THE REAL ROSA PARKS
Paul Rogat Loeb
We learn much from how we present our heroes. A few years ago, on Martin
Luther King. Day, I was interviewed on CNN. So was Rosa Parks, by phone
from Los Angeles. “We’re very honored to have her,” said the host. “Rosa
Parks was the woman who wouldn’t go to the back of the bus. She wouldn’t
get up and give her seat in the white section to a white person. That
set in motion the year-long bus boycott in Montgomery. It earned Rosa
Parks the title of ‘mother of the Civil Rights movement.’”
I was excited to hear Parks’s voice and to be part of the same show.
Then it occurred to me that the host’s description--the story’s standard
rendition--stripped the Montgomery boycott of all of its context. Before
refusing to give up her bus seat, Parks had been active for twelve years
in the local NAACP chapter, serving as its secretary. The summer before
her arrest, she’d had attended a ten-day training session at Tennessee’s
labor and civil rights organizing school, the Highlander Center, where
she’d met an older generation of civil rights activists, like South
Carolina teacher Septima Clark, and discussed the recent Supreme Court
decision banning “separate-but-equal” schools. During this period of
involvement and education, Parks had become familiar with previous
challenges to segregation: Another Montgomery bus boycott, fifty years
earlier, successfully eased some restrictions; a bus boycott in Baton
Rouge won limited gains two years before Parks was arrested; and the
previous spring, a young Montgomery woman had also refused to move to
the back of the bus, causing the NAACP to consider a legal challenge
until it turned out that she was unmarried and pregnant, and therefore a
poor symbol for a campaign.
In short, Rosa Parks didn’t make a spur-of-the-moment decision. She
didn’t single-handedly give birth to the civil rights efforts, but she
was part of an existing movement for change, at a time when success was
far from certain. We all know Parks’s name, but few of us know
about Montgomery
NAACP head E.D. Nixon, who served as
one of her mentors and first got Martin Luther King involved. Nixon
carried people’s suitcases on the trains, and was active in the
Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters, the union founded by legendary
civil rights activist A. Philip Randolph. He played a key role in the
campaign. No one talks of him, any more than they talk of
JoAnn Robinson, who taught nearby at an
underfunded and segregated Black college and whose Women’s Political
Council distributed the initial leaflets following Parks’s arrest.
Without the often lonely work
of people like Nixon, Randolph, and
Robinson, Parks would likely have never taken her stand, and if she had,
it would never have had the same impact.
This in no way
diminishes the power and historical importance of Parks’s refusal to
give up her seat. But it reminds us that this tremendously consequential
act, along with everything that followed, depended on all the humble and
frustrating work that Parks and others undertook earlier on. It also
reminds us that Parks’s initial step of getting involved was just as
courageous and critical as the stand on the bus that all of us have
heard about.
People like Parks shape our models of social commitment. Yet the
conventional retelling of her story creates a standard so impossible to
meet, it may actually make it harder for us to get involved,
inadvertently removing away Parks’s most powerful lessons of hope.
The conventional portrayal suggests that social activists come out of
nowhere, to suddenly take dramatic stands. It implies that we act with
the greatest impact when we act alone, at least initially. And that
change occurs instantly, as opposed to building on a series of
often-invisible actions. The myth of Parks as lone activist reinforces a
notion that anyone who takes a committed public stand, or at least an
effective one, has to be a larger-than-life figure--someone with more
time, energy, courage, vision, or knowledge than any normal person could
ever possess. This belief pervades our society, in part because the
media tends not to represent historical change as the work of ordinary
human beings, which it almost always is.
Once we enshrine our heroes on pedestals, it becomes hard for mere
mortals to measure up in our eyes. However individuals speak out, we’re
tempted to dismiss their motives, knowledge, and tactics as
insufficiently grand or heroic. We fault them for not being in command
of every fact and figure, or being able to answer every question put to
them. We fault ourselves as well, for not knowing every detail, or for
harboring uncertainties and doubts. We find it hard to imagine that
ordinary human beings with ordinary flaws might make a critical
difference in worthy social causes.
Yet those who act have their own imperfections, and ample reasons to
hold back. “I think it does us all a disservice,” says a young
African-American activist in Atlanta named Sonya Tinsley, “when people
who work for social change are presented as saints--so much more noble
than the rest of us. We get a false sense that from the moment they were
born they were called to act, never had doubts, were bathed in a circle
of light. But I’m much more inspired learning how people succeeded
despite their failings and uncertainties. It’s a much less intimidating
image. It makes me feel like I have a shot at changing things too.”
Sonya had recently attended a talk given by one of Martin Luther King’s
Morehouse professors, in which he mentioned how much King had struggled
when he first came to college, getting only a ‘C,’ for example, in his
first philosophy course. “I found that very inspiring, when I heard it,”
Sonya said, “given all that King achieved. It made me feel that just
about anything was possible.”
Our culture’s misreading of the Rosa Parks story speaks to a more
general collective amnesia, where we forget the examples that might most
inspire our courage, hope, and conscience. Apart from obvious times of
military conflict, most of us know next to nothing of the many battles
ordinary men and women fought to preserve freedom, expand the sphere of
democracy, and create a more just society. Of the abolitionist and civil
rights movements, we at best recall a few key leaders--and often misread
their actual stories. We know even less about the turn-of-the-century
populists who challenged entrenched economic interests and fought for a
“cooperative commonwealth.” Who these days can describe the union
movements that ended 80-hour work weeks at near-starvation wages? Who
knows the origin of the social security system, now threatened by
systematic attempts to privatize it? How did the women’s suffrage
movement spread to hundreds of communities, and gather enough strength
to prevail?
As memories of these events disappear, we lose the knowledge of
mechanisms that grassroots social movements have used successfully in
the past to shift public sentiment and challenge entrenched
institutional power. Equally lost are the means by which their
participants managed to keep on and eventually prevail in circumstances
at least as harsh as those we face today.
Think again about the different ways one can frame Rosa Parks’s historic
action. In the prevailing myth, Parks decides to act almost on a whim,
in isolation. She’s a virgin to politics, a holy innocent. The lesson
seems to be that if any of us suddenly got the urge to do something
equally heroic, that would be great. Of course most of us don’t, so we
wait our entire lives to find the ideal moment.
Parks’s real story conveys a far more empowering moral. She begins with
seemingly modest steps. She goes to a meeting, and then another, helping
build the community that in turn supported her path. Hesitant at first,
she gains confidence as she speaks out. She keeps on despite a
profoundly uncertain context, as she and others act as best they can to
challenge deeply entrenched injustices, with little certainty of
results. Had she and others given up after her tenth or eleventh year of
commitment, we might never have heard of Montgomery.
Parks’s journey suggests that change is the product of deliberate,
incremental action, whereby we join together to try to shape a better
world. Sometimes our struggles will fail, as did many earlier efforts of
Parks, her peers, and her predecessors. Other times they may bear modest
fruits. And at times they will trigger a miraculous outpouring of
courage and heart--as happened with her arrest and all that followed.
For only when we act despite all our uncertainties and doubts do we have
the chance to shape history.
Adapted from Paul Rogat Loeb,
Soul of a
Citizen:
Living With Conviction in a Cynical Time
(St Martin’s Press,
1999)
www.soulofacitizen.org