Loveland, Ohio – To celebrate Juneteenth National Independence Day, we are singing “Freedom”.
Learn more about Juneteenth.
We are also listening to:
1A Remaking America: The Birmingham movement, 60 years later
On May 2, 1963,Ā hundreds of school-age kids in Birmingham, Alabama, woke up with a plan.Ā Ā
Through coded messages broadcast by local radio DJs, they were given the signal to leave the classroom and meet at the park for a peaceful protest against segregation in the city.Ā Ā
āMy mother said, āIām sending you to school, donāt get in any troubleā,ā said Janice Kelsey, who was a 16-year-old high school student in Birmingham at the time.Ā āI was going to school. I just wasnāt going to stay.āĀ
Jeff Drew also participated in theĀ Childrenās March. His parents were involved in the Birmingham movement for civil rights and hosted Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. in their home.
āYou cannot imagine the joy of being on one of those buses on your way to jail,ā said Drew. āWe were nearly dying to participate.āĀ
Janice Kelsey and Jeff Drew joined us at the Carver Theater in Birmingham last month for a community conversation on the fight for civil rights then and now.Ā Their actions as students in the spring of 1963Ā brought national attentionāand a new momentumāto the civil rights movement, support for which had been waning as more adults were jailed and reluctant to be arrested.
Civil rights leaders, includingĀ James Bevel, recruited young people to participate in a peaceful demonstration on May 2, 1963 in what became known as the Childrenās Crusade. Hundreds of kids were arrested by police for parading without a permit. Images of police dogs and firehoses being used on students in the city highlighted the injustices in Birmingham and prompted President John F. Kennedy to express support for federal civil rights legislation.Ā
On our trip to Birmingham, we also spoke to the next generation of activists.Ā Ashley M. Jones isĀ a Birmingham native and the Poet Laureate of Alabama. At 32 years old, Jones is the stateās youngest-ever poet laureate and the first person of color to hold the position. Birmingham Mayor Randall Woodfin also joined us to talk about how the cityās past informs his role today.Ā
This conversation was recorded in April as part of ourĀ Remaking AmericaĀ collaboration with six public radio stations around the country, including WBHM. Remaking America is funded in part by the Corporation for Public Broadcasting.