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Happy Birthday Mrs. Fannie Lou Hamer! Do you have a favorite Hamer Quote? Tell u…

October 7, 2013 Kansas NAACP Comments Off

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Happy Birthday Mrs. Fannie Lou Hamer! Do you have a favorite Hamer Quote? Tell us your favorite. Here are some selected Fannie Lou Hamer Quotations:

• I’m sick and tired of being sick and tired.

• To support whatever is right, and to bring in justice where we’ve had so much injustice.

• Nobody’s free until everybody’s free.

• We serve God by serving our fellow man; kids are suffering from malnutrition. People are going to the fields hungry. If you are a Christian, we are tired of being mistreated.

• Whether you have a Ph.D., or no D, we’re in this bag together. And whether you’re from Morehouse or Nohouse, we’re still in this bag together. Not to fight to try to liberate ourselves from the men — this is another trick to get us fighting among ourselves — but to work together with the black man, then we will have a better chance to just act as human beings, and to be treated as human beings in our sick society.

• There is one thing you have got to learn about our movement. Three people are better than no people.

• One night I went to the church. They had a mass meeting. And I went to the church, and they talked about how it was our right, that we could register and vote. They were talking about we could vote out people that we didn’t want in office, we thought that wasn’t right, that we could vote them out. That sounded interesting enough to me that I wanted to try it. I had never heard, until 1962, that black people could register and vote.

• When they asked for those to raise their hands who’d go down to the courthouse the next day, I raised mine. Had it high up as I could get it. I guess if I’d had any sense I’d’ve been a little scared, but what was the point of being scared? The only thing they could do to me was kill me and it seemed like they’d been trying to do that a little bit at a time ever since I could remember.

• The landowner said I would have to go back to withdraw or I would have to leave and so I told him I didn’t go down there to register for him, I was down there to register for myself.

• I am determined to get every Negro in the state of Mississippi registered.

• They just kept beating me and telling me, “You nigger bitch, we’re gonna make you wish you were dead.” … Every day of my life I pay with the misery of that beating.

• on northern racism, speaking in New York: The man’ll shoot you in the face in Mississippi, and you turn around he’ll shoot you in the back here.

• in nationally-televised testimony to the Credentials Committee of the Democratic National Convention, 1964: If the Freedom Democratic Party is not seated now, I question America. Is this America? The land of the free and the home of the brave? Where we have to sleep with our telephones off the hook, because our lives be threatened daily.

• When the Democratic National Committee offered a compromise in 1964 to seat 2 delegates of the 60+ sent by the Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party: We didn’t come for no two seats when all of us is tired.

• to Senator Hubert H. Humphrey, who brought a compromise offer to the MFDP delegates: Do you mean to tell me that your position is more important than four hundred thousand black people’s lives? … Now if you lose this job of Vice-President because you do what is right, because you help the MFDP, everything will be all right. God will take care of you. But if you take it this way, why, you will never be able to do any good for civil rights, for poor people, for peace, or any of those things you talk about. Senator Humphrey, I’m going to pray to Jesus for you.

source: about.com
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