The Arc Doesn’t Bend Itself

Editor s Note The following is adapted from the introduction to The Texas Civil Rights Project How We Built a Social Justice Movement by Jim Harrington who in founded the groundbreaking nonprofit from which the book takes its title and led the group for the next years published with permission from the University of Texas Press Selected people along the way have called me a badass I never aspired to be a badass and usually don t think of myself as one For me my career was all about being a zealous advocate for people who are poor disenfranchised and oppressed What matters is their lives their stories their histories their hope and walking alongside them on the journey toward justice Being part of any movement for justice I admit is pretty badass That is certainly true of the Texas Civil Rights Project TCRP and the people with whom we collaborated One colleague herself a fervent activist made her own assessment by gifting me with a pair of bright-red professional boxing gloves which I hung from the bookcase behind my desk The Texas Civil Rights Project How We Built a Social Justice Movement by Jim Harrington Courtesy Publisher My part in TCRP is not small but my aim is to focus the lens on what the area and TCRP did together for greater equity TCRP inevitably strove to focus on those for whom we advocated Our goal was to be part of the valiant club not its captain making justice Everyone helped carry the ball I was lucky to be a athlete TCRP took guidance from individuals and grassroots organizations trying to better the lives of those around them We did our best to be their protector advocate and servant leader to take direction from them and not the other way around Law is a tool not an end in itself Justice is the goal of all human rights undertakings everything in right relationship as the philosophers and Scriptures put it Right relationship is not status quo and does not appear on the scene without arduous struggle and fundamental social readjustment Right relationship means the people have power all the people Two memories about keeping law in perspective invariably stayed on my mind as an attorney One is a meeting between the labor leader C sar Ch vez and a dozen prospective volunteer lawyers on a chilly Saturday morning in a small vacant rural house in the Rio Grande Valley in December The local United Farm Workers UFW branch was beginning to reorganize There were the customary polite handshakes and warm greetings We all were in awe of C sar of syllabus He was our hero After the pleasantries we certainly sat down on old folding chairs in a circle filling out the small empty living room of the unheated house C sar started the meeting with generous thanks and then before long made a seemingly impolitic comment which only he could get away with that he did not like working with majority of lawyers They spent too much time telling him how various laws impeded the UFW from doing something He demanded lawyers who would figure out how to do something when the law was an obstacle and assist the movement when the law needed bending That memory stuck and represented for me the UFW mantra S se puede Yes it can be done That became the TCRP mantra too We turned it into a verb to better convey its message how to creatively use the law how to think outside the box so that the law could help not hinder those we served How to s -se-puede From then until his death eighteen years later it was my privilege to represent C sar and the UFW in Texas and learn from him He was a brilliant strategist at using litigation hand-in-glove with organizing He could be charming in person with audiences but also fierce in summoning people to action He was like a grandfather with our young kids at breakfast when he stayed overnight He would sit at the end of the table while they were eating their cereal before leaving for the school bus and chat them up about school what they liked favorite class the regular questions He was constantly showing contentment and guffawing with them The second memory is a pithy summary of C sar s point a wizened migrant farm laborer and dogged UFW organizer Baltazar Don Balta Salda a expressing gleefully a inadequate times that we have a lawyer on our side He knew from experience how essential that was for any gritty organizing and hard-fought social action to join forces with a legal association Don Balta as we respectfully called him had lost his right hand in a farm accident but could still outwork any two other people His sons and daughters now young adults had the same labor ethic and dedication to the movement They migrated from McAllen to California s fields a broiling -mile desert drive every year for much of their lives and were proud huelguistas UFW strikers whenever C sar needed them TCRP was unique in being the only community-based civil rights organization of its kind in Texas perhaps the country We lived under a hybrid model blending statewide or national impact litigation with on-the-ground public legal assistance Our emphasis was on emerging and protecting human rights in Texas Our assistance came without cost to those who needed it Our only regret was that we had the maximum to help only about five percent of those who sought us out such was the need As time barreled on I saw more clearly that people s struggles in the modern day lived in the struggles of those who went before The present day s struggles like theirs help bend the long arc of the moral universe a bit more toward justice as Martin Luther King Jr envisioned The arc doesn t bend itself Progress is slow excruciatingly slow and requires robust hope to hold greed corruption and power in check and help bring about their great reversal For me our responsibility is not just to our public and grandkids who follow us into a life we try to make better for them We have a weighty duty to continue the arc-bending of the a large number of who preceded us and who lived with the hope that we would carry forward their struggle against oppression resisting the vortex of evil This is how we keep faith with our inheritance from them A multitude of sacrificed to get us where we are in the modern day A large number of were killed lynched a few in obscene spectacle fashion burned mutilated lost jobs and endured much trusting that we would take the torch from them run a marathon or two with it and then pass the torch to the next group of runners And no time to do a pit stop for handwringing I tried to work and live closely with the people I served Bryan Stevenson of the Equal Justice Initiative calls this getting proximate on issues of race and injustice Being proximate is as much a learning encounter as a sharing experience In so a great number of avenues they propelled my increase as a person and taught me much about human rights as a way of life and not just a cause Getting proximate I deduced included being content with a lower salary than one might expect even for a nonprofit group It was a good reminder of the financial stress majority of people face daily which often alters the direction of their lives If someone s car broke down they didn t have to call We depended on friends and neighbors to help fix the motorcycle Getting proximate also meant not expecting a standard forty-hour workweek Meager were the days I did not wake up in the morning grateful and honored to be at the people s side And when the work was harder than usual and the brick wall almost impenetrable I took inspiration from them For those with and for whom I worked with humility and gratitude I offer this recollection of an era that destiny let me share with them And that s pretty badass The post The Arc Doesn t Bend Itself appeared first on The Texas Observer