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How one journalist risked her life to hold murderers accountable - Christina Greer

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    In March of 1892,
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    three Black grocery store owners
    in Memphis, Tennessee,
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    were murdered by a mob of white men.
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    Lynchings like these were happening
    all over the American South,
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    often without any subsequent legal
    investigation
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    or consequences for the murderers.
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    But this time,
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    a young journalist and
    friend of the victims
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    set out to expose the truth
    about these killings.
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    Her reports would shock the nation
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    and launch her career as an
    investigative journalist,
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    civic leader, and civil rights advocate.
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    Her name was Ida B. Wells.
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    Ida Bell Wells was born into slavery
    in Holly Springs, Mississippi
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    on July 16, 1862, several months before
    the Emancipation Proclamation
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    released her and her family.
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    After losing both parents and a brother
    to yellow fever at the age of 16,
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    she supported her five remaining siblings
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    by working as a schoolteacher
    in Memphis, Tennessee.
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    During this time,
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    she began working as a journalist.
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    Writing under the pen name “Iola,”
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    by the early 1890s she gained
    a reputation
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    as a clear voice against racial injustice
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    and become co-owner and editor
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    of the Memphis Free Speech
    and Headlight newspaper.
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    She had no shortage of material:
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    in the decades following the Civil War,
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    Southern whites attempted to reassert
    their power
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    by committing crimes against Black people
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    including suppressing their votes,
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    vandalizing their businesses,
    and even murdering them.
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    After the murder of her friends,
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    Wells launched an investigation
    into lynching.
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    She analyzed specific cases through
    newspaper reports and police records,
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    and interviewed people who had lost
    friends and family to lynch mobs.
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    She risked her life
    to get this information.
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    As a Black person investigating racially
    motivated murders,
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    she enraged many of the same southern
    white men involved in lynchings.
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    Her bravery paid off.
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    Most whites had claimed and
    subsequently reported
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    that lynchings were responses to criminal
    acts by Black people.
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    But that was not usually the case.
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    Through her research,
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    Wells showed that these murders
    were actually a deliberate,
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    brutal tactic to control or punish
    black people who competed with whites.
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    Her friends, for example,
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    had been lynched when their grocery store
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    became popular enough to divert business
    from a white competitor.
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    Wells published her findings in 1892.
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    In response, a white mob destroyed
    her newspaper presses.
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    She was out of town when they struck,
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    but they threatened to kill her
    if she ever returned to Memphis.
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    So she traveled to New York,
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    where that same year she re-published
    her research in a pamphlet titled
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    Southern Horrors: Lynch Law
    in All Its Phases.
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    In 1895, after settling in Chicago,
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    she built on Southern Horrors in a longer
    piece called The Red Record.
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    Her careful documentation of the horrors
    of lynching
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    and impassioned public speeches
    drew international attention.
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    Wells used her newfound fame
    to amplify her message.
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    She traveled to Europe,
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    where she rallied European outrage against
    racial violence in the American South
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    in hopes that the US government and public
    would follow their example.
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    Back in the US,
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    she didn’t hesitate to confront powerful
    organizations,
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    fighting the segregationist
    policies of the YMCA
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    and leading a delegation
    to the White House
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    to protest discriminatory
    workplace practices.
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    She did all this while
    disenfranchised herself.
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    Women didn’t win the right to vote
    until Wells was in her late 50s.
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    And even then, the vote was primarily
    extended to white women only.
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    Wells was a key player in the battle
    for voting inclusion,
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    starting a Black women’s
    suffrage organization in Chicago.
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    But in spite of her deep commitment
    to women’s rights,
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    she clashed with white leaders
    of the movement.
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    During a march for women’s
    suffrage in Washington D.C.,
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    she ignored the organizers’ attempt
    to placate Southern bigotry
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    by placing Black women in the back,
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    and marched up front alongside
    the white women.
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    She also chafed with other
    civil rights leaders,
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    who saw her as a dangerous radical.
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    She insisted on airing, in full detail,
    the atrocities taking place in the South,
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    while others thought doing so would be
    counterproductive
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    to negotiations with white politicians.
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    Although she participated in the founding
    of the NAACP,
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    she was soon sidelined
    from the organization.
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    Wells’ unwillingness to compromise any
    aspect of her vision of justice
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    shined a light on the weak points
    of the various rights movements,
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    and ultimately made them stronger—
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    but also made it difficult for her
    to find a place within them.
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    She was ahead of her time,
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    waging a tireless struggle
    for equality and justice
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    decades before many had even begun
    to imagine it possible.
Title:
How one journalist risked her life to hold murderers accountable - Christina Greer
Speaker:
Christina Greer
Description:

View full lesson: https://ed.ted.com/lessons/how-one-journalist-risked-her-life-to-hold-murderers-accountable-christina-greer

In the late 1800’s, lynchings were happening all over the American South, often without any investigation or consequences for the murderers. A young journalist set out to expose the truth about these killings. Her reports shocked the nation, launched her journalism career and a lifelong pursuit of civil rights. Christina Greer details the life of Ida B. Wells and her tireless struggle for justice.

Lesson by Christina Greer, directed by Anna Nowakowska.

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TED-Ed
Duration:
04:33

English subtitles

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