The Blood of Emmett Till Quotes
The Blood of Emmett Till
by
Timothy B. Tyson8,949 ratings, 4.27 average rating, 1,280 reviews
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The Blood of Emmett Till Quotes
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“Somewhere between the fact we know and the anxiety we feel is the reality we live.”5”
― The Blood of Emmett Till
― The Blood of Emmett Till
“Because if we in America have reached the point in our desperate culture where we must murder children, no matter for what reason or what color, we don’t deserve to survive and probably won’t.”
― The Blood of Emmett Till
― The Blood of Emmett Till
“Some things are worse than death... If a man lives, he must still live with himself.”
― The Blood of Emmett Till
― The Blood of Emmett Till
“The ruthless attack inflicted injuries almost certain to be fatal. They reveal a breathtaking level of savagery, a brutality that cannot be explained without considering rabid homicidal intent or a rage utterly beyond control. Affronted white supremacy drove every blow.”
― The Blood of Emmett Till
― The Blood of Emmett Till
“seeing that the lynching of Emmett Till was caused by the nature and history of America itself and by a social system that has changed over the decades, but not as much as we pretend. In “Letter from a Birmingham Jail,” Martin Luther King Jr. writes that his worst enemies are not the members of Citizens’ Councils or the Ku Klux Klan but “the white moderate” who claims to support the goals of the movement but deplores its methods of protest and deprecates its timetable for change: “We will have to repent in this generation not merely for the vitriolic words and actions of the bad people but for the appalling silence of the good people.”10”
― The Blood of Emmett Till
― The Blood of Emmett Till
“Emmett Till's death was an extreme example of the logic of America's national racial caste system. To look beneath the surface of these facts is to ask ourselves what our relationship is today to the legacies of that caste system - legacies that still end the lives of young African Americans for no reason other than the color of their American skin and the content of our national character. Recall that Faulkner, asked to comment on the Till case when he was sober, responded, 'If we in America have reached the point in our desperate culture where we must murder children, no matter for what reason or what color, we don't deserve to survive and probably won't.' Ask yourself whether America's predicament is really so different now.”
― The Blood of Emmett Till
― The Blood of Emmett Till
“Not everything that is faced can be changed,” Baldwin instructs, “but nothing can be changed until it is faced.”24”
― The Blood of Emmett Till
― The Blood of Emmett Till
“We are still killing black youth because we have not yet killed white supremacy.”
― The Blood of Emmett Till
― The Blood of Emmett Till
“The black novelist Chester Himes wrote a letter to the editor of the New York Post the day he heard the news of Milam’s and Bryant’s acquittals: “The real horror comes when your dead brain must face the fact that we as a nation don’t want it to stop. If we wanted to, we would.”
― The Blood of Emmett Till
― The Blood of Emmett Till
“When we blame those who brought about the brutal murder of Emmett Till, we have to count President Eisenhower, who did not consider the national honor at stake when white Southerners prevented African Americans from voting; who would not enforce the edicts of the highest court in the land, telling Chief Justice Earl Warren, 'All [opponents of desegregation] are concerned about is to see that their sweet little girls are not required to sit in schools alongside some big, overgrown Negroes.' We must count Attorney General Herbert Brownell Jr., who demurred that the federal government had no jurisdiction in the political assassinations of George Lee and Lamar Smith that summer, thus not only preventing African Americans from voting but also enabling Milam and Bryant to feel confident that they could murder a fourteen-year-old boy with impunity. Brownell, a creature of politics, likewise refused to intervene in the Till case. We must count the politicians who ran for office in Mississippi thumping the podium for segregation and whipping crowds into a frenzy about the terrifying prospects of school desegregation and black voting. This goes double for the Citizens' Councils, which deliberately created an environment in which they knew white terrorism was inevitable. We must count the jurors and the editors who provided cover for Milam, Bryant, and the rest. Above all, we have to count the millions of citizens of all colors and in all regions who knew about the rampant racial injustice in America and did nothing to end it. The black novelist Chester Himes wrote a letter to the New York Post the day he heard the news of Milam's and Bryant's acquittals: 'The real horror comes when your dead brain must face the fact that we as a nation don't want it to stop. If we wanted to, we would.”
― The Blood of Emmett Till
― The Blood of Emmett Till
“So here is another shard of truth, which we must accept if we are to make sense of the trial: faith in our courts and our laws, in the statement chiseled above the columns of the U.S. Supreme Court building - 'Equal Justice Under Law' - can obscure the obvious, particularly with the passage of time. There was no equal justice, no universal protection of law in the Mississippi Delta, certainly not in 1955.”
― The Blood of Emmett Till
― The Blood of Emmett Till
“Milam and Bryant were not on a political mission when they pounded on Moses Wright’s door, and they did not kidnap Emmett Till beneath the banner of states’ rights, racial integrity, or white supremacy. The white men carried out their brutal errand in an atmosphere created by the Citizens’ Councils, the Ku Klux Klan, and the mass of white public opinion, all of which demanded that African Americans remain the subservient mudsill of Mississippi—or die.”
― The Blood of Emmett Till
― The Blood of Emmett Till
“Lord you gave your only son to remedy a condition, but who knows but what the death of my only son might bring an end to lynching.”
― The Blood of Emmett Till
― The Blood of Emmett Till
“Mamie now envisioned God’s purpose for her life—and for her son’s life: “I took the privacy of my own grief and turned it into a public issue, a political issue, one which set in motion the dynamic force that ultimately led to a generation of social and legal progress for this country.”
― The Blood of Emmett Till
― The Blood of Emmett Till
“We must look at the facts squarely, not to flounder in a bitter nostalgia of pain but to redeem a democratic promise rooted in the living ingredients of our own history.”
― The Blood of Emmett Till
― The Blood of Emmett Till
“Frederick Sullens, editor of the Jackson Daily News, predicted, “If a decision is made to send Negroes to school with white children, there will be bloodshed. The stains of that bloodshed will be on the Supreme Court steps.”68”
― The Blood of Emmett Till
― The Blood of Emmett Till
“Chicago activist Saul Alinsky sardonically defined integration as “the period of time between the arrival of the first black and the departure of the last white.”
― The Blood of Emmett Till
― The Blood of Emmett Till
“What does it mean when you remember something that you know never happened?”
― The Blood of Emmett Till
― The Blood of Emmett Till
“I knew that I could talk for the rest of my life about what happened to my baby, I could explain it in great detail, I could describe what I saw laid out there on that slab at A. A. Rayner’s place, one piece, one inch, one body part at a time. I could do all of that and people would still not get the full impact. . . . They had to see what I had seen. The whole nation had to bear witness to this.”
― The Blood of Emmett Till
― The Blood of Emmett Till
“It was like watching a community you thought you knew reveal itself as something else.”
― The Blood of Emmett Till
― The Blood of Emmett Till
“We blame them to avoid seeing that the lynching of Emmett Till was caused by the nature and history of America itself and by a social system that has changed over the decades, but not as much as we pretend.”
― The Blood of Emmett Till
― The Blood of Emmett Till
“Black youngsters who walked through neighborhoods other than their own did so at their peril. Those searching for places to play, in parks and other public facilities, were especially vulnerable. These were lessons that black children growing up on the South Side learned with their ABCs.6”
― The Blood of Emmett Till
― The Blood of Emmett Till
“[The undertaker] asked if [Mamie] wanted him to retouch Emmett's body and make him look a little more presentable, "No," [she] said. That was the way [she] wanted him presented. "Let the world see what I have seen.”
― The Blood of Emmett Till
― The Blood of Emmett Till
“And I kept screaming, as the cameras kept flashing," [Mamie] wrote, "in one long, explosive moment that would be captured for the morning editions.”
― The Blood of Emmett Till
― The Blood of Emmett Till
“The Dixiecrat revolt of 1948 captured the electoral votes of Mississippi, Louisiana, Alabama, and South Carolina and presaged the rise of a two-party South.8 Judge Brady was already a fuming Dixiecrat, calling for a new party “into whose ranks all true conservative Americans, Democrats and Republicans alike, will be welcomed” to battle “the radical elements of this country who call themselves liberals.” Senator James Eastland of Mississippi termed the Dixiecrat revolt “the opening phases of a fight” for conservative principles and white supremacy, and “a movement that will never die.”9”
― The Blood of Emmett Till
― The Blood of Emmett Till
“According to William Bradford Huie, Milam later justified Till’s lynching using the terms of violent racial and sexual politics: Just as long as I live and can do anything about it, niggers are going to stay in their place. Niggers ain’t gonna vote where I live. If they did, they’d control the government”
― The Blood of Emmett Till
― The Blood of Emmett Till
“They beat hell out of you for any reason or no reason. It’s the greatest pleasure of their lives.”
― The Blood of Emmett Till
― The Blood of Emmett Till
“After all, how do you give a crash course in hatred to a boy who has only known love?”
― The Blood of Emmett Till
― The Blood of Emmett Till
“Rather than arrest the assailant, white police officers hauled off a black bystander who objected to their inaction.”
― The Blood of Emmett Till
― The Blood of Emmett Till
“Like many white citizens over the years, members of the Council believed that anything that weakened white supremacy or challenged the existing social hierarchy in any way was socialism. But this was largely code for preserving the country’s racial caste system, centuries in the making.”
― The Blood of Emmett Till
― The Blood of Emmett Till
