42nd Annual Memorial Service for
Longdale Community Center site
County
Road 632
You are invited to attend
the 42nd Annual Memorial Service and Tell It Like It Was and Is
Conference. We shall remember and honor the three slain civil rights
workers, James Earl Chaney, Andrew Goodman, Michael Schwerner, and
all Mississippi civil rights movement martyrs. The services and
conference will be held on June 17 and 18 at the location of the
former Longdale community center on County Road 632 in the Longdale
community in
We
encourage people to come as early and stay as late as they wish to
visit with old and new
friends.
The service and
conference activities will be conducted outdoors on the Steele
family’s land. There is ample shade and ample parking. A
backup indoor site has been arranged, so there will not be a
problem in the event of rain. The community on the road people will
travel to get to the site is friendly to our cause.
There will be much and varied food, from barbeque to healthy
salads, for attendees. Thanks in advance
to the food committee.
This will be an event for
remembering, conversation, exchanging thoughts and ideas, strategizing
and calling for justice in the murders of Mississippi civil rights
movement martyrs and for strategizing for continuing the struggle
against racial oppression of people of color in Mississippi.
Concerns and
Issues
We shall
remember and honor James Chaney, Andrew Goodman Michael
Schwerner, and all Mississippi civil rights movement martyrs.
We shall address issues that are of concern in the year 2006, including:
Speakers and Program Participants
Thus far for this year's service are:
Curtis Austin - Civil Rights Movement scholar; Professor of History and Co-Director of the University of Southern Mississippi Center for Oral History and Cultural Heritage; native of Yazoo City, Mississippi.
Margaret Block - native of the Mississippi Delta; veteran of the civil rights movement, Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC); sister of fellow civil rights worker Sam Block; teacher and oral historian; after many years in California presently living back home in Cleveland, Mississippi. (Confirmed)
Nina Boal - Civil rights movement veteran who worked in Philadelphia, Mississippi in 1965 and 1966. (Confirmed)
Barbara Chaney - Mississippi civil rights movement veteran who worked in Philadelphia, Mississippi; sister of slain civil rights worker James Chaney; native of Meridian, MS. (Confirmed)
Ben Chaney - Director of the James
Earl Chaney Foundation; native of
MacArthur Cotton - Mississippi civil rights movement veteran, Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC); presently living in Kosciusko, Mississippi. (Confirmed)
Bettie Fikes - Veteran of the civil rights movement, Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC); SNCC Freedom Singers. (Confirmed)
Emory Harris - Veteran of the civil rights movement, Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC); SNCC Freedom Singers. (Confirmed)
Carolyn Hickman - native of Longdale, Neshoba County, Mississippi; memories of the times and the three civil rights workers.(Confirmed)
Danny Lyon- Civil rights movement veteran (SNCC); acclaimed photographer of the movement and continuing; first came to Mississippi when he was sent into the Delta to photograph Bob Moses in 1962; became the first SNCC staff photographer in 1963; his photographs of the Movement from 1962 to 1964 are a major record of activists and events in those years; went on to become a filmmaker and writer; his books include Memories of the Southern Civil Rights Movement, The Bikeriders, and Conversations with the Dead, about the Texas prison system; he has received fellowships from the Guggenheim and Rockefeller Foundations and is currently working in China; his pictures and films are on his website bleakbeauty.com. (Confirmed)
Rev.
Advial McKenzie - Pastor of
Leslie McLemore - Jackson, Mississippi city council member: professor of political science and director of the Fannie Lou Hamer Institute at Jackson State University; Mississippi civil rights movement veteran (SNCC). (Confirmed)
Steven McNichols - Freedom Rider from California who made it as far as Houston before being jailed where he was beaten by inmates under the direction of the jailers; Civil Rights Director for the National Student Association; participated in Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party's Congressional Challenge Strategy Committee; supported SNCC politically after the split at the 1964 Democratic National Convention in Atlantic City; master's thesis on economic development in Southwest Mississippi; attorney specializing in plaintiff's employment law. (Confirmed)
Joe Morse - Civil rights movement veteran, Congress of Racial Equality (CORE); worked in the Meridian, Mississippi area from 1964 to 1968. (Confirmed)
Eric Morton - Veteran of the civil rights movement, Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC);
Materials Coordinator for Mississippi Project & Mississippi Freedom Summer; Project Director for North Carolina Project (9 Black Belt Counties); in 1968 organized Detroit group of local activists to organize the 1969 National Black Economic Development Conference where James Forman presented his historic speech, "The Black Manifesto;" presently Associate Professor of Philosophy and English at Fort Valley State University of Georgia. (Confirmed)
Curtis Muhammad - Civil rights movement
veteran (SNCC) and native Mississippian. In the early 1960s he worked
in voter registration and direct action projects throughout
Diane Nash -Chairperson of the student nonviolent sit-in movement in the first southern city to desegregate its lunch counters (Nashville, 1960). One of the founding students of SNCC (1960). Coordinator of the Freedom Ride from Birmingham to Jackson in 1961. Director of the direct action arm of SNCC in 1961. Worked in voter registration and direct action projects in many counties in Mississippi. Activist in the peace movement that worked to end the Vietnam War. Co-developer of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference's (SCLC) initial strategy for the Selma Right-to-Vote movement. Recipient of the J.F. Kennedy Library Distinguished American Award and of the L.B. Johnson Library Civil Rights Award. (Ms. Nash says that even though she received the awards, in fact, they belong to all movement participants.) A native and current resident of Chicago she currently works in support of several issues related to liberation and peace. (Confirmed)
Charles "Chuck" Neblett - Veteran of the civil rights movement, Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC); SNCC Freedom Singers. (Confirmed)
George Roberts - Long-time human rights
activist. Native of
Bernice Sims - Ms. Sims began work in
Civil Rights Movement while a teenager in
David Sims - civil rights movement veteran; native and current resident of Meridian, Mississippi. (Confirmed)
George Smith - Project Director of the Congress of Racial Equality (CORE) Meridian, Mississippi operation from 1964 to 1967. (Confirmed)
Louise Moore Smith - Mississippi civil rights movement veteran (CORE); native of Meridian, Mississippi; presently living in Ft. Wayne, Indiana (Confirmed)
John Steele - Human rights activist and
Jimmie
Travis – native of
Rev. C.T. Vivian - Rev. Vivian whose civil right activism began in the 1940s continues today, tirelessly working for the progress of African Americans and the civil and political rights of all peoples. He founded the Nashville Christian Leadership Conference, organizing the first sit-ins there in 1960 and the first civil rights march in 1961. Rev. Vivian was a rider on the first "Freedom Bus" into Jackson, Mississippi, and went on to work along-side Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. on his Executive Staff in Birmingham, Selma, Chicago, Nashville, the March on Washington; Danville, Virginia; and St. Augustine, Florida. (Confirmed)
Hollis Watkins - Native of
Edward L. Whitfield
- In high school he
was the State President of the Arkansas NAACP Youth Council
and participated in demonstrations challenging Jim Crow
practices, and was an early peace activist opposing the
Vietnam War; in 1969 at Cornell University he became the chairman
of Cornell’s black student organization in a very turbulent period of
struggle for black studies, and he became a national officer in
the newly formed national black students organization, SOBU (Student
Organization for Black Unity); he left
Bob
Zellner - Bob
Zellner graduated
Additional speakers,
including more civil rights movement pioneers and veterans,
family members of the three young men, family member of
other Mississippi civil rights martyrs, and others will be added.
As always
at the memorial service, there will be an invitation for others who may
wish to speak.
We hope you will join us.
Please share this
information. The service is open to the general public.
Sincerely,
Curtis
Muhammad
John Steele
curtismuhammad@hotmail.com johnora32@msn.com
(504)
236-4703 (925)
497-9868
Diane Nash John Gibson
sa3456@msn.com arrow@inet-direct.com
(773) 821-5423 (870) 972-9248
Rev. C.T. Vivian
(404) 505-0472