The Nashville Sit-Ins were among the earliest non-violent direct action campaigns that targeted Southern racial segregation in the 1960s. The sit-ins, which lasted from February 13 to May 10, 1960, sought to desegregate downtown lunch counters in Nashville, Tennessee. The protests were coordinated by the Nashville Student Movement and the Nashville Christian Leadership Council (NCLC), primarily consisting of students from Fisk University, Baptist Theological Seminary, and Tennessee State University. Diane Nash and John Lewis, who were both students at Fisk University, emerged as the major leaders of the local movement.

On February 13, 1960, twelve days after the Greensboro, North Carolina sit-ins began, Nashville college students entered Kress (now K-Mart), Woolworth’s, and McClellan stores at 12:40 p.m. After making their purchases, the students sat down at the lunch counters. Store owners initially refused to serve the students and closed the counters, claiming it was their “moral right” to determine whom they would or would not serve. The students continued the sit-ins over the next three months, expanding their targets to include lunch counters at the Greyhound and Trailways bus terminals, Grant’s Variety Store, Walgreens Drugstore, and major Nashville department stores, Cain-Sloan and Harvey.

The first violent response to the protests came on February 27, which James Lawson, Jr., another protest leader called “big Saturday.” The protesters that day were attacked by a white group opposing desegregation. The police arrested eighty-one protesters but none of the attackers. Those arrested were found guilty of disorderly conduct. They all decided to serve time in jail rather than pay fines.

As racial tension grew in Nashville, Mayor Ben West appointed a biracial committee to investigate segregation in the city. Despite the committee’s numerous attempts at a compromise, the students declared that they would accept nothing less than the acknowledgement of their rights to sit at the store lunch counters along with white customers. On April 5, the committee suggested that the counters be divided into black and white sections. The NCLC and the Nashville Student Movement rejected the proposal, arguing that segregation of the counters was no better than black exclusion from them.

On April 19, a bomb destroyed the home of Z. Alexander Looby, the defense attorney representing many of the protesters. The bombing of Lobby’s home triggered a mass march to city hall where 2,500 protesters demanded answers from Mayor West. Diane Nash pointedly asked Mayor West if it was wrong for a citizen of Nashville to discriminate against his fellow citizens because of his race or skin color. The mayor admitted that it was wrong, giving the students an important symbolic victory in their campaign. Nash then asked the mayor if the lunch counters in Nashville should be desegregated. They mayor said they should.

After weeks of secret negotiations between merchants and protest leaders, an agreement was finally reached during the first week of May. On May 10, six downtown stores opened their lunch counters to black customers for the first time; the customers arrived in groups of two or three during the afternoon and were served without incident. With that agreement, Nashville became the first major southern city to begin desegregating public facilities. The Nashville campaign became a model for other civil rights protests in the 1960s and 1970s.

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  • LibsEatPoop [any]
    ·
    10 months ago

    Sharing this video and the Hexbear link along with my comment on the post about it:

    This, in my opinion, needs to be pinned (and spread/shared, and kept in a sidebar of resources of Palestine etc etc).

    It's a full document of everything to do with the genocide in its first 100 days. It's from Oct 7 and goes day by day, with pictures and videos by news agencies and on the ground by Gazans (this is where the dead Palestinians come in). It shows the hypocrisy of the Western leaders side by side with what is happening at the exact moment. It shows the difference between Western journalists and Arab journalists. It shows Palestinian doctors and medics breaking down and crying, but also their incredible, incredible bravery. It shows Israeli politicians talking of using the nuclear bomb, and of starving the Palestinians. It shows the IDF bombing not just residential buildings every day but the people the bombings kill, the people who mourn, the people who try to rescue the survivors. It shows the hospitals, the mosques, the refugee camps. All while providing proper context needed per international law for war crimes, genocide, and what international leaders are doing/not doing. And, of course, what Israeli politicians are doing.

    Again, the video is NSFW. The creator has not censored the videos. There are dead people. It is genuinely heartbreaking in a way I cannot communicate. It is not every day of the conflict - a lot of the times it is just buildings being destroyed but those buildings have people in them, and often enough in the following days you will see dead people, including children.

    I wouldn't have shared it if I felt it was just atrocity propaganda. But I've followed the creator for a while. They always make good videos. And, as I stated above, in this one too, they don't just show video after video, but put in effort to show how and why Israel lies, commits war crimes, US enables it etc.