In this BRCSJ Power Hour segment, Dr. Keisha N. Blain discusses the often tense but productive relationship between Bayard Rustin and Fannie Lou Hamer, highlighting their shared goals but sharply different tactics—Rustin’s cautious “long game” strategy versus Hamer’s direct, uncompromising agitation.
The Staff and the Sankofa: Kwame Mbalia on Ancestral Power
Respectability and Erasure in the Civil Rights Memory
In this BRCSJ Power Hour conversation, historian Mia Bay explains how civil rights leaders were intentionally framed for public acceptance, contrasting the sanitized image of Rosa Parks with the more radical, openly gay, and often marginalized reality of Bayard Rustin. She argues that while this strategy helped movements advance, it also erased the movement’s more disruptive roots—leaving us with a false sense of progress that ignores the vital role of loud, queer, and uncompromising activism.
Black, Queer, and the Unusual Angle of Justice
Dr. Peniel Joseph and Robt Seda-Schreiber reflect on how the pandemic-era surge of Black Lives Matter organizing reshaped public life and accelerated a broader democratic reckoning. Joseph links the movement’s insistence on intersectional justice and leaving “nobody behind” to earlier traditions embodied by Bayard Rustin.