" Tell the Story: The Chicago SNCC History Project,
1960 -1965"
Chicago Area Friends of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating
Committee and the Chicago Civil Rights Movement, c. 1960 -1965.
October 21- 22, 2005
Roosevelt University, Chicago, Illinois
REGISTRATION
IS LIMITED AND PRE-REGISTRATION IS REQUIRED.
****Pre-register by mail using the printable registration form
found here.
****
Preliminary
Program
This is a Call for a three-part project consisting of a national
conference, archive, documentation and resource center on the
origins and the development of the Chicago Area Friends of the
Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (CAFSNCC) and its pivotal
role in the Chicago civil rights movement between 1960 -1965.
The Chicago Area Friends of SNCC was originally founded as a support
organization for the southern student sit in movement. However,
injustices such as discrimination in employment, segregation in
housing and schools, an antiquated, bureaucratic school system
unresponsive to the educational needs of Blacks and other minorities,
disenfranchisement of Black voters by an exclusionary political
machine soon transformed the organization into an activist one.
CAFSNCC worked to make Black politicians more responsive to their
communities, encouraged and supported independent Black candidates
for office and perhaps most importantly orchestrated the campaign
against the then Superintendent of Schools, Ben Willis, and his
segregationist policies. The Chicago Civil Rights Movement had
its origins in Black struggles for equality dating back to the
19th century. Between 1960 - 1965, as a result of its programs,
alliances with local community groups and organizing, CAFSNCC
was catapulted into the leadership of this movement.
This
important Chicago story has not been told. Yet, this history laid
the basis for later events such as the election of Chicago's first
Black mayor, Harold Washington, and many other people's victories.
Many of those victories are being eroded and the social justice
goals of the movement subverted. One of the primary goals of this
project is to provide current and future generations with the
knowledge of the significance of the contemporary Civil Rights
Movement in building democracy in Chicago, the United States and
in the international struggle for social justice.
If
you were a part of or want to know more about this important period
in the history of this country, please contact us at frushing@ben.edu
or (630) 829-6248. The Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee
was unique in its commitment to participatory democracy within
the organization and to identifying and working with "local"
people already engaged in local struggles. CAFSNCC operated from
these same premises. Therefore, this is not a project about leaders.
It is a project designed to tell your stories that should be known
and must be preserved so that future generations will know the
true power of the people in making social change.
Please
submit our online Volunteer Information Form. After submitting
the Information Form you will be directed to the printable
Conference Registration Form. Access the Information
Form here.
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Organizing
Committee
Fannie
Theresa Rushing, Ph.D., Associate Professor of History, Benedictine
University, CAFSNCC, SNCC
Sylvia Fischer, Co Chairperson CAFSNCC
Lorne Cress - Love, CAFSNCC, SNCC
Ron Dorfmann, CAFSNCC
Bennett Johnson, Vice President, Third World Press, CAFSNCC
Don Rose
Marcia Rothenberg
Mimi Shaw - Hayes, CAFSNCC, SNCC
Co
Sponsored by Roosevelt University,
Chicago, Illinois
Honorary
Co Chairs
Honorable
Abner Mikva
Attorney James Montgomery
Diane Nash
Studs Terkel
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Community
Supporters
Center
for Cultural Understanding and Change/Field Museum
Saint Pius V Catholic Church
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Advisory
Committee (In Formation)
Bernice
Bild
Dr. Sydney Bild
Heather Booth
Paul Booth
Professor Timuel D. Black
Honorable Leon Despres
Ivanhoe Donaldson
Reverend A. I. Dunlap
Earl Durham
Barbara Fischer
Kathy Fischer
Attorney Aviva Futorian
Roberta Galler
Brenetta Howell - Barrett
Rose M. Jennings
Attorney Lawrence Kennon
Dr. Alfred Klinger
Dr. Joyce Lashof
Honorable John Lewis
Lucy Jean Lewis
Bob Lucas
Father Daniel Mallette, Pastor, Saint Margaret of Scotland
Church
Attorney Richard Morrisroe
Curtis Muhammad (Hayes)
Hollis Muhammad (Watkins)
Dr. Cheryl Johnson Odim, Dean, Columbia College
Mildred Page
State Senator Alice Palmer
Dr. Charles Payne, Professor of Sociology, Director of African
American Studies, Duke University
Reverend Doctor Michael Pfleger, Pastor, Community of Saint
Sabina
Dr. Barbara Ransby, African American Studies & History,
University of Illinois
Dr. Christopher Reed, Professor, Chair Department of History,
Roosevelt University
Mary Rogers
Don Rose
Brother Wali Siddiq
Rosie Simpson
Phil Smith
Professor Robert Starks, Northeastern University, Center for
Inner City Studies
James Wagner
Bernice Weissbourd
Reverend Doctor Jeremiah Wright, Pastor , Trinity, United Church
of Christ
Dr. Quentin Young
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Memoriam
Wayne
Yancy, CAFSNCC, Mississippi Summer Project
Lawrence Landry, Executive Director, CAFSNCC
Nahaz Rogers, CAFSNCC
David Llorens, CAFSNCC, SNCC
John Buffington, CAFSNCC, SNCC
Nancy Jefferson
Faith Rich
Irene Turner
Charles Fischer, Executive Committee, CAFSNCC
Lucy Montgomery, CAFSNCC
Ralph Rapaport, CAFSNCC, SNCC
Ida M. Cress
Mildred Shaw. CAFSNCC
State Senator, Richard Newhouse
James Forman, CoFounder, CAFSNCC, Executive Secretary, SNCC
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Last
Updated
September 27, 2005
by eclark@ben.edu
Copyright Benedictine
University 2005 : All Rights Reserved
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