Mississippi Today
On this day in 1994
Oct. 24, 1994
President Bill Clinton awarded Dorothy Porter Wesley the National Endowment for the Humanities’ Charles Frankel Award for her service as a Black librarian, bibliographer, researcher and curator.
The first Black woman to complete her graduate studies at Columbia University, she joined the Howard University library staff in 1928. With no budget and almost no staff, she overcame sexism and other barriers to transform the Library of Negro Life and History, with a few thousand titles, into a world-class research center with more than 180,000 books, pamphlets, manuscripts and other materials, which scholars from around the globe came to visit.
She recalled that work: โI went around the (Howard) library and pulled out every relevant book I could find โ the history of slavery, Black poets โ for the collection. Over the years, the main thing I had to do was beg โ from publishers, authors, families. Sometimes it meant being there just after the funeral director took out the bodies and saying, โYou want all this junk in the basement?’โ
Before she died in 1995 at the age of 91, Howard named the reading room in its library after her, and historian Benjamin Quarles declared, โWithout exaggeration, there hasn’t been a major black history book in the last 30 years in which the author hasn’t acknowledged Mrs. Porter’s help.โ
A portrait of her hangs in the National Portrait Gallery.
This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.
Mississippi Today
โMore than just a red stateโ: In the home of the Civil Rights Movement, a fight for a free Palestine
On a brisk day last December, Ray Nacanaynay and Lea Campbell stood at a busy intersection in Gulfport.
Nacanaynay, an Air Force veteran and member of Veterans for Peace, invited Campbell, the founding president of Mississippi Rising Coalition, to join him at his first protest for the war on Gaza.
โHe said, โI’m going to take my Veterans for Peace flag and a ceasefire sign, and I’m going to go stand at the intersection of Highway 49 and Highway 90 in Gulfport, and I would love for you to stand with me,’โ said Campbell. โAnd I did.โ
The protest grew into a weekly vigil for Gaza in Gulfport’s Jones Park. The initial actions were small โ just Nacanaynay and Campbell. But soon, other organizers and students began to join them.
โIt started to grow,โ said Campbell.
Nacanaynay and Campbell are just two of scores of Mississippians who have been protesting the war on Gaza over the past year. October marks one year since Palestinian militant group Hamas carried out a surprise attack on Israel in which they killed about 1,200 people and captured 251 hostages. Since then, Israel’s subsequent ground invasion and bombardment has killed over 41,000 Palestinians in Gaza, many of them children, and displaced 90% of Gaza’s population.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu says the objective of this invasion is to eliminate Hamas. But a number of international human rights organizations have called Israel’s offensive a genocide, including a United Nations Special Rapporteur.
As the crisis worsened, organizers across Mississippi began planning events to protest U.S. policies that support Israel’s attack on Gaza, to mourn the lives lost, and to educate the public about the history of struggle for the land. Meanwhile, Mississippi lawmakers re-affirmed the state’s financial support for Israel.
And Mississippians have struggled to find common ground, grappling with the different, at times conflicting meanings of the centuries-old conflict for the state’s citizens.
Rabbi Eric Gurvis of Jackson’s Beth Israel Congregation cautioned that violence in the Middle East is โso complicated on so many levels.โ
Gurvis, who believes there should be a Palestinian state, says that Israel is fighting a war against an enemy, Hamas, that rejects its right to exist.
โWhen Israel says we’re going to defend our citizens and try to stop those who are seeking to perpetrate the end of our existence, that’s not genocide,โ Gurvis said. โThat’s self defense.โ
โThere has to be a partner who will say, yes, there has to be an Israel as well.โ
Others say the conflict is not so complicated.
Emad Al-Turk, a Palestinian-American Mississippian, said that with the war in Gaza, โIsrael intends to ethnically cleanse and get rid of the indigenous people of Palestine.โ
He finds himself pushing through despite the challenges to keep fighting. โFor their sake, for their liberation, I try to push myself to find whatever strength I have to make sure we continue this fight.โ
Where does Mississippi stand?
In the state of Mississippi, where lawmakers have consistently been vocal about their support for Israel, organizers say they have faced an uphill battle engaging people on the consequences of U.S. economic and military aid to the Middle Eastern country โ for both Mississippians and Palestinians.
On Oct. 13, U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken and Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin issued a written ultimatum warning Netanyahu’s government to alleviate the humanitarian crisis in Palestine within 30 days or face potential reductions in U.S. military support. The letter specified that Israel must allow at least 350 trucks to enter Gaza each day and institute pauses in fighting to enable the distribution of aid.
But the very same day, the U.S. promised to send Israel a missile defense system and troops to operate it. Since October 2023, the U.S. Congress has enacted legislation providing Israel with more than $12.5 billion in military aid.
Nacanaynay’s organization, Veterans for Peace, wrote a letter to U.S. State Department officials in February saying the country’s military support of Israel violates U.S. law, including the Leahy Law, which bars the provision of arms to foreign powers that have committed โgross violations of human rights.โ
In April, Mississippi lawmakers voted to extend the Israel Support Act, a 2019 law prohibiting the state from investing in businesses that boycott Israel.
The law also authorized the Mississippi treasury to increase its initial $20 million investment in Israeli bonds up to $50 million. The state has earned over $2.2 million in interest from the bonds, according to the state treasury.
Spokespeople for House Speaker Jason White and Lt. Gov. Delbert Hosemann did not respond to requests for comment.
However, not all elected officials have lent unconditional support to Israel’s actions. Democratic 2nd District U.S. Rep. Bennie Thompson, for instance, was one Mississippi congressman who signed an open letter in December 2023 along with 10 other members of Congress, urging for a bilateral ceasefire.
โToo many innocent lives have been lost already. The bloodshed must end,โ the letter said.
And though the Israel Support Act passed both chambers of the Mississippi Legislature with a significant majority, it drew criticism from some lawmakers.
During House debate on April 3, Rep. Jill Ford, R-Madison, cited the biblical verse in Genesis, saying, โGod will bless those that bless Israel and curse those that curse Israel.โ
But Rep. Daryl Porter, D-Summit, responded that Mississippi lawmakers have neglected other scriptural instructions.
โAre you aware that the Bible also tells us to do a lot of stuff, like take care of the sick, feed the hungry, take care of the poor, and we fail to do that in this body?โ
Candace Abdul-Tawwab, a Jackson-based organizer who protested against the law when it was first proposed in 2019, echoed that she objects to Mississippi’s ongoing financial support of Israel when there are so many needs closer to home.
โThey’re sending our money to this country that’s committing these atrocities, when Mississippi is one of the poorest states in the nation.โ
Finding common ground
Aala’a Matalgah, an Ole Miss student of Arab origin, grew up in Mississippi. She remembers seeing pictures and videos of Gaza even as a child. But she also remembers feeling frustrated when no one else at school knew what she was talking about when she would mention it. โIt was shocking because I was like, how can something be so intense, and so many people don’t know about it?โ
Everything changed in October 2023. โNow,โ Matalgah said, โevery single person knows what Palestine is.โ
Gurvis described the war as โhorrific.โ
โI wish that every innocent Palestinian mother, father, child, grandparent that has died were not dead,โ he said. โThey’re human beings. They’re created in the image of God, just like us.โ
With Palestine in the spotlight, organizers said they have had to challenge ingrained narratives and pervasive stereotypes about Muslims and people of Arab origin.
โWe’re really fighting against the prevailing anti-Muslim narrative,โ said Campbell. โThe prevailing narrative in the South is that Muslims are terrorists โฆ we’re really having to unpack and deconstruct that narrative and lack of awareness, and that’s very challenging.โ
At one of Nacanaynay’s vigils, when he was holding a sign that said โBoycott, Divest, Sanction Israel,โ a man drove up by the sidewalk and told him, โGo to effing Palestine.โ
Still, in a state protective of its veterans, Nacanaynay, who moved to Mississippi from Washington state in 2023, feels he is positioned to โdo much more than a lot of other peopleโ to organize for Palestine.
โMaybe someone sees me holding a sign or shares a few words with me, and that’s what changes them,โ he said. โThat’s what turns them around.โ
During a pro-Palestine protest at Ole Miss in May, a white counter protester made monkey noises at a Black student participating in the protest. The counter protester’s fraternity, Phi Delta Theta, removed him from membership, while the university opened an investigation into his conduct.
Kristin Hickman, assistant professor of anthropology and international studies at the University of Mississippi, said in her personal capacity that she was โincredibly impressedโ by the students’ persistence in organizing around Palestine, despite the racist backlash they faced.
Matalgah, a member of University of Mississippi for Palestine, expressed a sense of sadness at the counter protestors’ behavior.
โThey didn’t know anything about Palestine or Israel,โ she said. โThey were just there because they hated us.โ
But she also recounted a moment where both sides realized they had something in common.
โThey were, at one point, chanting โFuck Joe Biden!’ And we looked at them and we started chanting it back because obviouslyโฆfuck Joe Biden! And they were so confused โ they all got quiet for a second.โ
From Gaza to Mississippi, a shared story
Terron Weaver, who has been door-knocking and holding teach-ins in northern Mississippi and Jackson as a member of the Party for Socialism and Liberation, said his organizing boils down to an experience many Mississippians share: โNot getting a fair shake in life.โ
Weaver said he’s had considerable success โjust bringing those conversations to people.โ
โPeople are not necessarily conservative,โ Weaver said. โI think that people here are just oppressed.โ
He said that many Black Mississippians he’s spoken with identify with Palestinians’ experiences.
โMost Black people here know what it’s like to live basically in a police state and that type of oppression,โ Weaver said. โI don’t think I’ve met another Black person that I’ve had a conversation with on Palestineโฆthat they don’t resonate with it in some way.โ
Al-Turk, whose relatives from Gaza have been repeatedly displaced in the past year, described how Palestinians in the occupied territories must display different license plates than Israelis. They must take meandering, poorly maintained roads littered with checkpoints, separate from smoother, direct routes reserved for Israelis. Human rights organizations, including an Israeli group, B’Tselem, and an independent human rights expert of the United Nations, have termed the system made up of such differential rights for Israelis and Palestinians an apartheid.
These experiences, Al-Turk said, have parallels in the liberation struggles of Black Americans and Black South Africans, and even the Irish movement for independence.
โIt’s all the same,โ he said. โIt’s seeking dignity and being recognized as an equal human being who has all the rights that others who live in that land are entitled to. That is not endowed by government, but it is endowed by our creator.โ
Many also see parallels with the Holocaust.
Sophia Williams, an Army veteran and a native Mississippian of German descent, found out two months ago that a distant relative had served as a Nazi guard in Dachau. As she connected the dots, she struggled with feelings of shock that slowly combined with horror.
โI wondered, how could the Holocaust have happened?โ Williams said. She felt like she was forced to grapple with this question twice: while processing her discovery about her family history and their role in the atrocities committed on Jews in Germany, while simultaneously watching the news over the past year.
โUnfortunately, I’m getting the answer now,โ Williams said. โThe pattern that I’ve seen is one of dehumanization.โ
Many Mississippians consider it even more important to organize for Palestine, given its history.
โThis is the seat of the civil rights movement,โ Abdul-Tawwab said. โThis is in our spirit. This is in our soul. So why would we not join in the fight for Palestinians? This is part of our legacy here. We’re fighting for ourselves, and at the same time fighting for them.โ
โTo me, the most important point is this: neither apartheid nor segregation are acceptable anywhere, at any time, under any circumstances,โ said Hickman. โIsrael does not have the right to impose a system of apartheid on Palestinians. Southern readers should understand that better than anybody else.โ
Many have fond memories from this past year of coming together in an attempt to build community.
Maya Purohit, a student at Mississippi State University, remembers one moment in particular that took place at a vigil in October 2023, when the names of Palestinian victims were being read out.
โEveryone in the room was just overcome with this wave of grief, and love as well, for strangers across the world that you don’t even know. Everyone was either in tears or bawling. It was crazy, yet beautiful,โ Purohit said.
โAnd that really gave me hope that, okay, there are people all the way across the world who care for this cause. Even in a place like Mississippi, where we’re not really known to be progressive or to be super empathetic to people who don’t look like the average cis white person, heterosexual person.โ
Hickman emphasized that while many Mississippians might think of the violence in the Middle East as something that’s happening โfar away,โ there are university students, some of whom were raised in Mississippi, who are Palestinian.
โThis is not a โfar away’ issue for them,โ Hickman said. โTheir family members are getting killed with the help of American tax dollars.โ
Margaret Lawson, an archivist of queer history in Mississippi, highlighted the importance of recognizing the multitudes even within rigid political spaces.
โIf you look at an electoral map, you see a red state,โ they said. โBut our state is much more diverse than that. Mississippi is the Blackest state in the nation. Jackson is the Blackest city in the Blackest state in the nation.โ
Lawson expressed the need to honor the views not just of the privileged few, but also those whose demands are not being met by their governments.
โThat is a part of Mississippi’s story, too,โ Lawson said.
This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.
Mississippi Today
Former Arkansas Gov. Hutchinson gives Mississippi lawmakers tips on streamlining governmentย
Former Arkansas Gov. Asa Hutchinson on Wednesday shared with members of the Mississippi Senate’s Government Structure Committee that he was able to successfully streamline some of Arkansas’ government services without firing or laying off workers.ย
Hutchinson, who served as governor of Arkansas from 2015 to 2023, said he wanted to make restructuring state government a component of his legacy when he left office, and the reforms he made to the system have largely remained intact.
The two-term GOP governor recalled a recent conversation he had with an Arkansas lawmaker about the restructuring. Hutchinson asked the senator what the reaction has been to the reforms, and the legislator replied that it’s largely flown โunder the radar.โย
โAnd I said, โThat’s the best answer I could ever have,’โ Hutchinson said. โThat means nobody’s trying to dismantle it. They’re accepting it as the way we do business in government today and I’m hopeful that it’ll be a lasting impact.โย
When he began the effort to consolidate government functions, Hutchinson said he formed an advisory board to make recommendations. When he formed the board, he gave it three goals: promote efficiency and savings, increase managerial control and improve the delivery of services to taxpayers.
When he adopted the board’s recommendations, Hutchinson said he was able to reduce the state government workforce by 5,000 employees by instituting a flexible hiring freeze and deciding not to replace the jobs of certain positions once workers retired.ย
Hutchinson also consolidated various state boards and commissions, which he believes reduced the amount of money taxpayers were spending on rent for government offices.ย
Hutchinson mounted a brief, unsuccessful presidential bid earlier this year. He dropped out of the Republican primary in January. His testimony was part of a hearing the Senate Government Structure Committee conducted on restructuring Mississippi’s government.
This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.
Mississippi Today
IHL approves Ole Miss diversity division closure
The University of Mississippi’s plan to replace an administrative division dedicated to diversity, equity and inclusion with one focused on access won approval by its governing board last week.ย
The formal OK from the Institutions of Higher Learning Board of Trustees came two months after Chancellor Glenn Boyce announced the Division of Access, Opportunity and Community Engagement in a campus-wide email.
Boyce wrote the goal was to redouble the university’s efforts to help more students attend and graduate college amid the looming enrollment cliff facing Mississippi’s institutions of higher learning.
โWe are steadfast in our commitment to the transformative power of higher education, and now is the time to prioritize our efforts to broaden access to higher education,โ he wrote on Aug. 16.
The new division takes the place of the university’s Division of Diversity and Community Engagement. It will cost $1.5 million to implement and bring together four different campus offices that focus on community engagement, inclusion and cross-cultural engagement, disability services, and equal opportunity and regulatory compliance, according to the IHL board book.ย
A university spokesperson said Ole Miss did not have an additional comment on the changes beyond Boyce’s August statement.
In the last year, most universities in Mississippi have made similar changes to their diversity offices, even though state lawmakers have yet to pass a ban on state spending on diversity, equity and inclusion initiatives.
Unlike its counterparts, Ole Miss ran its changes through IHL, which oversees all eight of the state’s public universities. The University of Southern Mississippi renamed its diversity office the โOffice of Community and Belonging.โ Last November, Mississippi State University opened its new Division of Access, Opportunity and Success.
In higher education, DEI traditionally refers to a range of administrative efforts to comply with civil rights laws and foster a sense of on-campus belonging among those populations.
During the IHL meeting, Casey Prestwood, the associate commissioner for academic and student affairs, read a description of the new division. Earlier in the meeting, the IHL board had approved the diversity division’s closure when it voted on the consent agenda.
โUM’s goal is to better align resources to prioritize student persistence, success, and graduation,โ Prestwood read. โTo achieve this, UM needs to enhance its focus on expanding access to higher education, particularly for students facing limited resources, minimal family experience with higher education, and other barriers.โ
The board approved the change without discussion.
This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.
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