transcript of shirley sherrod’s full remarks
I can’t view the video well, plus it’s easy for words to get lost, so here is a full transcript of what she said. I have removed the blockquotes because they make it more difficult for me, at least, to read and have instead cased Ms. Sherrod’s remarks in asterisks. It is obvious that someone edited this video with malicious intent, making sure to cut off anything that gave an indication of what it was really about, and to include anything that would inflame a certain type of white folks – even down to the last words on the video, but only part of the sentence, “one of his own” – if it was not Andrew Breitbart who edited this (and he says it was not, but we all know what a liar he is) then he should reveal who it was that did edit this video.
From Media Matters: Following are Sherrod’s remarks at the March 27 NAACP Freedom Fund Banquet (the section in bold is what Breitbart’s video included — the rest was omitted):
***********************************************************
[11:50] SHERROD: I made the commitment on the night of my father’s death at the age of 17 that I would not leave the South, that I would stay in the South and devote my life to working for change. And I’ve been true to that commitment all of these 45 years.
[...]
[16:34] SHERROD: God is good. I can tell you that. When I made that commitment, I was making that commitment to black people — and to black people only. But you know God will show you things and he’ll put things in your path so that you realize that the struggle is really about poor people –
AUDIENCE: All right. All right.
SHERROD: — you know. The first time I was faced with having to help a white farmer save his farm. He took a long time talking but he was trying to show me he was superior to me — I knew what he was doing.
AUDIENCE: All right.
SHERROD: But he had to come to me for help. What he didn’t know, while he was taking all that time trying to show me he was superior to me, was I was trying to decide just how much I was going to give him. I was struggling with the fact that so many black people have lost their farmland, and here I was faced with having to help a white person save their land. So, I didn’t give him the full force of what I could do. I did enough so that when he — I assumed that the Department of Agriculture had sent him to me; either that or the Georgia Department of Agriculture — and he needed to go back and report that I did try to help him. So I took him to a white lawyer that we had — that had attended some of the training that we had provided ’cause Chapter 12 bankruptcy had just been enacted for the family farmer, so I figured if I’d take him to one of them, that his own kind would take care of him.
That’s when it was revealed to me that y’all, it’s about poor versus those who have, and not so much about white — it is about white and black, but it’s not — you know, it opened my eyes, ’cause I took him to one of his own and I put him in his hands, and said, OK, I’ve done my job. But, during that time, we would have these injunctions against the Department of Agriculture and — so, they couldn’t foreclose on him. And I want you to know that the county supervisor had done something to him that I have not seen yet that they’ve done to any other farmer, black or white. And what they did to him caused him to not be able to file Chapter 12 bankruptcy.
So, everything was going along fine — I’m thinking he’s being taken care of by the white lawyer, then they lift the injunction against USDA in May of ’87 for two weeks and he was one of 13 farmers in Georgia who received a foreclosure notice. He called me. I said, well, go on and make an appointment at the lawyer. Let me know when it is and I’ll meet you there.
So we met at the lawyer’s office on the day they had given him. And this lawyer sat there — he had been paying this lawyer, y’all. That’s what got me. He had been paying the lawyer since November, and this was May. And the lawyer sat there and looked at him and said, “Well, y’all are getting old. Why don’t you just let the farm go?” I could not believe he said that, so I said to the lawyer — I told him, I can’t believe you said that. I said: It’s obvious to me that he cannot file a Chapter 12 bankruptcy to stop this foreclose, you have to file an 11. And the lawyer said to me, I’ll do whatever you say — whatever you think — that’s the way he put it. But he’s paying him. He wasn’t paying me any money. You know, so he said — the lawyer said he would work on it.
And then, about seven days before that man would have been sold at the courthouse steps, the farmer called me and said the lawyer wasn’t doing anything. And that’s when I spent time there in my office calling everybody I could think so to try to see — help me find the lawyer who would handle this. And finally, I remembered that I had gone to see one just 40 miles away in Americus with the black farmers. So, I –
[VIDEO CUT*]
SHERROD: Well, working with him made me see that it’s really about those who have versus those who don’t.
AUDIENCE: That’s right.
SHERROD: You know, and they could be black, and they could be white, they could be Hispanic. And it made me realize then that I needed to work to help poor people — those who don’t have access the way others have.
I want to just share something with you and I think it helps to — you know, when I learned this, I’m like, oh, my goodness. You know, back in the late 17th and 18th century, black — there were black indentured servants and white indentured servants, and they all would work for seven years and get their freedom. And they didn’t see any difference in each other — nobody worried about skin color. They married each other. You know, these were poor whites and poor blacks in the same boat, except they were slaves, but they were both slaves and both had their opportunity to work out on the slavery.
But then they started looking at the injustices that they faced and started then trying — you know, the people with money — you know, they started — the poor whites and poor blacks — they — you know, they married each other. They lived together. They were just like we would be. And they started looking at what was happening to them and decided we need to do something about it — you know, about this. Well, the people with money, the elite, decided, hey, we need to do something here to divide them.
So that’s when they made black people servants for life. That’s when the put laws in place forbidding them to marry each other. That’s when they created the racism that we know of today. They did it to keep us divided. And they — it started working so well, they said, gosh, looks like we’ve come up on something here that can last generations — and here we are. Over 400 years later, and it’s still working. What we have to do is get that out of our heads. There is no difference between us.
The only difference is that the folks with money want to stay in power and whether it’s health care or whatever it is, they’ll do what they need to do to keep that power.
[APPLAUSE]
[...]
[25:03] SHERROD: I couldn’t say 45 years ago, I couldn’t stand here and say what I’m saying — what I will say to you tonight. Like I told, God helped me to see that its not just about black people, it’s about poor people. And I’ve come a long way. I knew that I couldn’t live with hate, you know. As my mother has said to so many, if we had tried to live with hate in our hearts, we’d probably be dead now.
But I’ve come to realize that we have to work together and — you know, it’s sad that we don’t have a room full of white and blacks here tonight ’cause we have to overcome the divisions that we have. We have to get to the point as Tony Morrison said race exists but it doesn’t matter. We have to work just as hard — I know it’s — you know, that division is still here, but our communities are not going to thrive — you know, our children won’t have the communities that they need to be able to stay in and live in and have a good life if we can’t figure this out, you all. White people, black people, Hispanic people, we all have to do our part to make our communities a safe place, a healthy place, a good environment.
*********************************************************
* According to Jake Tapper, “NAACP says the tape was changed at the 21:00 mark. no edits, just a tape change.”
Nanette is | Topic: Living History, stupid people, telling our stories | Tags: Breitbart, Charles Sherrod, liars, NAACP, Shirley Sherrod
6 Comments, Comment or Ping
Chris
Breitbart has no room to call himself a journalist. This was all just a sad media ploy to smear the NAACP. If Brietbart wanted to do damage he should have just put the full video on his website and let people decide. Kind of scary to think she held her position so long considering her narrow minded racial views. Very glad she was able to “overcome” her racial views and preconcieved notions of white people to do the job she was hired to do.One question though, how did she KNOW Mr. Spooner was trying to act “superior” to her? I believe it would be best if we don’t put people like her as well as white racists in positions of authority. END RACISM
Nanette
Hi Chris, while I agree that Breitbart is certainly no journalist, something about your comment makes me suspect that you neither watched the video, nor read the transcript.
Or, if you did, it’s a very interesting take you have on what actually occurred.
Thanks for commenting.
Reply to “transcript of shirley sherrod’s full remarks”
Advertisements
Contact Nanette via…
Follow me? Twitter- NanetteHB
Won't you be my friend? Facebook - Nanette Kelley
Linkedin - Nanette Kelley
My Other Stuff
Human Beams International - a former social justice magazine now in the process of redefining itself as social justice and more.
The Book of Louis - the exploration of family history, Black history (primarily U.S.) and the intersecting histories of other people of color and whites.
Visit She Writes
Quotables
-Ornette Coleman / September
On My “To Read” List
Powell's Books
Bound for Canaan: The Underground Railroad and the War for the Soul of America . Fergus M. Bordewich.
Amazon
Bound for Canaan: The Epic Story of the Underground Railroad, America's First Civil Rights Movement
Related posts:
reading now: bound for canaan – the underground railroad August 27, 2009
Blogroll
Dropping (and picking up) Knowledge
looks interesting, no time to check out yet
My Stuff
News And Resources
places that interest me
things to read in a quiet moment
Virtual Bookshelf
Blogroll
Dropping (and picking up) Knowledge
looks interesting, no time to check out yet
My Stuff
News And Resources
places that interest me
things to read in a quiet moment
Virtual Bookshelf
search for…
affiliate
Previous Quotables
-Sarah Louise Delany / August
Fantasies are more than substitutes for unpleasant reality; they are also dress rehearsals, plans. All acts performed in the world begin in the imagination.
-Barbara Grizzuti Harrison / July
The Force is within you.
< > Force Yourself.
-Harrison Ford / June
Other stuff I do
Freelance article writing, ghostwriting, blog, content and SEO writing as well.
*Idea generation
*Website creation
*Brand identity
*Social media strategy and marketing
*Other stuff.
For more information or to hire me, reach me here.
Grow Art – Click picture to donate
Pages and Stuff
Since You Asked…
Why this is all about me, me, me
email me at nanette dot hb at gmail dot com
Notes
bookmarklets, don't require installation and work with all browsers
Readable changes text size, page bg color and more.
Readability - changes text size, layout, margins, style.
Recent Posts
Recent Comments
Meta
Categories
tags
Archives
Welcome to Serenity… refocus – seek joy – thrive
There are 357 posts and 275 comments so far. Feel invited to browse the archives, read the about or comment on the latest post.
Serenity… refocus – seek joy – thrive is published under a Creative Commons license. Repost all you like, with attribution. | Serenity… refocus – seek joy – thrive is proudly powered by WP.
Created by miloIIIIVII | Log in |
Entries RSS |
Comments RSS.
65 queries. 0.373 seconds.
Something Here
Something Else Here