By George E. Curry | SACOBSERVER.COM WIRE SERVICES
(NNPA) - Jesse Helms, an unrepentant racist,
died on July 4. When most racists die, public discussions
generally center on other aspects of their life and their
racial views are thrown in as an afterthought. In the case
of Helms, the former North Carolina senator, he was such a
virulent racist that his unrelenting attacks on civil rights
could not go unnoted.
Writing in the Charlotte Observer, columnist Jack Betts
observed, “He used the language of the Jim Crow era
to fight for a culture that kept public schools segregated,
public accommodations white and that regarded any government
attempt to wipe out discrimination as un-American.”
He referred to UNC – the University of North Carolina
– as the University of Negroes and Communists.
Helms incorrectly claimed Dr. Martin Luther King was influenced
by the Communist Party and credited that for everything King
did, from leading protests to opposing the war in Vietnam.
Prior to entering the Senate, Helms, then a television commentator,
said, ''Dr. (Martin Luther) King's outfit ... is heavily laden
at the top with leaders of proven records of communism, socialism
and sex perversion, as well as other curious behavior.''
He dismissed the Civil Rights Act of 1964 as ''the single
most dangerous piece of legislation ever introduced in the
Congress.”
Passage of the Civil Rights Act in 1964 and the Voting Rights
Act of 1965 were certainly dangerous to the political careers
of White Southern Democrats who rose to power and seniority
on the backs of disenfranchised Black voters. They ascended
to power by blocking African American access to the polls
and fighting for what Jesse Helms lovingly called “the
Southern way of life.” Translation: White supremacy.
Helms sought to frame his opposition to civil rights in
another context.
“I felt that the citizens of my community, my state
and my region of the country were being battered by this new
form of bigotry. I simply could not stay silent in the face
of this assault – and I didn’t.”
Senator No, as he was called for his obstructionist tactics,
got it backward. It was African Americans who were battered,
pulverized by violence, retaliation, bogus literacy tests,
poll taxes and racists such as Helms.
When Helms retired from the Senate, Washington Post columnist
David S. Broder called him, “The last prominent unabashed
white racist politician in the country.”
Helm’s record reflected just that.
He blocked the nomination of federal judges with whom he
disagreed, held up funds to the United Nations as chairman
of the Foreign Relations Commitee, conducted a 16-day filibuster
against establishing the Martin Luther King federal holiday,
opposed the 1964 Civil Rights Act, voted against the Voting
Rights Act of 1965, railed against AIDS as a gay disease (he
later softened his view on AIDS) and in 1990 boycotted Nelson
Mandela’s address to a joint session of Congress.
Even other Southern segregationists moderated their views
over time. South Carolina’s Strom Thurmond, for example,
admitted that his past positions on race had been wrong and
became the first Southern Congressman to add an African American
to his staff. After his famous “Stand in the Schoolhouse
Door” at the University of Alabama, Gov. George C. Wallace
asked Black voters for forgiveness and made a direct appeal
to Black voters.
Over the years, Helms moved in the opposite direction.
In 1966, he mailed 125,000 fliers to heavily Black districts
in North Carolina saying African Americans would be imprisoned
if they voted. When challenged by former Charlotte Mayor Harvey
Gantt in 1990, the incumbent unveiled an overtly racist television
ad. It showed the hand of a White man balling up a rejection
letter as the announcer intoned, “You needed that job.
And you were the best qualified. But they had to give it to
a minority.”
Helms won the election.
As a native Southerner, I often think about how far the
South would have advanced if it weren’t for the likes
of Jesse Helms. I think about all the talented people that
migrated North in search of employment or a better education.
I think about some brave Whites who stood up for fairness
in my native Tuscaloosa, Ala., only to be socially ostracized
or threatened with death. If Jesse Helms had his way, Blacks
would still ride in the back of the bus, we would be barred
from the polls and we wouldn’t be able to live anywhere
we could afford.
Seeing Barack Obama march through the South, including North
Carolina, during the primaries reminded me that an openly
racist Jesse Helms probably could not get elected in North
Carolina today. And it is only fitting that Jesse Helms died
knowing that a Black man has a credible chance of becoming
the next U.S, president. That’s in spite of Helms, not
because of him.
George E. Curry, former editor-in-chief of Emerge magazine and the NNPA News Service, is a keynote speaker, moderator, and media coach. He can be reached through his Web site, www.georgecurry.com.
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