(To the right, the FBI's "Missing" poster in 1964 for martyred civil rights activists Andrew Goodman, James Chaney, and Mickey Schwerner)
JACKSON, Miss. – Larry Rubin, field secretary of the Student
Non-Violent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) at the height of the Civil Rights
Movement in the early 1960s, figured his time to die had come when a Mississippi law
enforcement officer showed up at the door and told him to take a ride with him
in his patrol car.
“We all knew we were going to die,” Rubin told a roomful of
activists at the Mississippi Freedom Summer 50th Anniversary
Conference at Tougaloo College in Jackson Wednesday.
After all, fellow civil rights activists Andrew Goodman,
Mickey Schwerner and James Chaney had died at the hands of a band of white
racists that included local law enforcement in Neshoba County, Miss. Why not
Larry Rubin, a white, Jewish, Antioch College-educated son of a construction
worker from Philadelphia, Pa.?
The Mississippi officer took Rubin to a remote spot in the
piney woods and stopped the car. Instead of shooting the labor and civil rights
activist, however, the officer began asking questions about labor unions and
whether they might be able to protect his brother from mistreatment at his
blue-collar job. The officer may have been a racist, but ironically he had a sense of
the need for workers’ rights against oppressive management, Rubin said.
“That incident changed my life,” Rubin said.
It also raised a key issue at this week’s
commemoration of the SNCC-led voter registration drive and other civil rights
activism during what became known as Mississippi's “Freedom Summer” in 1964. The fierce
opposition those activists faced crystallized with the murders of Goodman,
Schwerner and Chaney.
As veterans like Rubin meet with today's young activists at
the five-day conference, a frequent message being heard at the event is that workers’
rights are at the heart of the movement today. Along with multiple panels
and discussions on workers’ rights, a scheduled highlight is a rally Friday by
student activists from around the country at Nissan’s giant plant in nearby
Canton, where they will demand fair treatment of workers and a fair union election.
A United Auto Workers release said the rally is part of “a
growing movement of over 1,000 students from over 60 colleges nationwide (who)
are again a major influence on the civil rights struggle today—labor rights for
Nissan workers.”
Workers at the plant--its workforce is predominantly African American--have complained of a climate a fear
inside its walls and active hostility by management to any prospect of a
unionized workforce to address ongoing issues such as wages, benefits and
working conditions. Nissan officials insist workers’ best option is what
spokesman Travis Parman has called “direct, two-way communication as opposed to
involving a third party.”
During a conference panel discussion on "Organizing the South" Wednesday--yours truly was a panelist--speaker after speaker from the audience stressed the importance of blacks, whites, Latinos, and all races working together if a labor movement is to be successful in the South. Workers must look beyond race, gender and other differences to see that the fight for their rights as human beings and workers is what should unite them, the speakers said.
Predominantly black Tougaloo College on Jackson's northern edge, site of the Mississippi Freedom Summer 50th Anniversary
Conference, was a hotbed of activism during the
Civil Rights Movement.
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