In 1930, Sen. J. Thomas “Cotton Tom” Heflin, a flamboyant
self-described “racist” from Alabama, stood in the U.S. Senate chamber
and uttered the following words: “Whenever a Negro crosses this dead
line between the White and the Negro races and lays his Black hand on a
White woman he deserves to die.” Roughly 2,500 Blacks were lynched in
10 southern states between 1882 and the year of Heflin’s infamous
speech, virtually all of whom died at the hands of White lynch
mobs. According to Jana Evans Braziel’s History of Lynching in the
United States, “The scale of this carnage means that, on the average, a
black man, woman, or child was murdered nearly once a week, every week,
between 1882 and 1930 by a hate-driven white mob." On Tuesday,
the first day of Black History Month, Sen. George Allen (R-Va.) and
Sen. Mary Landrieu (D-La.) apologized to the Black community and all
Americans for the words and actions of former U.S. senators, who
blocked three congressional initiatives – in 1922, 1935 and 1938 – to
pass anti-lynching laws. Blacks were killed as those anti-lynching
bills were being considered before Congress, according to Landrieu, who
said that a formal apology is necessary so that “wounds that are still
open can begin to heal.”. By 1964, another 2,000 Blacks would be
lynched, according to official counts, although Landrieu said he
suspects the number is probably double that. [more]
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