The women wore breathtaking hats to hear Lerone Bennett Jr. A gargantuan canary-yellow feather creation was perfectly calibrated to match the wearerโs canary-yellow suit. A bright-pink straw hat had big pink plastic roses encircling the brim. And, on the head of a younger woman, a red glitter cowboy hat winked a hint of ironic non-conformity.
I was attending the Mississippi State Federation of Colored Womenโs Clubs and Youth Affiliates at the Ramada Inn Southwest Conference Center on Sept. 7. Bennett, a graduate of Lanier High School, the executive editor of Ebony Magazine and a hometown hero, had come down from Chicago to speak to the women. Carolyn Nelson, vice president of the Jackson federation, welcomed us. โWeโre the oldest organized club for women of color in the United States of America,โ she said, adding that the goal is โlifting as we climb.โ The group turns 100 next year, and has sister chapters for women and young people in 37 other states. Finally, after the Lanier High School Jazz Band played to rousing applause, Bennett took the podium.
Bennettโs writings are blunt and inspiring. In a 1978 paper presented at Ole Miss, he wrote, โThe problem of race in Mississippi, and in America, is a white problem, and we shall not overcome until we confront that problem.โ Whites, he said then, must face the โpolitical, economic and social realities of the 20th century.โ At the luncheon, it was clear Bennett โ the son of a cook and a chauffeur โ hasnโt lost any fire since he wrote that paper 24 years ago. โWe black people donโt know who we are. Nobody in the country and Mississippi has done more than black Mississippians. Nobody in the country and the world is owed more,โ he said to cheers and โyou know it.โ He then added with a grin, โSee where Iโm going?โ The task, he said, is to โmake this guilty country apologize and make reparations to descendants of slaves and sharecroppers.โ Otherwise, โhistory wonโt forgive.โ
Bennett warned the women not to believe all the history theyโve been taught, pointing to his book, โForced Into Glory: Abraham Lincolnโs White Dreamโ (Johnson Publishing), which he signed afterward. Lincoln, he said, did not fight to free slaves in the South but merely to keep Western states free states.
Afterward, Gabrielle High, a hatless 10th-grader at St. Joseph Catholic School, said Bennettโs message โshould be explained to youth; we donโt understand whatโs going on.โ She planned to tell her friends. โIt was good. Surely,โ said Jessie L. Dobbins, 90, nodding sweetly under her small black straw hat with a single flower.
โ Donna Ladd
Free Press Facts:
Lerone Bennett Jr. was born in Clarksdale, Miss., in 1928 and raised in Jackson, where he attended Lanier High School. He worked with the Lanier high school paper and edited The Mississippi Enterprise, a black paper in Jackson. He attended Morehouse College where he was editor of the college paper. He later became an editor for the Atlanta Daily World and then was the associate editor of Jet and Ebony. He is an African-American historian and has published many books, including โBefore the Mayflower: A History of Black America,โ in 1962.



