The Great Migration and the power of a single decision Isabel Wilkerson

Imagine with me this scene.

It’s a scene that played out
in nearly all of our families.

It’s a scene in which a young person,

somewhere in our family tree,

somewhere in our lineage

had a heartbreaking decision to make.

It was a decision to leave all
that they had known.

And all of the people that they had loved

and to set out for a place far, far away

that they had never seen

in hopes that life might be better.

Migration is usually
a young person’s endeavor.

It’s the kind of thing that you do
when you’re on the cusp of life.

And so, there is, in all of our families,

this young person
somewhere in our background.

That person is standing at a dock,

about to board a ship

that will cross the Atlantic
or the Pacific Ocean.

That person is loading up a truck

that will cross the Rio Grande.

Or that person is standing

at a railroad platform

about to board a train
that will cross rivers and mountains

out of the Jim Crow South

to what they hope
will be freedom in the North.

And there, with this young person

as they are about to board that ship,

that boat,

that truck, that train,

are the people who raised them.

Their mother, their father,

their aunt, their uncle,
their grandparents,

whoever it might have been
who had gotten them to this point.

Those older people

were not going to be able
to make the crossing with them.

And as they looked into the eyes
of the people who had raised them,

there was no guarantee

that they would ever see them alive again.

Remember, there was no Skype,

no e-mail, no cell phones

not even reliable long-distance
telephone service.

And even if there had been,

many of the people that they were leaving
did not even have telephones.

This was going to be a complete break

from all that they knew

and all of the people that they loved.

And the very next time

that they might hear anything
about the people who had raised them

might be a telegram saying,
“Your father has passed away.”

Or, “Your mother is very, very ill.

You must return home quickly
if you are to see her alive again.”

That is the magnitude of the sacrifice

that had to have happened
in nearly all of our families

just for us to be here.

A single decision
that changed the course of families

and lineages and countries and history

to the current day.

One of these migration streams

stands out in ways
that we may not realize.

It was called the Great Migration.

It was the outpouring
of six million African Americans

from the Jim Crow South

to the cities of the North and West,

from the time of World War I
until the 1970s.

It stands out because this
was the first time in American history

that American citizens
had to flee the land of their birth

just to be recognized as the citizens
that they had always been.

No other group of Americans

has had to act like immigrants

in order to be recognized as citizens.

So this great migration was not a move.

It was actually a seeking
of political asylum

within the borders of one’s own country.

They were defecting a caste system
known as Jim Crow.

It was an artificial hierarchy

in which everything
that you could and could not do

was based upon what you looked like.

This caste system was so arcane
that it was actually against the law

for a black person and a white person

to merely play checkers
together in Birmingham.

You could go to jail

if you were caught playing checkers
with a person of a different race.

Someone must have seen
a black person and a white person

playing checkers with someone
in some town square.

And maybe the wrong person was winning

or they were having too good of a time,

but whatever it was that this person saw,

with this black person
and this white person playing checkers,

they felt the entire foundation
of Southern civilization was in peril.

And decided that it was worth
taking the time

to write this down as a law.

This caste system was so arcane

that in courtrooms throughout the South
there was actually a black Bible

and an altogether separate white Bible

to swear to tell the truth on in court.

The very word of God was segregated

in the caste system of the Jim Crow South.

The same sacred object

could not be touched
by hands of different races.

This artificial hierarchy,

because it goes against
human desires to be free,

required a tremendous amount
of violence to maintain.

Such that every four days,
somewhere in the American South,

every four days
an African American was lynched

for some perceived breach of protocol
in this caste system

in the decades leading up
to the start of the Great Migration.

This caste system had been put in place
for many, many reasons.

But one of them was to maintain
the economic order of the South,

which required not just
a supply of cheap labor

but an oversupply of cheap labor
to work at the will of the land.

This Great Migration began
when the North had a labor problem.

The North had a labor problem

because it had been relying
on cheap labor from Europe –

immigrants from Europe –

to work the factories and the foundries
and the steel mills.

But during World War I,

migration from Europe
came to a virtual halt.

And so the North had a labor problem.

And so the North decided to go
and find the cheapest labor in the land

which meant African Americans
in the South,

many of whom were not even being paid
for their hard work.

Many of them were working

for the right to live on the land
that they were farming.

They were sharecroppers
and not even being paid.

So they were ripe for recruitment.

But it turned out

that the South did not take kindly
to this poaching of its cheap labor.

The South actually did everything it could
to keep the people from leaving.

They would arrest people
from the railroad platforms.

Remember, putatively free
American citizens.

They would arrest them
from their train seats.

And when there were too many
people to arrest,

they would wave the train on through

so that people who had been hoping

and saving

and praying for the chance
to get to freedom

had to figure out:
How now will we get out?

And as they made their way
out of the South,

away from Jim Crow,

they followed three
beautifully predictable streams

as is the case in any migration
throughout human history.

In this particular case,
there were three streams.

One was the migration along the East Coast

from Florida, Georgia,
the Carolinas and Virginia

to Washington DC, to Philadelphia,

New Jersey, New York
and on up the East coast.

There was the Midwest stream,

which carried people
from Mississippi, Alabama,

Tennessee and Arkansas

to Chicago, to Detroit,
to Cleveland and the entire Midwest.

And then there was the West Coast stream,

which carried people
from Louisiana and Texas

out to California.

And when they really wanted to get away,

they went to Seattle.

And when they really, really
wanted to get away,

they went to Alaska,

the farthest possible point
within the borders of the United States

from Jim Crow South.

Before the Great Migration began,

90 percent of all African Americans
were living in the South.

Nearly held captive in the South.

But by the time
this Great Migration was over,

nearly half were living
all over the rest of the country.

So this ended up being
nearly a complete redistribution

of part of an entire people.

This Great Migration was the first time
in American history

that the lowest caste people

signaled that they had options
and were willing to take them.

That had not happened
in the three centuries

in which African Americans
had been on that soil at that time.

It had not happened
in 12 generations of enslavement

that preceded
nearly a century of Jim Crow.

How many “greats”

do you have to add
to the word “grandparent”

to begin to imagine how long
enslavement lasted in the United States?

Secondly, this Great Migration
was the first time in American history

that the lowest caste people

actually had a chance
to choose for themselves

what they would do
with their God-given talents

and where they would pursue them.

Think about those cotton fields

and those rice plantations

and those tobacco fields

and those sugar plantations.

On those sugar plantations,

and on those tobacco fields,

and on those rice plantations,

and on those cotton fields

were opera singers,

jazz musicians,

playwrights,

novelists,

surgeons,

attorneys,

accountants,

professors,

journalists.

And how do we know that?

We know that because that is
what they and their children

and now their grandchildren
and even great-grandchildren

have often chosen to become

once they had the chance
to choose for themselves

what they would do
with their God-given talents.

Without the Great Migration,

there might not have been
a Toni Morrison as we now know her to be.

Her parents were from Alabama
and from Georgia.

They migrated to Ohio,

where their daughter
would get to do something

that we all take for granted
at this point,

but which was against the law
and against protocol for African Americans

at the time that she would have been
growing up in the South,

had they stayed.

And that is just to walk into a library

and take out a library book.

Merely by making
the single decision to leave,

her parents assured that their daughter
would get access to books.

And if you’re going to become
a Nobel laureate,

it helps to get a book now and then.

You know, it helps.

Music as we know it was reshaped
by the Great Migration.

As they came North,
they brought with them,

on their hearts and in their memories,

the music that had sustained
the ancestors –

the blues music, the spirituals
and the gospel music

that had sustained them
through the generations.

And they converted this music
into whole new genres of music.

And got the chance to record this music,

this new music that they were creating,

and to spread it throughout the world.

Without the Great Migration,
“Motown” would not have existed.

The founder, Berry Gordy,
his parents were from Georgia.

They migrated to Detroit.

And when he got to be a grown man,
he decided he wanted to go into music.

But he didn’t have the wherewithal
to go all over the country

looking for the best talent,

and it turned out he didn’t have to.

It turned out that there he was,

surrounded by children
of the Great Migration

whose parents had brought this music up
with them during the journey.

And among those children
were these three girls,

there was Mary Wilson,

Florence Ballard

and there was a third one:

Diana Ross.

We might not know Diana Ross' name
had there been no Great Migration.

Because like a lot of Americans
and a lot of human beings in general,

she might not have existed
because her parents might not have met.

Her mother was from Alabama,

father from West Virginia,

they migrated to Detroit, different years,

met, married, had her and her siblings,

and thus a legend was born.

Jazz was a creation
of the Great Migration.

And one of the greatest gifts
of the Great Migration.

Starting with Louis Armstrong,
who was born in Louisiana

and migrated on the Illinois
Central Railroad to Chicago,

where he got the chance
to build on the talent

that was within him all along.

Miles Davis.

His parents were from Arkansas.

They migrated to southern Illinois,

where he would get the chance
to build on the talents

that were within him all along

but which could have gone fallow
in the cotton country of Arkansas.

John Coltrane.

He migrated at the age of 16

from North Carolina to Philadelphia,

where, upon arrival in Philadelphia,
he got his first alto sax.

And there are lovers of jazz
who cannot imagine a world

without John Coltrane
having gotten a hold of a saxophone.

Thelonious Monk.

Michael Jackson.

Jesse Owens.

Prince.

August Wilson.

Richard Wright.

Ralph Ellison.

Michelle Obama.

These are all a few
of the millions of people

who were products
of the single decision to migrate.

The people of the Great Migration

met with tremendous
resistance in the North.

And they were not able to defeat
all social injustice.

But one person

added to another person,

added to another person,

multiplied by millions,

were able to become the advance guard
of the civil rights movement.

One person added to another person,

added to another person,

multiplied by millions,

acting on a single decision,

were able to change the region
that they had been forced to flee.

They had more power in leaving

than by staying.

By their actions,

these people who had absolutely nothing

were able to do what a president
of the United States,

Abraham Lincoln, was not able to do.

These people, by their actions,

were able to do

what the Emancipation
Proclamation could not do.

These people, by their actions,

were able to do what the powers that be,

North and South,

could not or would not do.

They freed themselves.

Thank you.

(Applause)

Thank you.

(Applause)

和我一起想象这个场景。

这是
几乎在我们所有家庭中上演的场景。

这是一个场景,一个年轻人,

在我们家谱的

某个地方,在我们血统的某个地方,

做出了一个令人心碎的决定。

离开
他们所知道的一切,是一个决定。

所有他们所爱的人

,都出发去一个

他们从未见过的遥远的地方,

希望生活会更好。

移民通常
是年轻人的努力。

当你处于生命的风口浪尖时,这是你做的那种事情。

因此,在我们所有的家庭中,

我们背景中的某个地方都有这个年轻人。

那个人正站在码头,

即将登上一艘

横渡大西洋
或太平洋的船。

那个人正在装载

一辆将穿越格兰德河的卡车。

或者那个人正

站在铁路平台上,

即将登上火车
,该火车将从吉姆克劳南部穿越河流和山脉

前往他们希望
北部的自由。

在那里,这个

年轻人即将登上那艘船,

那艘船,

那辆卡车,那辆火车,

是抚养他们的人。

他们的母亲,他们的父亲,

他们的姑姑,他们的叔叔,
他们的祖父母,

不管是
谁让他们走到了这一步。

那些年长的

人将无法
与他们过境。

当他们看着
养育他们的人的眼睛时

,无法

保证他们会再次看到他们活着。

请记住,没有 Skype、

没有电子邮件、没有手机,

甚至没有可靠的长途
电话服务。

即使有

,他们离开的许多人
甚至没有电话。

这将与

他们所知道

的一切和他们所爱的人彻底决裂。

下一次

,他们可能会听到
关于抚养他们的人的任何消息,

可能是一封电报,上面写着:
“你父亲已经去世了。”

或者,“你妈妈病得很重。

如果你想再见到她,你必须尽快回家。”

这就是

我们几乎所有家庭都必须做出的巨大牺牲,

只是为了让我们来到这里。

一个单一的决定
,改变了家庭

、血统、国家和历史的进程

到今天。

这些迁移流

之一以
我们可能没有意识到的方式脱颖而出。

它被称为大迁徙。

从第一次世界大战到 1970 年代
,600 万非洲裔美国人

从吉姆克劳南部

涌向北部和西部城市

它之所以引人注目,是因为这
是美国历史上第一次

美国公民
不得不逃离他们出生的土地,

只是为了被承认为
他们一直以来的公民。

没有其他美国人

必须像移民一样行事

才能被承认为公民。

所以这次大迁徙并不是一个举动。

这实际上

是在本国境内寻求政治庇护。

他们正在背叛一种被称为吉姆克劳的种姓制度

这是一个人为的等级制度

,你能做和不能做的一切

都是基于你的样子。

这种种姓制度是如此神秘
,以至于

黑人和白人

在伯明翰一起玩跳棋实际上是违法的

如果您被发现
与不同种族的人玩跳棋,您可能会入狱。

一定有人看到
一个黑人和一个白人

在某个城镇广场上和某人下棋。

或许是赢错了人,或许是

他们玩得太开心了,

但不管这个人看到什么

,这个黑人
和这个白人在下棋,

他们都觉得整个
南方文明的根基都处于危险之中。

并决定
花时间

把它写成法律是值得的。

这种种姓制度是如此神秘

,以至于在整个南方的法庭上,
实际上有一本黑色圣经

和一本完全独立的白色圣经,

可以发誓在法庭上说真话。

在吉姆克劳南部的种姓制度中,上帝的话语被隔离了。

同一个圣物

,不同种族的手,是无法触及的。

这种人为的等级制度,

因为它违背了
人类对自由的渴望,

需要大量
的暴力来维持。

这样,每四天,
在美国南部的某个地方,

每四天就有
一名非裔美国人在大迁徙开始前的几十年里,因为在这种种姓制度中

的一些被认为违反协议的行为而被处以私刑

这种种姓制度的建立
有很多很多的原因。

但其中之一是维持
南方的经济秩序,

这不仅需要
廉价劳动力的供应,

而且还需要廉价劳动力的过剩,
才能按照土地的意愿工作。

当北方出现劳动力问题时,这场大迁徙就开始了。

北方有一个劳动力问题,

因为它一直
依赖来自欧洲的廉价劳动力——来自欧洲的

移民——

为工厂、铸造厂
和钢铁厂工作。

但在第一次世界大战期间,

来自欧洲
的移民几乎停止了。

因此,北方出现了劳动力问题。

所以北方决定
去寻找这片土地上最便宜的劳动力,

这意味着
南方的非裔美国人,

其中许多人甚至没有
因为他们的辛勤工作而得到报酬。

他们中的许多人正在努力

争取在他们耕种的土地上生活的权利

他们是佃农
,甚至没有得到报酬。

因此,他们的招聘时机已经成熟。

但事实证明

,南方
对这种偷猎廉价劳动力的行为并不友好。

南方实际上
尽其所能阻止人们离开。

他们会
从铁路站台上逮捕人。

请记住,假定是自由的
美国公民。

他们会把
他们从火车座位上逮捕。

当有太多
人要逮捕时,

他们会挥手让火车通过,

让那些一直希望

、拯救

和祈祷有
机会获得自由的人

不得不弄清楚:
我们现在要怎么出去?

当他们
离开南方,

远离吉姆克劳时,

他们跟随了三个
美丽的可预测的溪流,

就像人类历史上的任何迁徙一样

在这种特殊情况下,
有三个流。

其中之一是

从佛罗里达、乔治亚
、卡罗来纳和弗吉尼亚沿东海岸迁移

到华盛顿特区,再到费城、

新泽西、纽约
和东海岸。

有中西部河流

,将人们
从密西西比州、阿拉巴马州、

田纳西州和阿肯色州

带到芝加哥、底特律
、克利夫兰和整个中西部。

然后是西海岸溪流

,将人们
从路易斯安那州和德克萨斯州

带到加利福尼亚州。

当他们真的想离开时,

他们去了西雅图。

当他们真的,真的
想离开时,

他们去了阿拉斯加

,这
是美国境内

距离吉姆克劳南部最远的地方。

在大迁徙开始之前,

90% 的非裔
美国人生活在南方。

在南方几乎被俘虏。

但到
这次大迁徙结束时,

将近一半的人生活
在全国各地。

所以这最终
几乎完全重新分配

了整个人民的一部分。

这次大迁徙
是美国历史

上第一次最低种姓的人

表示他们有选择
并愿意接受。

在当时非裔
美国人在这片土地上的三个世纪中,这种情况还没有发生过。

吉姆·克劳(Jim Crow)近一个世纪之前的 12 代奴隶制中从未发生过这种情况。

你必须
在“祖父母”这个词上加上多少个“伟人”

才能开始想象
美国的奴役持续了多久?

其次,这次大迁徙
是美国历史上第一次

让最低种姓的人

真正有
机会自己选择

他们将
用上帝赋予的才能做什么,

以及他们将在哪里追求这些才能。

想想那些棉田

、那些稻田

、那些烟草田

和那些甘蔗种植园。

在那些甘蔗种植园

、那些烟草田

、那些水稻种植园

和那些棉花田上,

有歌剧歌手、

爵士音乐家、

剧作家、

小说家、

外科医生、

律师、

会计师、

教授、

记者。

我们怎么知道呢?

我们知道这一点,因为这是
他们和他们的孩子

,现在他们的孙子
甚至

曾孙经常选择成为的人,

一旦他们有
机会自己选择

他们将如何
利用上帝赋予的才能去做。

如果没有大迁徙,

可能就没有
我们现在所知道的托尼·莫里森。

她的父母来自阿拉巴马州
和乔治亚州。

他们移居到俄亥俄州

,他们的女儿
会在那里做

一些我们现在都认为理所当然
的事情,

但在她本来在南方长大的时候,这违反了法律
和非裔美国人的礼仪

, 他们留下了。

那只是走进图书馆

并取出图书馆的书。

仅仅通过
做出离开的决定,

她的父母就保证他们的女儿
可以接触到书籍。

如果你要
成为诺贝尔奖获得者

,时不时买一本书会很有帮助。

你知道,它有帮助。

我们所知道的音乐是
由大迁徙重塑的。

当他们来到北方时

,他们在心中和记忆中

带来了
支撑祖先

的音乐——布鲁斯音乐、精神
音乐和福音音乐

,这些音乐支撑了
他们世代相传。

他们将这种音乐
转化为全新的音乐流派。

并有机会录制这些

音乐,他们正在创作的这种新音乐,

并将其传播到世界各地。

没有大迁徙,
就没有“汽车城”。

创始人 Berry Gordy
的父母来自佐治亚州。

他们搬到了底特律。

当他长大成人后,
他决定要进入音乐领域。

但他没有足够的资金
走遍全国

寻找最优秀的人才

,事实证明他没有必要这样做。

原来,他在那里,被大迁徙的

孩子们包围着,

他们的父母
在旅途中把这首歌带到了他们身边。

在这些孩子
中,有这三个女孩,

有玛丽·威尔逊、

弗洛伦斯·巴拉德

,还有第三个:

戴安娜·罗斯。

如果没有大迁徙,我们可能不知道戴安娜·罗斯的名字

因为就像很多美国人
和很多普通人一样,

她可能不存在,
因为她的父母可能没有见过面。

她的母亲来自阿拉巴马州,

父亲来自西弗吉尼亚州,

他们移居底特律,不同的岁月,

相识,结婚,生下她和她的兄弟姐妹

,一个传奇就此诞生。

爵士乐是
大迁徙的产物。

也是大迁徙最伟大的礼物
之一。


出生在路易斯安那州的路易斯阿姆斯特朗开始,他

从伊利诺伊
中央铁路移民到芝加哥,

在那里他有机会
发挥

他一直以来的天赋。

迈尔斯戴维斯。

他的父母来自阿肯色州。

他们移居伊利诺伊州南部,

在那里他将有机会
发挥

他一直以来的天赋,

但这些天赋本可以
在阿肯色州的棉花之乡闲置。

约翰科尔特兰。

他在 16 岁时

从北卡罗来纳州移民到费城

,抵达费城后,
他得到了他的第一支中音萨克斯。

有些爵士乐
爱好者无法想象

没有 John
Coltrane 掌握萨克斯管的世界。

Thelonious 和尚。

迈克尔杰克逊。

杰西欧文斯。

王子。

奥古斯特·威尔逊。

理查德赖特。

拉尔夫·埃里森。

米歇尔奥巴马。

这些都是数
以百万计的人中的一小部分人

,他们
是单一决定迁移的产物。

大迁徙的人们在北方

遇到了巨大的
抵抗。

他们无法战胜
所有的社会不公。

但一个人

加另一个人,

再加上另一个人,

乘以百万

,能够
成为民权运动的前锋。

一个人加上另一个人,

再加上另一个人,

乘以百万,

根据一个决定采取行动

,能够
改变他们被迫逃离的地区。

他们离开比留下更有力量

通过他们的行动,

这些一无所有的

人能够做到美国总统

亚伯拉罕·林肯无法做到的事情。

这些人,通过他们的行动

,能够

做到解放
宣言不能做到的事情。

这些人,通过他们的行动

,能够做到

北方和南方的权力

不能或不愿做的事情。

他们解放了自己。

谢谢你。

(掌声)

谢谢。

(掌声)