Can Sanders’ civil rights experience at U. of C. translate on campaign trail?
“The U. of C. had a reputation of radicalism during the 1950s. During the Red Scare, a number of U. of C. faculty members were accused of being communists,” said
While some of Sanders’ earliest political activism focused on civil rights issues plaguing black communities, he has stumbled during his presidential campaign when explaining his positions on the civil rights issues of the present. For some activists, Sanders’ past organizing is not sufficient evidence that the
Sanders transferred to the U. of C. after a year at
As president of CORE, he spearheaded sit-ins, pickets and protests related to racial inequality, the most visible of which was two weeks of sit-ins at the office of university President
“We feel it is an intolerable situation when Negro and white students of the University cannot live together in university owned apartments,” Sanders told the student newspaper, The Maroon, in
Former classmates said Sanders was committed to holding the university responsible for its promise to examine racial issues.
“Of the people at these meetings, he was particularly interested in policy questions, like what should the government do about civil rights or nuclear weapons,” said
Sanders helped set up a system for filing complaints concerning discrimination in university housing. And after the administration backpedaled on promises to hold discussions on policy changes, Sanders set up tables in Mandel Hall where students could submit ideas on how the university could become more inclusive, according to Maroon accounts.
“Bernie was clearly a leader,” said
Considered a long shot for the presidency by political analysts, the self-described Democratic socialist initially focused his campaign on economic inequality.
But a series of cases involving authorities and African-Americans, including the fatal shooting of
Sanders and other Democratic presidential candidates have been criticized by civil rights advocates, including leaders of the Black Lives Matter movement, who say the candidates have not adequately addressed these issues. In response, Sanders has pointed to his background in the civil rights movement in college, including his participation in the 1963 civil rights march on
Black Lives Matter protesters interrupted Sanders at a Netroots Nation conference last month, demanding he speak more forcefully about institutional racism. After the confrontation, Sanders became visibly upset, saying “black lives of course matter, and I’ve spent 50 years of my life fighting for civil rights and for dignity. But if you don’t want me to be here, that’s OK.”
Since then, Sanders, who has been interrupted by Black Lives Matter demonstrators at other events, took the issue head-on
DeRay
“It was unclear to me how that past work was informing his rhetoric until people pushed him on it,”
In the 1960s, the U. of C. campus was a place where socialists, civil rights advocates and anti-war protesters staked out ground for change. Many students traveled to
Multiple socialist student groups also existed at the school, and renowned political theorist
In a 1963 letter to The Maroon, Sanders struck some notes similar to his current positions, calling on protesters to hit hard against segregationist policies in
The CORE sit-ins against segregation, which garnered national attention, were tense, and some protesters were arrested, Maroon reports said. Sanders was not among those arrested during the sit-ins, according to the reports.
After weeks of sit-ins, Beadle and the university agreed to form a commission to investigate discrimination and hold community discussions about race.
Sanders and about 40 CORE members also picketed the landlords of a U. of C.-owned building that refused housing to a black man. As picketers left the residence on
During Sanders’ time at CORE, the group organized a talk on campus by Malcolm X on the subject of “integration or segregation.” Sanders and other CORE members also volunteered for the re-election of
While Sanders was frequently quoted in The Maroon and often wrote letters to the editor condemning the administration, he also was a guest writer for a column called The Gadfly. In one column titled “Sex and the Single Girl-Part Two,” he argued that by imposing curfews and room checks for women, the school was regulating the sex lives of students.
“It must be stated in the strongest possible terms that no group of men should be given the power to believe that they can regulate one of the most important aspects of human life,” Sanders wrote.
Sanders’ call for curfew reforms was not taken seriously, but the push to end segregation eventually succeeded. After more than a year of protests, The Maroon announced “UC ends housing segregation” on its
While critics said Sanders at first appeared defensive or annoyed toward the Black Lives Matters protesters who shut down his speeches, he has since embraced their efforts, rolling out a racial justice platform
Sanders also named a black criminal justice advocate and strong supporter of the Black Lives Matter movement as his national press secretary.
“The time of speaking in coded language is past us,”
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