Marching With King in Selma (Spring 2023 | Volume: 68, Issue: 2)

Marching With King in Selma

AH article image

Authors: Bob Yuhnke

Historic Era: Era 10: Contemporary United States (1968 to the present)

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Spring 2023 | Volume 68, Issue 2

Canisius college students
On March 21, 1965, students from Canisius College in Buffalo, New York traveled to Selma, Alabama to join Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. and other civil rights leaders in their march to the state capitol. Canisius College Archives

On the first weekend in March, 1965, TV images of brutal violence by the Alabama state police against civil rights demonstrators shocked the nation. Wielding batons and dogs, police killed one demonstrator and brutally beat many others as a few hundred otherwise-silent Black Americans marched peacefully across the Edmund Pettus Bridge on U.S. highway 80, heading from Selma to the Alabama capitol. Their offense? Demanding the right to vote guaranteed by the Fifteenth Amendment to the Constitution.  

Days after Bloody Sunday, Martin Luther King, Jr., along with leaders of other civil rights groups, issued a call for faith communities to join another march on the 21st. 

When I heard of Martin’s call, my response was “Yes, we will join hands.”  

I was then a senior at Canisius College in Buffalo, New York, where I had just ended my term as editor-in-chief of the Griffin, the campus newspaper. Using my bully pulpit, I had endorsed Barry Goldwater for president just months before. In high school, I had been captured in the thrall of his pitch for liberty in Conscience of a Conservative. But, at the core, the right to vote was the first freedom in the lexicon of liberty. There can be no liberty for people who have no place at the table, whose voices are not heard, and whose personal sovereignty is not respected. The terror visited upon the marchers at the bridge was proof to me that the right to vote must be assured to restore civility to the land. When I heard of Martin’s call, my response was “Yes, we will join hands.”  

This was the first time I could recall Black civil rights leaders reaching out to white America with an open call for support. Until then, I understood that civil rights leaders wanted the protests, the sit-ins, the Freedom Rides, and the marches to be an expression of Black power, led by Black organizations, and representing the voice of the Black community. It was their opportunity to be recognized and heard. I felt that whites, no matter how sympathetic to the goals of the movement, were not welcome as open participants due to the fear that white activists would co-opt and dominate the movement.  

But Martin’s call sent a new message. White brothers and sisters were openly invited to stand together, to march arm-in-arm, to show solidarity, white with Black America.   

bloody sunday
King and other leaders attempted a first march from Selma to Montgomery on March 6, which became known as Bloody Sunday after Alabama state police brutally beat participants, such as John Lewis