August 28, 2009 2:05 PM

Emmett Till's Casket Headed to Smithsonian

(AP)  A casket that helped trigger the civil rights movement and decades later was discarded like trash is now heading to the Smithsonian Institution.

On the very spot where in 1955 the brutalized remains of 14-year-old Emmett Till were put on display in Chicago, his family on Friday announced plans to give the casket to the Washington D.C. museum complex.

"Part of the responsibility of a national museum is to help people to remember, and through this donation we will ensure that future generations will remember how the death of a child, a mother's courage, helped to transform America," said Lonnie Bunch, the director of the Smithsonian's planned National Museum of African American History and Culture.

The news conference at the church on Chicago's South Side follows last month's discovery of the tattered, dented and rusty casket in a garbage-strewn storage shed at a suburban cemetery where former workers are charged with digging up corpses and reselling burial plots.

The former workers are not accused of disturbing Till's grave. However, while detectives were investigating the cemetery desecration, they found Till's casket that had been pulled from the ground when his body was exhumed in 2005 as part of an investigation into his death. Till's body was then buried in another casket and the family was told the original casket would be kept for a memorial.

Friday marks 54 years since Till, who was black, was beaten and killed in Mississippi for whistling at a white woman. His casket was put on display and photographed at the funeral. Photographs of his battered body in the coffin were shown around the world and became powerful images of the civil rights movement.

The Rev. Jesse Jackson has said that Till's killing and his mother's decision to show his remains helped convince Rosa Parks a few months later not to give up her seat in a public bus in Montgomery, Alabama - a decision that became one of the most significant acts of defiance in American history.

Bunch said the casket, with its clear glass top that allowed people to see Till's body is an important historical artifact.

"The casket itself was part of the story," he said. Further, Bunch said, there is no understating the importance of what Mamie Till-Mobley did when she put placed her son's open casket in Roberts Temple Church of God in Christ.

"This is partly a way to pay homage to Mrs. Mobley, her courage to demand that the world look at this," said Bunch, who came to know her when he was president of what is now called the Chicago History Museum. "And this is an incident that really reawakened the civil rights movement.

Bunch said he heard about the casket's damage the same way everyone else did: When news broke that it was found at Burr Oak Cemetery, a historic black cemetery in Alsip, just outside Chicago.

He said he initially called the Till family to offer any help. He soon realized that not only did the casket need to be preserved, but that the best place for it was the Smithsonian's African American museum that is scheduled to open in 2015.

Bunch said experts inspected the casket and told him it could be salvaged, but it would take months of work.

He does not know exactly how the casket will be displayed in the museum, but Bunch said he wants to be careful that it is not done in a way that turns it into just a curiosity.

"This should be an object that challenges us, it should be an object that makes us think (and) not just be seen as a spectacle," he said.



By Associated Press Writer Christina M. Wright

© 2009 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Add a Comment See all 24 Comments
by gramto8 August 29, 2009 4:40 PM EDT
You know, when I had kids, I was hoping that this world would be a better place than the one I grew up in. Then when my grandkids started coming along, I once again was hoping that things would change for the better. Now that my first great grandchild is in utero, I know that things will never get better. I can only trust in his/her parents to keep him/her safe, just I tried to do with my girls and as they are trying to do with their kids.

I was in school when the first of the integration happened in our area. We kids mostly did okay with it. The adults, on the other hand, went ballistic. There were relatively few students that had to be pains in the derriere. Those just couldn't get past their backwoods, KKK-type upbringing. The rest of us welcomed the diversity. I am still in contact with some of those classmates, albeit not frequently. After all, it WAS 40+ years ago... :-/
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by TryTakingMyMoney August 29, 2009 10:14 AM EDT
Is this "race" payback nonsense going to ever stop?
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by amulette August 29, 2009 9:55 AM EDT
I wish most of you could face a mirror and see what I'm seeing about you from your comments,how sad.
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by pensacola8-2009 August 29, 2009 1:03 AM EDT
Many oppressive people just don't realize how much pain and agony they cause with their thinking or behavior.

We have peacemakers, healers, judges, educators, and mindful parents working together to bring social change and permit racism and violence to fade into our past.

Every parent labors hard to drive away the demons that invade our children's cradles.

When people stop talking about others is a racial or violent way, racial violence will end.
Reply to this comment
by brianbwb-2009 August 29, 2009 2:57 AM EDT
Some of the posters here are proof that some parents actually invite the demons into their childrens' cradles.

It is not the talk, it is the act.
by sandy19731 August 28, 2009 8:05 PM EDT
The image that launched a movement. That is certainly within the range of things found in museums. I think some of the writers here do not visit museums often.
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by sddemocrat August 28, 2009 5:10 PM EDT
We are all citzens of the United States of America, whether being white, black , hispanic, native american, jewish, etc. We all bleed the same color blood. Emmett Till must have been in such pain when he was beaten to death. His mother showed great courage and I applaud her.
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by IndianaGuy August 28, 2009 4:50 PM EDT
rwsmith29456

While you are checking into black history look into the life of Levi Coffin. Not all charaters in black history are black not are they all evil.
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by rwsmith29456 August 28, 2009 4:17 PM EDT
We were taught a VERY narrow view of African American history in the 50's and 60's. About the only ones mentioned were George Washington Carver and those who were 'credits to their race'. I just found out a few years ago from a book the Univ. of S.C. printed that there was a major slave rebellion just south of the city of Charleston that I grew up in AND IT WAS NEVER MENTIONED BY ANYONE. I've also read the autobiography of Malcolm X and was fascinated by this individual. Another interesting bit that has been intentionally suppressed are the discoveries of stone cities in south Africa. I think I'll look into Frederick Douglas next. I don't like not being in the know about this part of our history.
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by ToolMangler1 August 28, 2009 8:23 PM EDT
Here is some more 'light reading for those that think that 'todays Blacks are the most horribly treated peoples around,


NEW DELHI, Feb. 13, 2007

Activists Chastise India On Untouchables

Rights Group: India Fails To Fight Discrimination Against Hindu Untouchables
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Photo

(AP)
(AP) Indians at the bottom of India's Hindu caste system are attacked, raped and killed daily due to their status, even though the rigid social hierarchy has been outlawed for decades, an international human rights group said Tuesday.

India has a strikingly uneven record of battling discrimination against its 165 million dalits, or untouchables. A former president and the current chief justice are dalits, but another 1.3 million earn a pittance clearing human excrement off train tracks.

Five decades after the caste system was outlawed, the vast majority of dalits remain relegated "to a lifetime of discrimination, exploitation and violence, including severe forms of torture," Human Rights Watch said in a report written with the Center for Human Rights and Global Justice at New York University's law school.

"India needs to mobilize the entire government to make good on its paper commitments and end caste abuses," said Brad Adams, Human Rights Watch's Asia director.

Indian officials were not immediately available for comment.

The report offered a slew of examples of violence against dalits, such as the case of a man beaten so badly in January _ after demanding that his daughter's rapists be tried _ that both his legs and an arm had to be amputated.

According to New York-based Human Rights Watch, 58,000 cases of abuse against dalits were registered in India between 2001 and 2005.

The figure is thought to be a fraction of the real number because most dalits are afraid to report such incidents, fearing retribution from higher-caste Hindus or authorities, the report said. It cited a 2005 government estimate that crimes are committed against dalits every 20 minutes.

Hinduism divides people into social castes, and dalits, who have no caste, are considered society's lowest members.

Hindus make up about 84 percent of India's 1.1 billion people. There are also caste-like divisions for Muslims, who account for 13 percent of India's people, and Christians, who make up 2.4 percent.

http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2007/02/13/podcast_kceye/main2469185.shtml
by brianbwb-2009 August 29, 2009 2:50 AM EDT
Hey ToolMangler, India is India, the US is the US.

It is not about being "the most horribly treated around", it is about being treated in ways substandard to the rights and liberties of our own country.

You seem to be suggesting that we should say "it is OK to be treated as second-class citizens, in the country we were born in, pay taxes to, and shed blood for, because other countries are worse, therefore we will accept intolerance against us".

Not in this universe, son.

We are struggling to solve our own country's problems in this circumstance. Until we do, there is no moral standing from which to criticize others.

We take care of ours, and let India take care of hers.

In fact, if the day ever comes when this sociopathic cancer is eradicated from American society, our example will be one that other countries will voluntarily emulate.
by ROBACA August 28, 2009 3:40 PM EDT
And don't forget the "National Museum of Spanish American History and Culture". Didn't anyone learn about Christopher Columbus in school? Many explorers came from Spain.
Reply to this comment
by brianbwb-2009 August 29, 2009 3:12 AM EDT
Columbus was Italian, not Spanish. He was commissioned by Queen Isabella of Spain.
by squarepegdude August 28, 2009 2:51 PM EDT
Are you kidding me with this?! All of a sudden (hmmm, wouldn't wander why given the recent election...) we seem to be spending (wasting?) more and more time and money on 'African American' (Black) history than any other race and they only make up a very small portion of our society. When will it be enough and we can all move on to more important things - Like taking care of our planet perhaps?!?!?!
Reply to this comment
by lloydbest1 August 28, 2009 3:45 PM EDT
A partial answer to your question:

1. When African Americans are enough integrated into our society that a "Black" president is no longer a novelty.
2. When there are NO measurable differences in living standards between AA's as a group and the White majority as a group.
3. When black/non black couples need never fear for their lives or their health - no matter where they live or visit.
4. When comparing African Americans to white people, even in positive terms, becomes a thing of the past.
5. When a "typical" black kid coming out of a "typical" black high school who has put in a "typical" effort into his academic success scores no different in any achievement test than his/her "typical" white counterpart.
6. When racial profiling is not merely unacceptable but unthinkable.
7. When the life expectancy and accessibility to basic health care for black Americans EXACTLY matches that of white ones.
8. When we do away with any race based generalizations.

I have no problem with your wanting to take care of the planet. In fact it's laudable but we Americans have enough bandwidth to be able to take care of more than one issue at a time. And race relations is one that still needs some work.
by whatithink-2009 August 28, 2009 5:45 PM EDT
What a stupid comment, Squarepegdude! You should really learn a bit before you post stupid things. Shameful!
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