Those were not poor, unemployed, uneducated white working people. I heard about the march during the planning stage, as a field secretary of SNCC. He may be 75 years old, but he is nowhere close to retiring. The SNCC workers joined the students in front of City Hall to pray, and Zellner, the protest’s only white participant, was attacked and severely beaten by several white men while local police watched and FBI agents took notes. As a native southerner who lived and worked in New York for many years, Zellner is in a unique position to compare attitudes toward race in the two geographical areas. Bob Zellner remembers the last time he saw Lewis–during the remembrance of ‘Bloody Sunday’ in Selma this past March. Dedicated to Zellner’s friend of 60 years, the late Georgia civil rights icon John Lewis, and based on “The Wrong Side of Murder Creek,” the film was written, directed and edited by Barry Alexander Brown. James Zellner, an itinerant Methodist preacher and member of the Ku Klux Klan, traveled to Europe during World War II to help … “Is democracy worth trying to save, and if so, what do we have to do to save our democracy?”. “I think they did an incredible job of making a motion picture with a small budget,” Zellner added. Back in February 2000, Zellner, then co-chair of the Southampton Anti-Bias Task Force, was arrested after showing up to ease tensions at a Shinnecock-led protest at the Parrish Pond development near what was then Southampton College. Martin Luther King is alive and well in America, Bob Zellner told students Thursday at Purdue University Calumet. In 2013, Zellner, a former Southampton resident, was arrested in North Carolina, where he now lives. Related Story: Deon Taylor to Direct ‘Freedom Ride’ Based on John Lewis and the Freedom Riders “It’s very strong, and whenever it’s challenged, people will do extraordinary things to maintain the caste system,” Zellner said. “I think it’s true that some of the most dedicated anti-racist people are southerners. “There’s quite a bit of the book that wasn’t covered,” explained Zellner in a recent phone interview. we ever get past this difficult time and find a way for our society to continue in an orderly fashion without the scourge of racism, there will be a body of literature that participated in bringing about profound changes throughout our society. Zellner earned a doctorate in history from Tulane University in the 1990s and until his retirement taught the history of the civil rights movement at Long Island University. After working briefly in Atlanta, Zellner went to McComb, Mississippi, with Bob Moses and Chuck McDew for a SNCC planning session. Mike Thelwell, a SNCC worker and former Black Panther, a poet, novelist, and teacher at Amherst, apologized for the expulsion of the whites from SNCC. During the visit McComb students organized a march to protest the murder of Herbert Lee and the expulsion of Brenda Travis and Ike Lewis from Burglund High School. It stars Lucas Till as a young Bob Zellner and takes place in Brown’s own hometown of Montgomery, Alabama, where the true events in Zellner’s life occurred. After beginning graduate study on race relations and sociology at Brandeis University, Zellner took a leave of absence in 1964 to coordinate SNCC’s efforts in Greenwood. Since he began working as a civil rights activist in his native Alabama in the early 1960s, Bob Zellner, the son and grandson of Ku Klux Klan members, has remained vigilant and on the front lines in the fight against racism. He continues to speak publicly on civil rights and in 2008 published a memoir, The Wrong Side of Murder Creek: A White Southerner in the Freedom Movement. For several months Zellner, McDew, and Moses ran a freedom school, Nonviolent High of Pike County, for the students who dropped out of Burglund High to protest Travis’s expulsion, though the school closed when the three activists were convicted of disturbing the peace and contributing to the delinquency of minors. “I’ve had to separate myself from my character in the movie,” explained Zellner. In other words, being fully committed is a way to show you are true to the cause. “But I did do a cameo in the hanging scene,” he added. In the mid-1950s, when Zellner was in high school in Mobile, Alabama, Autherine Lucy became the first Black student to attend the University of Alabama. Download it once and read it on your Kindle device, PC, phones or tablets. But he raised it in Alabama, and shot it in Alabama and it is being supported by the state of Alabama.”. In looking back on his half century or more of organizing and studying race in North America, Zellner has come to believe that the underlying issue surrounding race is the caste system, which he maintains is far more rigid than a class system. That made him a special target for the mob that greeted young Black protesters. As a result, over the course of the last half century, he has been beaten or arrested more times than he can count. “Barry had a difficult time in writing the script — condensing 50 or 60 years into 120 minutes. And that’s a topic Bob Zellner knows something about. “I was told, ‘Don’t let anyone hear you say that.’ Even if you didn’t agree, you were supposed to keep your mouth shut.”. Zellner was SNCC’s first white field secretary. Among the appealing aspects of a photograph is what it can tell us about ourselves. For Zellner, who has suffered brutal beatings at the hands of violent police, segregationist lynch mobs and the Klan, reliving some of the more harrowing moments of his youth on film wasn’t easy. They were sentenced to four months in jail and fined. At first, money was difficult to raise and nobody wanted to invest in it. “I was interested, even as a child,” he said. HAMMOND | The spirit of the Rev. Write CSS OR LESS and hit save. I think one of the reasons is they pay a huge price for the sentiment,” Zellner said. At the center of that body of literature will be a no-holds-barred book by a gay Black man from Baton Rouge, Louisiana, who works for an international media company and is engaged to a white man from the East End of Long Island. Below is an interview with Bob Zellner, edited for length and clarity. The final offering in Bay Street Theater’s “Story Time” series — children’s books read aloud on Zoom by the authors themselves — will feature Julie Andrews and her daughter, Emma Walton Hamilton, reading “Simeon’s Gift” on May 15. “Tut Edwards, the store’s owner, was a UU [Unitarian Universalist] and a follower of Huey P. Long as a progressive populist,” he added. The men attempted to drag Zellner away from the other protesters, but Zellner clung to a railing until police finally pulled him off to arrest him, along with the other SNCC workers and 119 students. On April 5, Zellner will celebrate his 82nd birthday, and in a fitting and timely tribute to his many years of activism, Zellner’s life story — specifically, his role as the first white field secretary for the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) in the early 1960s — has made it to the big screen in “Son of the South,” a film from executive producer Spike Lee. Bob Zellner (left) and Mayor Adam O’Neal at the Rally to Save Rural Hospitals in Washington D.C. (Photo: Kairos Center) What happened after … In 1966 SNCC voted to expel white activists from its organization, and although Zellner and his wife, Dorothy Miller Zellner, who also worked for SNCC, appealed, SNCC’s central committee rejected their request for reinstatement. He witnessed tragedy all around him during the events surrounding "Bloody Sunday" in Selma, Alabama. A movie on the life of civil rights activist Bob Zellner set for release Video. Bob Zellner, left, talks to fellow civil rights activists Dorothy Cotton and Rep. John Lewis as they share their stories at the Birmingham Civil Rights Institute in 2011. Bob Zellner overcame fear and community pressure to learn about and be involved with the Civil Rights movement. Though threatened with expulsion for his involvement with student protests, Zellner graduated in 1961 with a degree in psychology and sociology. “Racism, if you clean it up, sells very well in the North and it can get you political power.”. But with every battle, progress was made, and though since his early days in the movement attitudes have changed greatly, Zellner noted that many members of his own family have gone back to their Klan ways and to this day, discussions on certain topics are avoided altogether during get-togethers. The idea of such a project was conceived by Bob and Dottie Zellner, and two other white Southerners, Carl and Anne Braden, executive directors of SCEF. The following information is provided for citations. Zellner also participated in SNCC’s McComb voter registration campaign and in the Pike County Nonviolent Movement before moving to Leflore County to work with Amzie Moore and the McGhee family on desegregation, voter registration, and the formation of the Leflore County Freedom Democratic Party. https://www.factsninja.com/who-is-kathleen-zellners-husband-robert-zellner.html Annette Hinkle, arts editor of the Sag Harbor Express, writes extensively about the East End of Long Island for a number of regional publications. “There is a difference in the way people talk about and handle it, but racism is the same whether it’s down South or up North,” Zellner said. “With this film Barry Alexander Brown and Spike Lee are putting their talents in the field of arts to address these questions that are really on the front burner,” he said. Ralph Abernathy. During the summer of 1964 he also worked in Neshoba County with Rita Schwerner, investigating the murder of her husband, Michael Schwerner, and two other civil rights workers, James Chaney and Andrew Goodman. For other people nicknamed "Bullet Bob", see Bullet Bob. Still alive, but changed. Kathleen Zellner, Steven Avery’s feisty post-conviction lawyer, is at the center of Making a Murderer 2.That has some people wondering about Zellner’s own family and whether she has a husband. By the time the movie ends, I had just joined the SNCC staff. He was sorry to teach me, but it was a survival technique.”. Bob Zellner is still an activist in North Carolina. A veteran of the 1960s civil rights movement, she served as a recruiter for the Freedom Summer project and was co-editor of Student Voice, the student newsletter of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee.She is active in the Palestinian solidarity movement. He was not just white, but from Alabama, and his father and grandfather had been members of the Ku Klux Klan. Sources John Dittmer, Local People: The Struggle for Civil Rights in Mississippi (Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 1994). In 2017, her first book was published. After graduating from Mobile’s Murphy High School in 1957, Bob Zellner attended Huntingdon College in Montgomery, where he took a course in race relations and attended a workshop held by the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC). So he limited it to my childhood and my introduction to the movement. In his role on the anti-bias task force in Southampton, Zellner recalled, he investigated all sorts of incidents where symbols of hate, including nooses, would be used as intimidation or to create a political divide or controversy. Late last week, Georgia Governor Brian Kemp signed into law a major rewrite of the state’s election rules. As the son of a Methodist minister, the SNCC website explains that Zellner’s interest in civil rights was rooted in his religious faith. “I did a lot of my growing up in East Brewton, Alabama, on the wrong side of the tracks and the poor side of town. Bob Zellner is a veteran of the Civil Rights movement. After spending the following summer at the Highlander Folk School in Monteagle, Tennessee, Zellner was hired by SNCC to recruit white students for the movement, a position sponsored by a grant from the Southern Conference Education Fund. While in Russia, he lived and worked with a group of black gospel singers who were also helping the resistance, and when he returned to the United States, he repudiated his racist beliefs. It was a symbol that made me feel at home in the Hamptons,” he said facetiously. “Barry would record the stories then do a version of the script and give it to me and say, ‘What do you think and what do we need to change?’ We worked on it that way from beginning to end.”. When I was 12 or 13, I worked in a small grocery store and I was struck by the way the Black customers were treated versus white customers. If he is still at it today, he nearly lost it many times in the process. Dorothy "Dottie" Miller Zellner is an American human rights activist, feminist, editor, lecturer, and writer. Director Barry Alexander Brown brings real-live activist Bob Zellner’s story to the screen in Son of The South, which will be out on February 5.In the biopic, the grandson of a Klansman finds himself on the opposite side fighting for civil rights alongside great figures of the time like Rosa Parks. “I was always asking why we had to treat the Black customers different from white customers. CTRL + SPACE for auto-complete. Use features like bookmarks, note taking and highlighting while reading The Wrong Side of Murder Creek: A White Southerner in the Freedom Movement. But the activist’s long arrest record isn’t limited to southern states. “It’s very important and they’re not going to give it up easily. His incredible perseverance helped shape the course of history. The Wrong Side of Murder Creek: A White Southerner in the Freedom Movement - Kindle edition by Zellner, Bob. In many respects, he is fortunate to be alive. For years, Zellner worked closely with Brown in writing the screenplay, and he notes that the movie was primarily created from his memories and stories that the two of them developed together. You have to limit it. ', and 'The locals’ attitude was halfway civil because the news people were everywhere, and Rita had a lawyer.' HAMMOND | The spirit of Rev. 27 quotes from Bob Zellner: 'Joan Browning, one of our white volunteers;', 'None of us have ever forgotten those songs, and in the shock-troop days, in dangerous situations, the music gave the people strength and courage—soul force. “I’m part of the lynch mob — I just had to be part of the racist mob.”. http://mississippiencyclopedia.org/entries/bob-zellner/, Moral Heroes website, www.moralheroes.org. He continues his activism and in April 2013 was arrested for protesting North Carolina’s voter ID law. President Joe Biden was quick to call the law “Jim Crow in the 21st Century,” offering a modern-day reference to legislation enacted in southern states in the late 19th and early 20th centuries that codified racism. Since he began working as a civil rights activist in his native Alabama in the early 1960s, Zellner, the son and grandson of Ku Klux Klan members, has remained vigilant and on the front lines in the fight against racism. Zellner also campaigned for social justice in Alabama, Georgia, and Virginia. Dr. Bob Zellner, born in 1939, plans to return this week to Mobile, where he was the son of the minister of Broad Street Methodist Church in the 1950s. Eastern Long Island was a lucrative place to raise money. It had been his first demonstration as a field officer for the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee. Bob and Dottie Zellner were sitting there. While northerners often like to think of themselves as historically more tolerant, he notes that this part of the world has hardly been a bastion of equality. It causes [my wife] Pamela and I an incredible amount of grief, and some of those scenes were so real from the past, they were emotional to watch. Set in 1960s Alabama, the drama is based on the true story of Bob Zellner, a White activist who joined the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC), and forged a bond with civil rights activists, including Rev. I have moderate to severe PTSD. "Sag Harbor: 100 Years of Film in the Village.". Dottie Zellner will be eighty years old this year. Zellner’s social activism began in earnest in 1961 when, as a 22-year-old Freedom Rider and SNCC’s field secretary, he traveled from Atlanta to Albany, Georgia, to test two U.S. Supreme Court decisions outlawing segregation of interstate travel facilities. Perhaps the most fascinating part of Bob’s life is that he hasn’t “retired.” “Son of the South” jumps through a variety of hoops to tell his story: from his time serving on the Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) - becoming the organization's first white field secretary - to his numerous arrests with John Lewis. There were some exceptions. I thought it would be great for Autherine Lucy and Alabama,” Zellner said. When his father broke away from the Klan, it notes, his mother made Sunday school shirts from the white robes. When SNCC leaders Chairman Chuck McDew and white Field Secretary Bob Zellner went to visit Dion in jail and bring him reading materials, they were also arrested on criminal anarchy charges. Bob Zellner, a 28-year-old Alabamian who was the first white field secretary for SNCC (1961), and one of the last whites to leave that organization. Barry wanted to make a movie about Alabama in Alabama. Zellner was beaten daily while guards looked on until SNCC lawyers forced a transfer into solitary confinement. “That’s when I realized I had a different feeling than my peers. While Bob was a kid, his father took the dangerous step of renouncing his Klan membership. Executive produced by Spike Lee, “Son of the South” is based on Bob Zellner’s award-winning 2008 autobiography “The Wrong Side of Murder Creek: A … Born in Alabama on 5 April 1939, John Robert Zellner was the second of James Abraham Zellner and Ruby Hardy Zellner’s five sons. The details of the incident are shared in Zellner’s 2008 autobiography, “The Wrong Side of Murder Creek: A White Southerner in the Freedom movement.” In a chapter titled “Up South,” Zellner, a retired Long Island University professor, credits the presence of Southampton Press photographer Dana Shaw for stopping New York State troopers from breaking his arm during the arrest. Rememberd by Bob Zellner. Now, in his long-awaited memoir, Zellner tells how one white Alabamian joined ranks with the black students who were sitting-in, marching, fighting, and sometimes dying to challenge the Southern “way of life” he had been raised on but rejected. One individual, Dr. Bob Zellner, tirelessly dedicated his life to the Civil Rights Movement. Robert William Andrew Feller (November 3, 1918 – December 15, 2010), nicknamed " The Heater from Van Meter ", " Bullet Bob ", and " Rapid Robert ", was an American baseball pitcher who played 18 seasons in … When asked if he first became aware of social and racial injustice as a college student, Zellner said that it actually began long before then. “Son of the South” is available for streaming and can be rented or purchased on several digital platforms, including Apple TV, Amazon Video, VUDU, Google Play, Microsoft Movies & TV, FandangoNow and Redbox On Demand. “I refer to him as ‘the character,’ not me. “Long Island also has an interesting history because of that rich soil which is Bridgehampton loam — it was a plantation area during slavery and there was a strong slave culture on Long Island.”. In addition to limiting the use of drop boxes for ballots, the new legislation imposes stricter voter ID requirements, allows state takeovers of local elections and even bans handing out water to voters waiting in long lines. It wasn’t the last time he would end up in jail. The couple subsequently moved to New Orleans to work with the Southern Conference Educational Fund. It led to the first of his many arrests in multiple states. He grew up in rural Alabama, the son and grandson of Ku Klux Klan members and ministers. Because it’s so difficult to go against family, friends and long-standing attitudes, it would seem that southerners who fight for civil rights are often the most committed advocates of racial equality, and Zellner would tend to agree. ‘Son of the South’: Bob Zellner’s Life as an Activist is Now... View sagharborexpress’s profile on Facebook, View sagharboronline’s profile on Twitter, ‘Met Under Moonlight,’ a Beachfront Drive-In Opera Theater, Bay Street To Unveil Theater Plans In Online Presentation Tuesday, April 6, The East End Through the Lens Of William Wallace Tooker, Book Review: ‘This Is The Fire’ By Don Lemon, Julie Andrews and Emma Walton Hamilton Share a Story, ‘Espionage and Enslavement in the Revolution’, ‘Becoming Dr. Ruth’ at Bay Street Theater. The other aspect is our Black sisters and brothers always think you can be in the movement for a while, and then you can go back to being white.”. Our style, our appearance, the experiences we share, and moments of intimacy and honesty that are suddenly history the instant a shutter clicks. After finally being released on bond, the criminal anarchy charges were dropped against all three after years of legal wrangling, though Dion Diamond still had to serve a sixty-day sentence for disorderly conduct. They were solid, middle class bourgeoisies. James Zellner, an itinerant Methodist preacher and member of the Ku Klux Klan, traveled to Europe during World War II to help support the Jewish resistance to the Nazis. Martin Luther King is alive and well in America, Bob Zellner told students at Purdue University Calumet Thursday. “We basically gathered … Bob is a veteran of the Civil Rights movement. “It was instructive to me to look at the socioeconomic backgrounds of many involved in the insurrection at the Capitol. Although he occasionally uses a broad brush dipped in primary colors while fashioning his admiring portrait of Bob Zellner, the grandson of a Ku Klux … “I credit Barry and Spike Lee, who both have deep roots in Alabama. Zellner - played her by Lucas Till - was a trailblazing civil rights activist and grandson of an Alabama Klansman who saw past bigotry. Decades later, he is still protesting on behalf of social change and equal rights. “It would be at their places of business, or on the side of buildings. He graduated from Murphy High School in 1957 and Huntingdon College in 1961. And while the camera can mechanically record these pieces of our past, it is the intent and imagination of the photographer that decides what and how the images are to be remembered. He had to teach me the caste system. Until 1962 Zellner was SNCC’s only white field secretary. Klan fundraisers from the South would go north to raise money. A native Southerner born in a former Klan family, Bob Zellner dedicated his life to the fight for racial equality in the Civil Rights Movement nearly sixty years ago. Bob Zellner was white. “I did some research as a historian and I discovered a close connection between the Ku Klux Klan in North Carolina and eastern Long Island. Notably, that arrest came during a protest against state legislation that would require voter photo identification and restrict early voting or same-day registration, tactics that civil rights groups have long argued suppress voter turnout among minorities and the disenfranchised. “We had no cards to play,” said Mike. He grew up in rural Alabama, the son and grandson of Ku Klux Klan members and ministers. Zellner moved back to New York in 1983 and still remains active in feminist causes and is also involved in advocacy work on behalf of Palestinians. In Belhaven, North Carolina, veteran organizer Bob Zellner—a former civil rights activist whom Moral Mondays organizers persuaded to join the movement because of his deep experience bringing together disparate groups—worked with local White Republicans to try to save the area’s rural hospital from closing. Born in Alabama on 5 April 1939, John Robert Zellner was the second of James Abraham Zellner and Ruby Hardy Zellner’s five sons. 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