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June, 1999


In Memoriam: Mae Bertha Carter, 1923-1999


by Michael Flug

In the 1960s, Sunflower County, Miss. became known for two worlds—one exemplified by the notorious racist Senator James O. Eastland, the other by the civil rights activist and liberation thinker, Fannie Lou Hamer. It was in the life and death struggle between these two worlds that Mae Bertha Carter rose up. Born at the north end of the county, virtually in the shadow of Mississippi's Parchman Penitentiary, Mae Bertha Carter and her husband Matthew worked as sharecroppers for more than two decades.

Mae Bertha Carter joined the NAACP in 1955, years before Mississippi's civil rights movement made national headlines. The murderous repression that swept the Mississippi Delta that year did not intimidate her; throughout her life, repression never stopped her quest for freedom.

In September, 1965, after the passage of the Civil Rights Act, the Carters made a decision to enroll seven of their children in the all-white schools of Drew, Miss. Even to SNCC activists working in Fannie Lou Hamer's nearby hometown of Ruleville, Drew had a reputation for terror.

When verbal threats did not force the Carters to withdraw their children from the white schools, their house was shot up. Not long after, they were evicted from the plantation and prevented from getting farm work anywhere around Drew. Even when they remained the only Black students in white schools in Sunflower County, they persisted. Connie Curry's 1995 book, SILVER RIGHTS, tells the story of her struggle.

Mae Bertha Carter became a tireless activist in the Civil Rights Movement, speaking everywhere about her experience of struggle, and successfully suing the state of Mississippi over its sham integration scheme. But when Black students finally attended the white schools in numbers, whites set up private schools, leaving the public schools virtually all-Black, and stripped of resources and funds.

This turn of events didn't stop Mae Bertha Carter either. She began exposing the fraud of a bankrupt education system and campaigning for resources in Drew schools. In 1993 she wrote in NEWS & LETTERS, "Education in Mississippi has taken so many steps backward that our children can't compete in this world.... There's a teacher shortage here in Sunflower County because teachers are so underpaid. A teacher in Drew makes about as much as at McDonalds....The same government that doesn't see the need to educate our children still wants to send our children to war and put them in the ground. Mississippi had more young Black people in this last war (Persian Gulf) than any other state, just because they couldn't find a job at home. We got a long way to go down here."

When I talked to Mae Bertha Carter last fall, she was still trying to get a librarian for the school library, still speaking out about the "crime" of schools without funds. She repeated what she had said in 1993: "We got a long way to go down here." But she added: "And we're not going to stop till we get there." Mae Bertha Carter died April 28. We honor her memory.



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