This Is the Day (BOOK REVIEW)
This Is the Day
The March on Washington
Photos by Leonard Freed
Foreword by Julian Bond
Essay by Michael Eric Dyson
Afterword by Paul Farber
J. Paul
Getty Museum
Publications
Hardcover, $29.95
120 pages
ISBN: 978-1-60606-121-3
Book
Review by Kam Williams
“There
have been many marches since, and several before, but no other march to the
nation’s capital captured our collective imagination like the March on Washington of August 28,
1963… The momentous pilgrimage showcased an inspired… Martin Luther King, Jr.,
the celebrated leader of black America
who hadn’t yet delivered an entire speech that the nation had listened to…
Gospel
legend Mahalia Jackson… encouraged her friend to depart from paper… “Tell ‘em
about the dream, Martin,” she bellowed from the background. And respond to her
call King did… King cast aside his prepared speech… to weave the dream metaphor
into the tapestry of the nation’s self-image, and in the process he grafted
black folk to the heart of American democracy.”
Excerpted from the Essay
by Michael Eric Dyson (pgs. 1-5)
“Leonard Freed’s
photographs of the March on Washington
depict
both the march and
the marchers… For the participants, this was both a serious and a happy
occasion, a chance to exercise their rights and to petition their government
for a redress of ancient grievances. The marchers are at once sober, somber,
and gleeful—proud to be present as they sense history is being made.”
Excerpted from the
Foreword by Julian Bond (page ix)
When you think
of the March on Washington
for Jobs and Freedom, what automatically comes to mind for most people is
Martin Luther King’s “I Have a Dream” speech. And while Dr. King’s remarks
certainly deserve every bit of recognition they have garnered over the years,
it is also important to remember that hundreds of thousands of ordinary American
citizens committed to civil rights had descended on the National Mall to attend
the event.
I was only
a child at the time, but I can still readily recall the palpable concern in the
air about the folks from the neighborhood boarding buses for DC. After all, the
press had been speculating about the prospect of rioting and arrests if the
crowd were unruly, so those participating were doing so with the prospect of
considerable personal risk in mind.
Fortunately,
the glorious gathering went of without a hitch and came to represent a
watershed moment in U.S. History. Now, a half-century later, we are lucky to have
an opus like “This Is the Day” available to remind us of that high point in the
nation’s non-violence movement.
The book is
essentially a photographic essay chronicled by Leonard Freed (1929-2006) before,
during and after at the March. His beautiful black & white images are rarely
of the leaders (only one of Dr. King), but rather are evocative portraits of
the movement’s hopeful foot soldiers who’d trudged from all over the country to
petition the government for equal rights.
A few of
the photos captured are wide-angle panoramas which give a sense of the mammoth scale
of the demonstration. But most are intimate snapshots which afford you an
opportunity to read each of the earnest subject’s faces.
Besides the
timeless stills, the tome is devoted to the reflections of civil rights leader
Julian Bond, who was at the March, as well as to a very colorful essay recounting
the day by Michael Eric Dyson, written with a profusion of the popular professor’s
trademark rhetorical flourishes. It also features a postscript by Paul Farber
analyzing the gifted Freed’s approach to his craft.
Overall,
this timely tome is a perfect way to commemorate the 50th
Anniversary of one of the most important landmarks in African-American history.
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