Jewish Group
Related: About this forumJuneteenth is almost here and we're so excited to share the great events we've got going on to celebrate.
Our Jews of Color group is proud to host our Juneteenth Shabbat@WHC this Friday at 6:00 pm, we're screening "The Big Payback" with our friends at Edlavitch DCJCC on Monday, June 17, then on the holiday itself, we'll be at the Scotland Juneteenth Heritage Festival. RSVP below.
https://www.whctemple.org/event/juneteenth-shabbatwhc-2024/
MyMission
(2,000 posts)Our rabbi spearheaded this effort, and our social justice committee collaborated with the black community to hold this event as part of their Juneteenth observance. It will be a lunch and learn, and also promote voter registration The planning committee considered showing Mississippi burning, but instead will mention the connection of the movie to the civil rights movement. It will be held at a local community center, rather than a house of worship, to encourage everyone to attend.
Synopsis:
On June 21, 1964, three young men, James Chaney, Michael Schwerner, and Andrew
Goodman disappeared near the town of Philadelphia, Mississippi. Michael Schwerner
and James Chaney worked for the Congress of Racial Equality (CORE) and Andrew
Goodman was a college student from New York who volunteered to work on voter
registration, education, and Civil Rights as part of the 1964 Mississippi Summer Project.
During the summer of 1964, the Klu Klux Klan burned 20 black churches in Mississippi,
including Neshobas Mount Zion Baptist Church, where Schwerner had once worked.
Before setting the Mt. Zion ablaze, the Klan severely beat several people attending a
meeting there. Upon hearing this news, the three civil rights workers traveled from Ohio,
where they were training, to Mississippi. At 4 PM, on the drive to Meridian, they were
stopped by police. Chaney, the driver, was arrested for speeding and the other two men
were detained. At 10 PM, they were permitted to pay the fine and were instructed to
leave the county. They were never seen alive again.
On August 4, after six weeks of searching, the FBI uncovered the bodies of Schwerner,
Chaney, and Goodman in an earthen dam. After their release from jail, as they drove
back to Meridian, they were again stopped by a patrol car, this time accompanied by
two carloads of Klan members. The three men were taken to a remote rural road where
Schwerner and Goodman were each shot once in the chest. After first being tortured,
Chaney was shot three times. The three young men were then buried in shallow
graves.
Chaney, a black man from Mississippi, Schwerner and Goodman, Jewish men from up
north, shared a passion for justice and racial equality, a pursuit for which they lost their
lives. On the 60th Anniversary/Yahrzeit of their deaths, the Martin Luther King
Association of Asheville and Congregation Beth Israel have joined to honor the legacy
of these men during the week of Juneteenth.
https://bethisraelnc.org/events/a-juneteenth-lunch-learn-event-asheville-honors-the-legacy-of-james-chaney-michael-schwerner-and-andrew-goodman/
elleng
(136,043 posts)great to recognize the 3 young men.