“You Will Hang” and Other Things You Don’t Want to Hear on a Saturday Afternoon

Georgia State Police at Brotherhood II March, 1987 - photo by J Michael

by Kip Silverman
photos by J. Michael

Author’s Note: There’s an interesting internet experiment called The Listserve ( http://thelistserve.com/) where people opt in to get one email from a member each day. The members are randomly selected and have 48 hours to submit their entry. It can be on any topic and often is and it is limited to about 400 words. They have a little over 19k participants so far. They selected me and published my piece on Sunday May 20.

My entry is below.

I have received over 350 responses already (within 36 hours) from people around the world so far in support of my entry and its message and I am floored.

* * * * *

[The Listserve] “You Will Hang” and Other Things you don’t want to hear on a Saturday Afternoon

In 1987, I was at a civil rights march in Cumming, GA (Brotherhood March II). I was grabbed by a coordinator towards the end- I was told to flank the woman next to me who was with a child in a stroller; there were people on the ridge next to us throwing rocks and bottles and screaming obscenities. As I tried to turn my body into a shield I directly faced these people screaming the most hateful and violent words I have ever heard uttered. I thought I had understood racism and prejudice. I understood nothing.

I was becoming enraged. I wanted to fight back. As I began looking for a rock or anything, a chant was growing in the stream of marchers; I expected a confrontation until I heard what they were chanting. To fight the shouts of “Nigger Lovers” and “You will Hang” was a chant of “We Love You” in return.

Counter-protesters at Brotherhood II March, 1987 - photo by J Michael

Kip Silverman in Cummings, GA 1987 - Photo by Bob Ramsak

I didn’t understand. How can people met with lifelong hatred and discrimination act in return with Love? In the face of people threatening to kill you, they reply with “I Love You”.

I broke inside. I collapsed. The people around me grabbed me, pulled me up and helped me to my feet. I heard the words beside me “It’s okay brother, I have you” and I regained my footing and made it to the end.

There is a picture of me sitting on a curb shortly afterward looking exhausted and dazed. 25 years later I am still exhausted and dazed.

I try to inform everything I do in my life with this experience- the morals I raised my three amazing daughters with, how I still to this day try to make changes in this ever-broken world of ours.
There are so many awful things that humans do to each other. I truly believe they can only be resolved with a genuine love and caring for each other. Unequivocally, everyone should have the same opportunity to equal treatment under law, clean food and water, safe housing, health care and good education. And mutual respect. I have not ever heard a single argument to lead me to believe anything other than this.

This is the underlying theme of the Occupy Movement. It’s about everything really. But most of all, it’s about love and respect for us all.

Email me if you want to read some of my poems.

Much Love and Respect to you all.

Kip Silverman
Portland, Oregon
kip dot silverman at gmail dot com

Brotherhood II March, 1987 - photo by J Michael

  6 comments for ““You Will Hang” and Other Things You Don’t Want to Hear on a Saturday Afternoon

Leave a Reply to OccupyPDXKip Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *