After reading "The Parting of the Waters" with Martin Luther King Jr. as the central focus of the civil rights movement, it was a pleasure to read about the young activists of SNCC giving a very different focus. Their courageous sit-ins, marches, Freedom Rides, and voter registration drives in the segregation-soaked south of Tennessee, Alabama, Georgia, South Carolina, and Mississippi are almost beyond belief. I had known of John Lewis and Stokely Carmichael and Marion Barry and Julian Bond, but I did not know how they each became involved in SNCC, what their roles and accomplishments were, and how they dealt with their post-SNCC years. I recently learned of the amazing Diane Nash. I did not know about the remarkable Ella Baker, Bob Zellner, and Bob Moses. Thank you, Andrew Lewis, for providing this history.
I reread this book March 2023, not realizing that I had read it 3.5 years before. Not sure what that says about my brain, but I really enjoyed the book again. What struck me this time were all the choices of actions and conflicts within SNCC. So many things could have happened differently. Choices were also being made by local, state and federal governments.
On this reading, the most impressive person was Bob Moses. Not only was he the main grassroots mover of voter registration for African-Americans in Mississippi, but he later founded the Algebra Project, which gave underprivileged kids a leg up through mathematics.