins the chapter with as evidence that the White Citizens’ Council was on the defensive? What analysis does he offer of the power structure of the South, and how, if at all, does it differ from common assumptions? From your own?
2. What were some of the effects of Freedom Day? Which seem most significant to you? What was the significance of shifting efforts from ending segregation to registering voters? Which goal do you see as more important, and why?
“Power for Black People”:
1. This brief excerpt describes events that took place in Selma two years after Freedom Day. What are the criticisms Forman makes of Martin Luther King and SCLC? How do these compare to criticisms that John Lewis reports in earlier readings? Do you think Forman’s criticisms are justified? Why or why not?
2. In these selections, Forman discusses his attitudes toward nonviolence in general and marches in particular. What changes, if any, can you detect in these attitudes? What are the reasons underlying his attitudes? Do you agree with them? Why or why not?
“Bloody Sunday”:
1. John Lewis here describes his involvement with the first attempted march from Selma to Montgomery. Why did this instance of police brutality seem worse than others, according to Lewis? How does he describe media coverage and national reactions? What are your reactions to this reading?
2. Think about the style and tone that Forman and Lewis use. How would you characterize the differences between their writing? Between their philosophies? Find a few examples to support your response.
Question 1
This excerpt is so emotional, and really gives the reader an insight to what happened that Sunday, from the eyes of John Lewis. The display of police brutality in this excerpt seems worse than others to Lewis, because the marchers were "silent, unarmed people" and "the mass movement of those troopers on foot and riders on horseback rolling into and over" the marchers. The fact that the marchers were completely silent and were orderly in a line, but the police still handeled the situation with extreme force, shows that police brutality was used more in this situation than in others.
The media coverage of the march was crucial in the progression of the movement. People of America as well as other countries got to see first hand the agony the marchers endured while the police beat them. Lewis says "the images were stunning. It seemed too strange, too ugly to be real. It couldn't be real." That seems to have been the reaction of most of the people who watched the airing of the march.
My reactions to this excert were of shock and disbelief. I was completely appalled at the measures the governor took to stop this march, when the marchers weren't even causing any problems. They were orderly and silent. They were treated like they weren't even humans, frankly it made me sick! It is hard for me to believe that things that bad actually happened, just because of the stupidity and close-mindedness of the white power structure.