Marching on
Washington — 1963 and 2013:
NASW involved in original, anniversary events
By Rena Malai, News staff
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| Crowds surround the reflecting pool with the Washington
Monument in the background during the “National Action to Realize the Dream” march on Aug. 24 in Washington, D.C. |
Washington, D.C.’s National Mall vibrated with energy on Aug.
24 as tens of thousands of people from across the U.S. gathered to celebrate
the “National Action to Realize the Dream,” the 50th anniversary of the 1963
March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom.
NASW members and staff were among those who attended the
march, and some of them also were at the original march 50 years ago.
“Because of its involvement in the original march on Washington,
it was important for NASW to have a presence at the 50th anniversary,” said Mel
Wilson, manager of NASW’s Department of Social Justice and Human Rights. “We
had a good turnout — as many as 75 social workers from across the country, some
(from) as far as California, showed up.”
NASW’s significant presence was in keeping with its many years
of committed support of civil rights, Wilson said, adding that former NASW
President Whitney M. Young — the head of the Urban League in 1963 — was one of
the major organizers for the first march on Washington. Another social worker,
Dorothy I. Height, also played a significant role in organizing the first
march, as she was then president of the National Council of Negro Women.
Kurt Reichert, who was NASW president in 1963, firmly believed
in civil rights, and he made sure all aspects of the organization became
committed to support the cause during the first march.
“The battle for civil rights became NASW’s number one priority
during my presidency,” Reichert said in a statement at the celebration of
NASW’s 50th anniversary in 2005, one year before he died. “Social work
generally, and NASW in particular, had been responsive to civil rights for many
years, ahead of other professions.”
This year, the Lincoln Memorial served as the platform for
speakers to address the cheering crowds, just as it did in 1963 when Dr. Martin
Luther King Jr. gave his famous “I Have a Dream” speech.
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| Martin Luther King III and his wife, Arndrea, walk toward
the Lincoln Memorial during the anniversary march. The Rev. Al Sharpton is in
front of King. Both men were speakers at the event. |
Key speakers included King’s oldest son, Martin Luther King
Jr. III; the Rev. Al Sharpton; the Rev. Jesse Jackson; D.C. Mayor Vincent Gray;
and Rep. John Lewis, D-Ga., who is the sole surviving speaker from the first
march.
“Five decades ago, my father, Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.,
stood upon this hallowed spot,” King said. “So I stand here today in this
sacred place — I am humbled by the heavy hand of history. ... I, like you, continue
to feel his presence.”
A look back
NASW member Carol Goldbaum was a student at Northwestern
University in Illinois in 1963, and did not know the march on Washington would
inspire her to become a social worker.
She said her family was nervous for her to participate in the
march. Convening for civil rights was a scary concept back then, Goldbaum said,
and it was hard to predict what would happen in such a large crowd.
“They had no idea whether there would be a riot from people or
police, and D.C. is hardly in the North,” she said. But the day was lovely and
sunny, the crowds were energized, and there was a strong sense of optimism.
“Everyone was there because we needed to be there,” Goldbaum
said. “There was such a sense of camaraderie and good will. Being there and
hearing the many wonderful speeches and songs, and just the energy of all those
people inspired me to come back to Northwestern and do something about the
state of affairs in our country and in Evanston (Ill.).”
Like Goldbaum, NASW member Larry Lee attended both the
original march and the Aug. 24 anniversary event.
He said he remembers an extraordinary sense of peacefulness at
the 1963 march, despite the overwhelming crowds.
Lee, who is executive director of the New York Asian Women’s
Center in Manhattan, said there was a sort of breaking point in the nation at
that time that was the motivating force behind the organization of the first
march.
“I remember as a youngster facing separate water fountains for
‘white’ and ‘coloreds,’ and as an Asian not knowing where I fit in,” he said.
“In the 1963 march, what it meant was a hope that things would change, hope for
a new order, a new world and nation.”
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| NASW members Carol Goldbaum, left, Freda Friedman and Larry
Lee participated in both the 1963 and 2013 marches in Washington. |
The atmosphere was electric then, and there was a tremendous
sense of purpose, said NASW member Freda Friedman, who attended both marches as
well.
“The sense of unity and community at the first march really
helped break down barriers of differences between people,” she said. “They were
singing and marching and holding hands, and there was a vibrancy that really
brought people together from all walks of life. It was incredibly powerful.”
Then and now
There have been extraordinary changes since the first march, Lee
said, and those changes are apparent across the U.S.
“The country has changed, we now have a black president, and
there’s a capacity for people of different ethnicities to rise and become
friends and to be very close, which in the past was very limited,” he said.
Despite this, he said, the atmosphere at the anniversary march
— although energizing — held a different feel from the first, and there was a
sense of promises not yet met.
“The nation has grown up a little more jaded and feeling we
haven’t reached what we should have reached by now,” Lee said.
Friedman said she noticed several separate platforms at the
anniversary march committed to various issues, which, while inspiring, lacked
the larger sense of community that prevailed in 1963.
“Fifty years ago, there was much more a sense of hope that
things could really change,” she said. “Since then we have developed a lot of
cynicism of what can happen, and if change occurs it can also backslide.”
There has been a fair amount of progress in 50 years, Goldbaum
said, and clearly a stronger and more committed middle class among the black
community — and much less segregation. However, there have been a lot of
missteps, she said, and too many disappointments for the anniversary march to
have the kind of upbeat feel the first march had.
“We all felt we were really turning a corner then, and yes we
turned a big corner, but we have to go around so many more corners to get
really energized again,” she said.
But she did see more of a sense of determination at the
anniversary march, compared with the optimistic outlook at the first.
“I wouldn’t characterize either march as better or worse, but
just different,” she said. “And the sense of commitment and purpose to be there
was just as strong now as it was then.”
The next 50 years
NASW’s Wilson said the anniversary was of historical
importance for the association because of its heavy involvement in the original
march. But this year’s event also coincided with two highly significant civil
rights issues, he added: the Supreme Court overturning a section of the Voting
Rights Act, and the high-profile, racially charged Trayvon Martin case in
Florida.
“It was important for us as an organization to be present at
the anniversary because social work is a key component in the issue of civil
rights,” Wilson said.
All you need to do is look at the principles of social work,
Goldbaum said, and social justice is very near the top.
“I didn’t even know what social work was 50 years ago when I
went to the first march,” she said. “But the 1963 March on Washington for Jobs
and Freedom was a major influence on me. What got me to grad school to study is
my belief in the importance of a just society. Making sure that people have
adequate ability to survive in this world is right up there.”
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| Lee |
Lee said having social workers as national leaders can help
bring more national equality to the U.S., and a deeper sense of social justice
overall.
“We haven’t had big social work thinkers in bringing the
nation together in a while,” he said. “It’s something we really need to have to
see major change.”
To successfully help people improve their quality of life,
social workers need to know what they can do individually, and realize the
constraints society imposes, Friedman said.
“Our work as social workers is to be aware of what those
constraints are and work to support change,” she said. “For the next 50 years,
I hope there are more equal opportunities for every minority group; much more
of a sense of hopefulness in the younger generation; and much more of a sense
and need to collaborate and work together to identify problems and come up with
solutions.”
But there are still a lot of things that need to change in
terms of fairness, Lee said.
“We have to work towards an education system that gives fair opportunity
to everybody, equal opportunities for jobs and the ability for us to be
together and trust each other,” he said. “It may be a never-ending quest, and
in 50 years we’ll still be saying the same thing. Everyone always strives for
the same thing, but the disparity is still so great now.”
However, this is a beginning, Wilson said, and participating
in the 50th anniversary march is a continuation of NASW’s commitment to
furthering civil and human rights.
“We were happy to be a part of the larger groups of organizations
and individuals who came out to celebrate the 50th anniversary of the 1963
March on Washington,” he said.
Observations from the
1963 March on Washington
- The fee to use the public bathettes at Union Station was
suspended for the day in celebration of the event. (Jack Hansan)
- The sound quality was poor, so people climbed the trees
lining the National Mall to try to hear the speakers better. The trees have
grown a lot in 50 years — too hard to climb now. (Larry Lee)
- The weather was almost the same for the original march and
the anniversary event on Aug. 24: sunny and not too humid, which is rare for
August in D.C. (Carol Goldbaum)
- For every two speakers at the original march, there was a
different singer. The music completely united the crowd. (Goldbaum)
To see video clips from this year’s anniversary march,
visit youtube.com/socialworkers
Pioneer Jack Hansan talks to NPR about 1963 march
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| Jack Hansan points to a poster recently at the NASW
national office about the 1963 March on Washington. |
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| Hansan’s ticket stub for the train ride to the march is
shown. |
When NASW Social Work Pioneer® Jack Hansan arrived in
Washington, D.C., on Aug. 28, 1963, he said he knew change was in the air when
the men’s public bathroom attendant at Union Station refused to let anyone pay
the 25 cent entry fee for a bathette.
“‘It’s on me’” Hansan remembers the attendant saying. “That’s
when I really knew this march on Washington was a big, big deal.”
In commemorating the 50th anniversary of the 1963 March on
Washington for Jobs and Freedom, NPR recently interviewed Hansan about his
participation in the original march.
He helped organize a group of about 500 fellow NASW members,
Cincinnati businessmen and other civic activists, and they all boarded a
chartered overnight train and traveled the distance from Ohio to D.C.
Hansan remembers talking with colleagues and other train
passengers throughout the night — all of them dressed professionally with ties
despite the travel and summer weather.
“We rode two nights on a train, one up and one back. There
was no club car, but it was fun,” he said to NPR. “We were all dressed politely,
like we were going to an office — shirts and ties.”
Hansan’s wife, Ethel Hansan, and their four sons did not go
with him to the 1963 march, but he made sure to send them a postcard on that
day, which he still has.
Hansan founded the website the Social Welfare History
Project, where his memories and mementos from the original march can be found.
For more information, click
here.
Listen to Hansan’s NPR interview here.
From October 2013 NASW News. © 2013 National
Association of Social Workers. All Rights Reserved. NASW News
articles may be copied for personal use, but proper notice of
copyright and credit to the NASW News must appear on all copies
made. This permission does not apply to reproduction for advertising,
promotion, resale, or other commercial purposes.
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