猫咪社区

Faith in Action
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Historic photo of freedom marchers carrying American flag
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Fran O鈥橞rien 鈥65 was never particularly political. Slight and a little shy, O鈥橞rien wanted to be a teacher, spending her days with children. She wasn鈥檛 one to demonstrate on a street corner or shout at a rally.

Fran O'Brien '65
Fran O'Brien '65 helped plan her 50th reunion at Pacific in 2015.

But in the upheaval of the early 1960s, O鈥橞rien found an unexpected passion 鈥 not political so much as religious.

A deeply involved member of 猫咪社区鈥檚 Student Religious Council, O鈥橞rien had a fundamental belief in social justice. It was that belief that led her to become the only 猫咪社区 student to participate in the Freedom Summer of 1964.

The idea was to send white college students to Mississippi 鈥 then the heart of America鈥檚 racial inequity 鈥 to help black citizens navigate the murky, and often dangerous, process of voter registration, to supplement the education of students whose schools were still separate and far from equal, and to bring white America鈥檚 attention to the burgeoning Civil Rights Movement.

It was an idealistic 鈥 and controversial 鈥 idea, and not one that immediately appealed to O鈥橞rien.

鈥淚 thought, 鈥業t鈥檚 a good cause, but not for me.鈥欌

She didn鈥檛 have the knowledge to teach Mississippi鈥檚 constitution to adults or to give black high-schoolers the physics or algebra lessons they needed, she told herself.

Then, she heard they needed teachers to take care of younger children too, to run recreation programs and art and crafts.

鈥淭hat was right up my alley,鈥 she said. 鈥淚鈥檇 been doing that since I was 13.鈥

Still, she hesitated 鈥 an application completed, but waiting to be submitted.

It was the film Judgment of Nuremburg that changed her mind.

鈥淚n one scene, an American judge is talking to a German housekeeper, asking about life under Hitler. She got defensive: 鈥榃e did not know what was happening, and we couldn鈥檛 do anything!鈥

鈥淎nd I thought, 鈥榃hat would I do if someone asked me?鈥

鈥淚t would be one thing if I didn鈥檛 know, but I had in my hand the opportunity to do something. If a door is locked and you don鈥檛 go through, that鈥檚 one thing. But if it鈥檚 wide open and someone says, 鈥楥ome in,鈥 that鈥檚 different.

鈥淭hat took my excuses away.鈥

     

It was never supposed to be an easy job.

children seated outside
Children seated out of schoolhouse, with Fran reading to them.

Volunteers for Freedom Summer were carefully screened to keep out anyone who might not be able to follow the principles of complete nonviolence. And, volunteers were required to come with money for transportation and living costs 鈥 plus a fund for bail, if and when they were arrested for their efforts.

The costs became apparent quickly. O鈥橞rien was in the second wave of volunteers to go to Oxford College in Ohio for training before riding buses south to Mississippi.

鈥淲e arrived on Sunday afternoon. On Monday, we heard that three of the men who had gone down the week before were missing.

鈥淏ob Moses (director of the Freedom Summer project) waited until one of the men鈥檚 wife was out of the room before he told us, 鈥楾hey鈥檙e dead. They鈥檝e been missing overnight in Mississippi. They鈥檙e dead.鈥

鈥淪ix weeks later, he was proved right.鈥

O鈥橞rien didn鈥檛 flinch.

In an essay, Faith and Activism, 40 year later, she wrote:

At no time did I doubt I should have been there. Sometimes I wondered why; often I wondered what I would do and how on earth I could possibly be useful; but never did I use the question word 鈥淚F.鈥 It did not occur to me that I might have made a mistake in coming. I KNEW I was meant to be exactly where I was. That is faith. In my case, it led to a unique type of activism.

O鈥橞rien spent the rest of her week-long training gathering ideas for simple art projects for her students and learning how to drop into the fetal position to protect her vital organs if attacked.

She鈥檇 need both skills.

O鈥橞rien was assigned to Vicksburg, a relatively safe 鈥 by Mississippi standards 鈥 community, where she found many people welcoming, if cautious.

鈥淢any of the older black people, they liked what we were doing, but they were stiff, formal. They couldn鈥檛 get past the fact we were white. You could almost see the conflict between their head and heart: 鈥榃e agree with what you鈥檙e doing, but we can鈥檛 have anything to do with you.鈥欌

The retired schoolteacher with whom she lived, Mrs. Garrett, was different.

鈥淪he was a remarkable person to make that transition and to teach me.鈥

O鈥橞rien taught arts and crafts, led games, played the piano, and started a children鈥檚 chorus. But when the children started asking about the American history lessons their older siblings were learning, she paused. There were no children鈥檚 history books.

鈥淢rs. Garrett said, 鈥楩ran, I didn鈥檛 have books. If you know the material, you can teach it.鈥 The problem was, I didn鈥檛 know the material. I was minoring in history at Pacific, but I鈥檇 never heard of Fredrick Douglass or Harriet Tubman.

鈥淪he said, 鈥榃ell, the kids can鈥檛 read the high school books, but I hope you can!鈥欌

And so O鈥橞rien did, helping her young students discover their role in American history, smiling as they added verses to songs like America the Beautiful, and helping inspire them to put on their own American history pageant.

Her work even drew the praise of Martin Luther King Jr., who visited the Vicksburg site in July 1964.

Ever humble, O鈥橞rien doesn鈥檛 volunteer this memory 鈥 but hers and other stories from the Freedom Summer project are chronicled in the book Freedom Summer by Bruce Watson:

At first, Fran thought it must be someone who merely looked like (King), but when a friend asked whether she was just going to stand there gawking, Fran jumped in the back. All the way to dinner, other volunteers fell over themselves to tell King about their summer work. Fran sat in silence. Finally, King turned around. 鈥淎nd what about you, young lady?鈥 he asked. 鈥淲hat do you do in the project?鈥

鈥淣othing,鈥 Fran managed to say. 鈥淚 just work with the kids.鈥

鈥淲hat do you do with the kids?鈥

Shyness stifled Fran, but another volunteer burst in and told King what a great teacher she was, doing arts and crafts, backyard games, and now a chorus and piano and sewing lessons. 鈥 Fran smiled weakly. King studied her, then asked, 鈥楧o you call that 鈥榥othing鈥?鈥

鈥淣o, sir.鈥

Then, getting serious as only Martin Luther King could get serious, he said, 鈥榊oung lady, don鈥檛 you ever say you 鈥榡ust work with the kids.鈥 Our children are the future and you are forming it.鈥 After dinner, King spoke to a boisterous crowd, but Fran O鈥橞rien would not remember a thing he said that was more important than what he said to her.

     

If King鈥檚 words would leave an indelible mark in her heart in the years to come, another experience would leave a shadowy reminder of the Freedom Summer, one that would trigger nightmares and denial for years to come.

鈥淭here was a lot of violence, and I did have one violent incident,鈥 O鈥橞rien says now, almost as an aside. 鈥淚 was attacked by four members of the KKK.鈥

It was a rainy night, and she was waiting for a ride at the bottom of a hill in front of the Vicksburg Freedom House. When the car arrived, there wasn鈥檛 room for everyone, so she offered to stay behind for the next car.

鈥(The driver) was black and had grown up in Mississippi. He assumed 鈥榳ait鈥 meant get the Sam Hill up the hill to the house. I took it literally, though, and just waited there. Sure enough, another car came around, but it was four Klansmen with robes and hoods.鈥

The men took O鈥橞rien to a vacant lot nearby 鈥 or so she believes. At the time, fear distorted her senses. She had no idea where she was or how long she was gone.

鈥淭hey said, 鈥榃e鈥檙e going to make you sorry you came here. We鈥檙e going to make you get on your knees and say it.鈥 They bent me over the hood of the car and beat me with rubber hoses until I fainted.鈥

When she woke up, she was back at the Freedom House. She thought she鈥檇 been gone for hours, but in reality it was only about 30 minutes. She hadn鈥檛 even been missed. In shock, she blamed herself, thought herself foolish.

Girls in window looking down.

鈥淲e鈥檇 been told a hundred times, 鈥楧on鈥檛 be alone,鈥欌 she said. 鈥淎t some point, I decided I wasn鈥檛 going to tell people.鈥

She carried the secret for the next 25 years.

     

鈥淚t suddenly seemed like everybody had changed. People who had just seemed to have a different opinion from mine were suddenly horribly racist and bigoted,鈥 she said.

鈥淭he most difficult were the people who I thought asked very stupid questions: 鈥楥an鈥檛 it just change gradually?鈥 I鈥檇 forgotten that three months earlier I had thought the same thing.

鈥淭hen there were the people who would say, 鈥業 know there鈥檚 a lot of violence, but they鈥檙e asking for it.鈥 That would just set me off, but people didn鈥檛 know why.鈥

Nightmares would follow her for years.

But so, too, would her renewed passion for teaching.

O鈥橞rien had suffered polio when she was 12 and was drawn to teaching children with disabilities after volunteering at a summer camp shortly thereafter.

鈥淚 was still using a cane then, and the kids would come to me first, because to them, I was 鈥榥ormal,鈥欌 she said. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 what happens when you segregate.鈥

After graduating from Pacific, she went on to earn a master鈥檚 in special education from San Francisco State University and spent some 36 years teaching.

Her Freedom Summer experiences have been written up in two books and a variety of articles, but it鈥檚 likely the three and a half decades working with children that have made the most difference in the world.

鈥淎 lot of the issues (in special education) were very similar to the Civil Rights Movement,鈥 she said.Young boy holding banner up.

She remembers one young boy who had suffered a hand injury when he was 4.

鈥淗is first-grade teacher thought his hand was too unsightly to be in school and had put him in a special education class,鈥 she said. 鈥淗e had gradually been doing less and less academically, because at the time, special ed had very low expectations.

鈥淢aybe it was my lack of experience at the time, but I thought, 鈥業f somebody just expects these kids to learn, they will.鈥 That鈥檚 not always the case, but it often is.鈥

That鈥檚 what she had seen in Mississippi.

鈥淭he black kids in the south had been told they were not as bright, and many believed it. But as long as the expectations are not unreasonably high, kids will respond.鈥

O鈥橞rien retired 10 years ago, unable to keep up with the physical demands of working with children with disabilities. But she continues to tutor and teach Sunday school 鈥 and neither the lessons of Mississippi or the faith that took her there have faded.

鈥淢any times in the years since Mississippi I have caught myself thinking, 鈥業 can鈥檛 do this!鈥 only to find out that I can,鈥 O鈥橞rien wrote in 2004. 鈥淣ot everyone can do the same things 鈥 and how boring it would be if we did! But everyone can do something. God planned it that way.鈥

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