African-American civil rights organization From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC) is an African-American civil rights group. The SCLC was very important in the Civil Rights Movement. Martin Luther King, Jr. was its first president.
Abbreviation | SCLC |
---|---|
Formation | January 10, 1957 |
Purpose | Civil rights |
Headquarters | Atlanta, Georgia |
Region served | United States |
National President/CEO | Charles Steele, Jr. |
Affiliations | 17 affiliates; 57 chapters |
Website | www.nationalsclc.org |
Today, the SCLC says it is "a nonprofit, non-sectarian, inter-faith, advocacy organization that is committed to nonviolent action to achieve social, economic, and political justice." This means the group is open to people of all faiths and religions, not just Christians.
The SCLC was created in 1957, after the Civil Rights Movement's successful Montgomery Bus Boycott. On January 10, 1957, Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. invited about 60 black pastors and leaders to Atlanta, Georgia. Their goal, at the time, was to end segregation on buses in the Southern United States. However, they agreed that they would only use non-violent ways of protesting and trying to make change. Their motto was: "Not one hair on one head of one white person shall be harmed."[1]
About a month later, the group met again in New Orleans, Louisiana. They decided that their goal would be to end segregation everywhere – not just on buses. They also chose Dr. King as their president, and chose the name "Southern Christian Leadership Conference."[1]
The SCLC also chose a group of leaders called the Board of Directors to be in charge of making final decisions and planning strategies. At first, some churches and civil rights organizations joined the SCLC. However, it was difficult to get churches to join. Groups like the Ku Klux Klan and the White Citizens' Council used violence and terrorism to attack civil rights activists. So did the police in many states. Some churches which joined the SCLC, or did civil rights work, were bombed or set on fire.
In 1954, civil rights activists started "Citizenship Schools." These schools taught African-American adults to read so they could get driver's licenses; fill out forms; open bank accounts; and pass literacy tests that only black people had to pass to sign up to vote. The program spread across the South. They called themselves the "Highlander Folk School."[2]
In 1961, the state of Tennessee took the Highlander Folk School's land and property away. In that year, the SCLC rescued the Citizenship School program. The Schools' teachers pretended to be teaching adults to read. Secretly, they were teaching about democracy, civil rights, leadership, getting people together to protest, politics, and protest strategies. All of these things would be very important in the Civil Rights Movement.[2]
Eventually, close to 69,000 teachers taught Citizenship Schools throughout the South. Most of these teachers were volunteers who were not paid.[2] Many of the Civil Rights Movement's adult leaders went to or taught Citizenship Schools.[2]
The SCLC's work in the Civil Rights Movement included:[1]
Ralph Abernathy became the President of the SCLC after Dr. King's murder. Under his leadership, the SCLC:
Abernathy was President until 1977. Joseph Lowery replaced him, and was President until 1997.[5]
Since 1997, some of the issues the SCLC has worked on include:[6][7][8]
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