Monday, August 4, 2008

Freedom Riders: John Lewis and Jim Zwerg on the Front Lines of the Civil Rights Movement

Title: Freedom Riders: John Lewis and Jim Zwerg on the Front Lines of the Civil Rights Movement
2007 Sibert Honor Book
Author: Ann Bausum
Published: 2006
Interesting Facts: (1) "The Freedom Rides did not begin in 1961. They did not even begin in 1947 with the first organized test of interstate bus segregation. As far back as the 19th century African Americans had challenged segregated seating on public transportation (pg. 35). (2) "Perhaps Southern racists thought that the Freedom Riders--so beaten and scattered--had been defeated at last, but they were wrong again" (pg. 51). Citizens from around the country watched a battered and bruised Jim Zwerg on the evening news issue a statement from his hospital bed, "Segregation must be stopped...We're going on to New Orleans no matter what. We're dedicated to this...We're willing to accept death" (pg 51). (3) "Jim Zwerg's hospital bed statement, broadcast over national television served as a clarion cry for action...Individuals...headed off to join the Freedom Rides. Black and white, young and old, students, professors, members of the clergy, rabbis, Quakers, Northerners and Southerners, males and females alike, boarded trains, buses, and even airplanes bound for the segregated South--from Arkansas to Florida, from Georgia to Louisiana" (pg. 53). (4) Jim Zwerg reflected on his participation in freedom rides and the media attention that he received, " 'I'm nothing special. I'm a dentist's kid from Wisconsin who happened to get on a bus with some friends who got the hell beat out of him. Think of the hundreds of kids...especially black students, that put it on the line and nobody knows their names.' By being white-skinned, notes Zwerg, he drew extra attention among news reporters" (pg. 66-67). (5) "In 1963, just two years after the Freedom Rides, hundreds of thousands of Americans--black and white, young and old...gathered as one to champion equality and human rights during the August 28 March on Washington" (pg. 68).
Curriculum/Pathfinder Suggestion:
National US History Standards, Grades 3-4, Standard 4E: Analyze songs, symbols, and slogans that demonstrate freedom of expression and the role of protest in a democracy.

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