People gathering in act sinning
President Lyndon B. Johnson meets with Martin Luther King, Jr., at the signing of the Voting Rights Act of 1965 Credit: Yoichi Okamoto / Wikimedia Commons

By Black News & Views

When President Lyndon Johnson signed the Voting Rights Act in 1965, it was the result of decades of resistance, legal action, and the willingness of Black Americans and their allies to withstand the violence that too often accompanied the fight for equality. Late U.S. representative and civil rights icon John Lewis was brutally beaten while leading a protest in Selma, Alabama, to get the bill passed. Allison Davis looked back at Lewisโ€™s involvement in the movement with three of his former staffers. And looking ahead to present struggles, Davis also caught up with Cornell William Brooks, former NAACP chief and now professor of the practice of public leadership and social justice at Harvardโ€™s Kennedy School.

Video by Black News & Views