|
Singing for Freedom by Carla Nordstrom Background: During the early 1960s, Mississippi was the poorest state in the nation, with most non-white families living well below the poverty line. Although African Americans made up close to half of the population of this state, few were registered to vote, and there were no African American representatives in the Democratic Party. In 1964, a presidential election year, civil rights organizations decided to focus on four goals in Mississippi: to register more African Americans to vote; to use the Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party to challenge the Mississippi Democratic delegation to the 1964 Democratic national convention; to set up “Freedom Schools” for African-American children to study reading, math, and history; and to establish centers where African Americans could get legal and medical help. Approximately 1,000 people from all over the country were trained and sent to Mississippi to help accomplish these goals. They were to spend the summer traveling throughout the state, registering people to vote, and setting up schools and legal and medical centers in African American communities. Some of these civil rights workers were African American and from the Deep South, while many were white college students, often from elsewhere in the country. They were required to bring $500 for bail as well as money to cover living expenses, medical bills, and transportation home. The young people began to arrive in Mississippi in June, 1964. On June 21, not long after the arrival of the first group of 200 civil rights workers, three of them – an African American from Mississippi and two whites from New York City - disappeared. The bodies of James Chaney, Andrew Goodman, and Michael Schwerner were found on August 4. They had been murdered. The murders testify to the danger that confronted civil rights workers
during that summer. They were constantly harassed by people who did not
agree with what they were doing. But these civil rights workers practiced
nonviolence. They did not get into physical confrontations with the people
who harassed or threatened them. These young people used song to build
community, gather strength, and to keep them from being overwhelmed by
the dangers of their work. Often the songs they sang were modifications
of nineteenth-century spirituals sung by African American slaves or songs
that had been composed by anonymous African Americans immediately after
the slaves had been emancipated.
Objectives: Aim/Essential Question:
Motivation: Draw three columns on chart paper and label the first column POEM and the second one FAVORITE SONG. Ask the students how the poem makes them feel and record their responses in the first column. Ask the students to close their eyes and think of a favorite song. Ask
them how the song makes them feel and record their answers below the FAVORITE
SONG label.
Day Two:
Application: Ask the students to consider which form of expression -- music, film,
TV, radio broadcast, newspaper and magazine articles, ads, or posters
-- is most effective way to communicate feelings and ask them to explain
why. Then ask: Why did the leaders of the civil rights movement rely so
heavily on music? Have the students write letters to their families as if they were civil
rights workers during the summer of 1964. Samples of real letters can
be found at Ask students to select images about Freedom Summer on the http://www.crmvet.org/ website and have them write journal entries as if they were a person in one of the pictures. Teach the students the songs from the interactive feature on the www.historynow.org
website and organize a sing-along or an assembly performance that features
the songs. This is a great way to celebrate Martin Luther King’s
birthday in January or Black History Month in February.
|
| © The Gilder Lehrman Institute of American History, 2006. All Rights Reserved. |