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In reply to the discussion: Rapper 'Diddy' urges black people to not get out the vote... [View all]struggle4progress
(118,282 posts)Jocelyn Y. Stewart
Sept. 23, 2014
... I came to learn how perilous it had been for black people to vote in the South, especially in the era prior to the Voting Rights Act of 1965. People of color didnt return from the poll wearing a splashy red, white and blue I voted sticker the way we might now. People of color often werent allowed to vote, and if they persisted, and tried organizing others to exercise their rights as Americans, they were often beaten, sometimes killed, for their efforts.
Hence my dads you gotta vote speeches. At the core of my dads fidelity to the ballot was an appreciation for the sacrifices made by everyday people that allowed African Americansand other people of colorto obtain it.
In the 1950s, when my parents were kids, the NAACP began an effort to register voters in the small rural Louisiana town where they lived. Local African-American residents, like my mothers father and the father of her friend Curtis Spears Jr., became members and participated in the effort.
One day Curtiss father returned from town beaten and bloodied. The assault had come at the hands of the town marshal, who later explained it as a case of mistaken identity. Not long afterward, the loan on the familys farm was recalled by the local lending institution. The family was forced to become sharecroppersa plummet in status and fortuneall because of their desire to vote ...
http://time.com/3423102/people-died-so-i-could-vote/