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Source: Torricelli, Senator Robert and Carroll, Andrew, eds. In
Our Own Words:Extraordinary Speeches of the American Century. New
York: Washington Square Press Publication, 1999. Ida
B. Wells-Barnett Calls Attention to the Epidemic of Lynchings and
"Mob Murder" in America.
The
daughter of Mississippi slaves, Ida B. Wells-Barnett was a fiercely
outspoken activist, journalist, and teacher who inveighed against racial
discrimination and championed women's rights throughout the late 18oos and
early 1900s Wells-Barnett began a national crusade against lynching in
1892 when one of her closest friends was lynched by a mob during a race
riot. In the following 1909 address to the National Association for the
Advancement of Colored People, Wells-Barnett assails the mentality that
condones lynchings and other forms of "mob" justice. The
lynching record for a quarter of a century merits the thoughtful study of
the American people. It presents three salient facts: First, lynching is a
colorline murder. Second, crimes against women is the excuse, not the
cause. Proof
that lynching follows the color line is to be found in the statistics
which have been kept for the past twenty-five years. During the few years
preceding this period and while frontier law existed, the executions
showed During
the last ten years, from 1899 to 19o8 inclusive, the number lynched was
959. Of this number, 102 were white, while the colored victims numbered
857. No other nation, civilized or savage, burns its criminals; only under
that Stars and Stripes is the human holocaust possible. Twenty-eight human
beings burned at the stake, one of them a woman and two of them children,
is the awful indictment against American civilization-the gruesome tribute which the nation pays to the color line. Why
is mob murder permitted by a Christian nation? What is the cause of this
awful slaughter? This question is answered almost daily: always the same
shameless falsehood that "Negroes are lynched to protect woman The
Springfield, Illinois, mob rioted for two days, the militia of the entire
state was called out, two men were lynched, hundreds of people driver from
their homes, all because a white woman said a Negro assaulted her. f mad
mob went to the jail, tried to lynch the victim of her charge, and, no
being able to find him, proceeded to pillage and burn the town and to
lynch two innocent men. Later, after the police had found that the woman's
charge was false, she published a retraction, the indictment was
dismissed, and the intended victim discharged. But the lynched victims
were dead, hundreds were As a final and complete refutation of the charge that lynching is occasioned by crimes against women, a partial record of lynchings is cited; 285 Is
there a remedy, or will the nation confess that it cannot protect its
protectors at home as well as abroad? Various remedies have been suggested
to abolish the lynching infamy, but year after year, the butchery of men,
women, and children continues in spite of plea and protest. Education is
suggested as a preventive, but it is as grave a crime to murder an
ignorant man as it is a scholar. True, few educated men have been lynched,
but the hue and cry once started stops at no bounds, as was clearly shown
by the lynchings in Atlanta, and in Springfield, Illinois. Agitation,
though helpful, will not alone stop the crime. Year after year statistics
are published, meetings are held, resolutions are adopted. And yet
lynchings go on.... The only certain remedy is an appeal to law.
Lawbreakers must be made to know that human life is sacred and that every
citizen of this country is first a citizen of the United States and
secondly a citizen of the state in which he belongs. This nation must
assert itself and protect its federal citizenship at home as well as
abroad. The strong men of the government must reach across state lines
whenever unbridled lawlessness defies state laws, and must give to the
individual under the Stars and Stripes the same measure of protection it
gives to him when he travels in foreign lands. Federal protection of
American citizenship is the remedy for lynching.... In
a multitude of counsel there is wisdom. Upon the grave question presented
by the slaughter of innocent men, women, and children there should be an
honest, courageous conference of patriotic, law-abiding citizens anxious
to punish crime promptly, impartially, and by due process of law, also to
make life, liberty, and property secure against mob rule. Time
was when lynching appeared to be sectional, but now it is national-a
blight upon our nation, mocking our laws and disgracing our Christianity.
"With malice toward none but with charity for all," let us
undertake the work of making the "law of the land" effective and
supreme upon every foot of American soil-a shield to the innocent; and to
the guilty, punishment swift and sure. No
federal anti-lynching law was ever enacted.
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