Hello everyone!
Day 4 has been another eventful day down south! By this point in the immersion, we have been bonding together as a group through various icebreakers (cue eye rolls from multiple group members) which end up being filled with laughter as we learn more about one other.
The day began with the Civil Rights Memorial Center in downtown Montgomery, which paid tribute to the men and women who gave their lives in the Civil Rights movement, as well as the men and women who have lost their lives due to racial injustice since the ending of the civil rights era. As we took time to circulate the memorial, where images of these individuals were hung around the room, there was silence as we thought of the courageousness of each individual and what this means for us as we take or education of southern culture that is influenced by a history charged with racial injustice, and inform others about the current issues that still plague this country. I think about these people who moved through their fears to do what they believed in the cores of themselves to be right, and remember that they were simply that: people like you and me. People who lived with intention and made conscious choices to change the circumstances they found themselves in, not only for themselves, but for the generations to come. I implore anyone reading this to pause and think about this thought: that all people have the ability to be courageous by living with this intention.
After the Civil Rights Memorial we took a block of time to explore the city center of Montgomery, which acted as a slave trade hub during the civil war era, before moving to the Equal Justice Initiative. We had three speakers who educated us about the death penalty, where the state of Alabama has the 4th largest death row in the country. We also discussed the issues of children being sentenced to life in prison without parole as young as 13 and 14 years old. These issues are revealed to be closely connected to the deeper rooted history of slavery, and the myths created about black people as being dangerous and violent in order to keep them in chains. These ideas, even if they are difficult to notice, survive still within American culture and contribute to the fact that American prisons are disproportionately made up of people of color. This legacy of racial injustice is manifested in the laws and legislation of this country, and in order to combat the effects of these myths and ideals, one must educate themselves and others about the history of America that most would rather forget.
Tomorrow we will participate in a project created by the Equal Justice Initiative, where soil will be collected from various lynching sites in the state and put into a lynching memorial site, bringing attention to the victims of this era who have been forgotten, so that we may move forward by becoming conscious of our history as a nation.
More to come from the Civil Rights Immersion!
Ta ta for now! Hannah Schoen