Tuesday, March 12, 2019

A Legacy and Justice Visit to Montgomery

On the Sunday of Labor Day weekend last year Dianne, our son Amos and I made a trip to Montgomery. Our destination? Two places that had just opened the previous April 26: the Legacy Museum and the National Memorial for Peace and Justice. The Equal Justice Institute operates both facilities. The Legacy Museum covers black experience in the U.S. "From Enslavement to Mass Incarceration" as its subtitle states. The National Memorial documents the victims of lynching in the United States, a project that continues.  

As is often the case, that September day in Alabama was very hot. Yet both locations were crowded with people black and white. 

The opening of the museum and memorial attracted international attention. You can read two responses here and here. According to an email I recently received from EJI, almost 300,000 people had visited the sites by January 31, 2019. 

Further comments are below.  







Photos are not allowed in the Museum. The facility is 11,000 square feet and  was very crowded on the day we visited. People taking photographs would have been distractions from the message and perhaps disrespectful as well. Through various types of exhibits the museum describes the past oppression of blacks in the U.S. and current problems such as high incarceration rates. 

The exhibits and displays are not meant to comfort. The terrors of slavery and its aftermath of Reconstruction and sharecropping and the contemporary issues surrounding mass incarceration are vividly expressed. One display contains samples of soil from lynching sites across America. Naturally the vast majority are in the southern states. Another vivid exhibit uses video technology  and slave pen recreations for narrations of first person slave accounts. 

This pair of sites offers a very well-done and thoughtful series of exhibits and experiences. Their addition to Alabama's already impressive Civil Rights Museum Trail will bring even more  state, national and international tourists to learn the history. 









This sculpture by Dana King is dedicated to the women who sustained the Montgomery Bus Boycott





The National Memorial building contains over 800 hundred six-foot long steel monuments representing each county in the U.S. where lynchings have taken place. On the grounds outside the building are an equal number of monuments that will be available for counties to claim and install locally. 

These monuments are one part of EJI's Community Remembrance Project. Other initiatives include historical markers at lynching sites and the collection of soil from those sites. 

























Since we live in Shelby County, I especially noticed these names. I'll have to do some research...








































Sculpture "Raise Up" by Hank Willis Thomas 



















The Legacy Museum is located on the site of a slave warehouse, and is one block from the site of Montgomery's slave markets. Also nearby were the river docks and train station where tens of thousands of slaves were moved in and out of the city. 





Friday, March 8, 2019

Deb's Bookstore in Cullman

I always enjoy checking out bookstores when I travel, and recently I stopped at one in Cullman. Brother Richard and I had visited this one a few years ago, but I hadn't been back since. One day as I headed home from mom's in Huntsville, I passed by, so....

As you can see from the photos below, the place is large and packed. There are sections for biographies, non-fiction, self-help and such, but most of the inventory is fiction. Lots of fiction. There are large sections for romances, science fiction and fantasy, and --unusually--westerns. Louis L'Amour has his own section, as do Steven King, Clive Cussler, James Patterson, Stuart Woods, and others.  

The store had a website that was really just an online billboard with a video tour; it's no longer active. The Facebook page still exists. You'll just have to make a trip yourself....

Oh, the place is for sale. The owner informed me she's retiring this year and wants to sell. The price includes the building, inventory, computer system, a large parking lot and fifteen years worth of customer goodwill. 

Hmmm...

UPDATE 26 June 2021

I stopped in again and the place has indeed sold and is operating under a new name, Camelot Books and Comics. You can see a couple of signs at the end. For the most part, nothing has changed about the inventory as described above, which consist of some 250,000 items! 

































































Tuesday, March 5, 2019

Doctor Who Visits Montgomery in 1955

February 4 was the anniversary of Rosa Park's birth. As luck would have it, just a few days earlier I had watched "Rosa", an episode from the most recent season of Doctor Who.That British show has been around since 1963, but despite being a science fiction and fantasy fan, I've only seen a few episodes. I watched this one because of the Alabama connection, and enjoyed it so much I'll have to catch some more. 

Doctor Who is not the only television show to make a time traveling leap back to segregated Alabama. Perhaps one day I'll do a blog post on those Quantum Leap episodes...

Further comments are below.  




Doctor Who fandom is massive, which is not surprising since the show has survived so long. If you want to learn a bit, start here




The 2018 series brought something new to the Doctor Who universe. For the first time, the good Doctor is played by a woman, Jodie Whittaker. She is the 13th actor to play the lead in the BBC series. 





Malorie Blackman is an author of young adult novels and children's books who often uses science fiction settings. Chris Chibnall is currently Doctor Who's showrunner and head writer.  






Our episode opens with Rosa boarding through the front door and sitting in the white section of a bus in 1943. She was ordered by the driver James F. Blake to get off and enter from the back door. That same driver will be driving the bus Rosa boards twelve years later.




Rosa reluctantly gets off the bus intending to enter through the back door. As was apparently fairly common in those days, the driver took off before she could get back on. 










Doctor Who is an alien Time Lord, so she and her friends make their way around the universe in a time machine, the Tardis, disguised as a British police box. Bradley WalshTosin Cole, and Mandip Gill play the Doctor's newest travelling companionsGraham O'BrienRyan Sinclair, and Yasmin Khan, respectively. 

They have quickly learned how things are in the segregated U.S. South. Ryan--a black man--is punched for touching a white woman, and Yasmin--a Pakistani--is called a Mexican. 




Who and friends set up shop in a motel--fictional as far as I've been able to determine. Ryan and Yasmin must of course remain out of sight. Who and her third friend must pose as a couple to take the room. They have all spent the day of their arrival learning the nature of segregation in Montgomery in 1955. The groups happens to meet Rosa Parks, who sets them straight on some of life's parameters in Alabama. 

 The group has arrived in Montgomery in 1955 by accident, but decide to stay after detecting another time traveler. The four soon learn he has come to change history by preventing Parks from riding that bus, hopefully preventing the boycott, a major spark of the Civil Rights movement in America.

Why? Well, evil time travelers do that sort of thing. Hey, it's this episode's McGuffin. But rest easy--Doctor Who and companions are going to make sure Rosa boards the right bus.









One of the delights of this episode are the realistic background touches that help recreate Montgomery in 1955. Doctor Who and the others use these bus schedules and phone books to try and locate where Rosa Parks will be on that fateful day. 








We also see an ad for the Montgomery Fair department store, the real place where Parks worked as a seamstress. Once the bus boycott began, she was fired from this job. 




Here's the Montgomery Fair department store where Rosa Parks worked as a seamstress as depicted in this episode. 




And here is the real department store ca. 1940. You can see more photos at the online Department Store Museum.






Parks was living in unit 634 of the Cleveland Heights Apartments when the boycott began. 



Doctor Who and Rosa meet again. 





The black man among Doctor Who's companions, Ryan Sinclair, makes his way to Rosa Parks's apartment where she is meeting with Martin Luther King Jr., and attorney Fred Gray







A determined Rosa takes her seat in the white section of the bus. 



She refuses to move, the driver calls the police, and Rosa is arrested. History is not interrupted. 




Back aboard the Tardis, Doctor Who winds up the episode with a rousing explanation of what happened next in the Civil Rights movement.



The episode ends with Doctor Who and friends viewing the asteroid named after Rosa Parks.




"Rosa" is not a documentary, and some liberties are taken with historical reality. But as this article notes, "Rosa" is remarkably accurate for an episode of a weekly fantasy series.