My colleague Zahara Hill and I are chugging along with “The Reconstruction,” our ongoing celebration of the people fighting to rebuild America’s historical memory of Black history as conservatives try to tear it down.
I recently sat for an interview with the Rev. Wheeler Parker, an activist and author who is the last surviving witness to the abduction of Emmett Till, his cousin, in 1955. Ever since Till’s murder in Mississippi, the 85-year-old Parker has fought to ensure that the accurate story of what took place is told. And last year, his family notched a victory when President Joe Biden announced the development of a national monument honoring Till and his mother, Mamie Till-Mobley. Parker, logically, was asked to introduce the president at last year’s event.
So it was a privilege to talk to him — about faith, perseverance, apathy among young people, and the convos he had with President Biden.
Check out the video of our full chat above. Below are some highlights, edited for clarity and length.
JJ: What was Emmett like as a kid? Often when we talk about vaunted civil rights figures, we lose some of their humanity. And that’s why I think it would be great to hear from someone who knew Emmett well.
WP: In the Bible, they say a man is known by his doings; people see us as we are. To see Emmett, the way he was and the person he was, to put it short: fun-loving prankster. I’ve never seen him have a dull day in his life. Full of life, and that’s what you had to be if you were around him. He just enjoyed life to the fullest. Great humanitarian, and he was just into everything! He’s gonna be the center of attraction in everything, right there. You can’t talk about him without smiling or laughing — as long as you don’t talk about, you know, how he ended up. But he’s gonna be the center of attraction.
JJ: You mentioned “how he ended up.” That’s such a major part of his story — and it’s a part of your story, because you’ve taken it upon yourself to ensure that the public knows the true story of his abduction. What has that been like for you emotionally to take on that burden?
WP: The story of Emmett Till has a lot of mixed emotions. And I think the thing that affected me the most was, shortly after he was taken, the way the Look magazine article portrayed him. I’ve lived with that for 69 years, and it still resonates with me. In spite of all the good that has come out of it, that’s still foremost in my mind. It impacted me so that I still live with that today — the way they portrayed him. It was terrible then, and it’s still terrible.
JJ: What in particular stuck with you?
WP: Emmett Till was not the first person that suffered those kinds of atrocities. But his story, usually, it’s swept under the rug or kind of covered up, sugar-coated, “it’s the way of life” and they moved on. But that story went out to the whole world — it went everywhere. So, since it went everywhere, now people are a little more sensitive about how — they’re more conscious about their mistreatment of Black people, it’s not well-accepted. And it started to wear on people. So now they’ve got to try to protect their image: “He deserved what he got.” And that’s the way the [the Look article] portrayed him. That article was horrible, it was horrible. It’s amazing how you can portray people in such a way — and if you do it for a long time, people start believing it. And I lived with that real hard for 30 years, just like he got what he deserved. We didn’t talk about it. The story and way we see Emmett now is a whole lot different than it was from ’55 to ’85.
JJ: Yes.
WP: The country looked very different. Now, it’s like he’s an icon and everybody wants a piece of him. Not back in the day. We didn’t talk about it to our family — Black folks — because they said my grandfather wouldn’t have let that happen. White people were saying he got what he deserved. To see and experience it the way I’m experiencing it now — it’s a whole, whole different world.
JJ: Did the Look article inspire you to go on this journey to ensure that the accurate telling was told?
WP: You know, I don’t know how to say that, because it was painful always and we didn’t have control. Like, I’m talking to you now, but I didn’t have access to media to tell my story. When I got a chance to tell it, like I’m telling you, I told it. The media was not interested in coming to us until after that 1985 documentary by NBC. That started changing everything. Rich Samuels, a guy out of Chicago, Channel 5 NBC — that started turning things around.
WP: He interviewed us, and he told what we said. So now, we’re being heard. Me and my Uncle Simeon [Wright] — we’re eyewitnesses. For 30 years, when I’d start telling my story, they’d say “Wheeler Parker alleged …” I’d say, “Alleged? I’m an eyewitness!” I watch “America: Fact vs. Fiction,” and it’s amazing how fiction or lies can spread. It’s kind of like the Titanic and saying it didn’t happen at all. And that’s the same thing with a lot of our stories. We do a lot of embellishing in our country, and Emmett’s story doesn’t sit well with me being embellished at all. Tell it like it is — the naked truth. Like his mother said: “Let the world see.”
JJ: Yes.
WP: It’s not a pleasant story, so it’s incriminating whether you want it to be or not. When you tell of the racism — racism is not pleasant at all. And you know what? Racism ain’t going nowhere. It’s gonna be there. And young people, they don’t think it’s changing. But, I mean, they don’t know where we came from.
JJ: Can you delve into that some more? I think your perspective on this is helpful. There are lots of young folks who might feel disaffected or apathetic because things aren’t changing at the pace they want. What do you say to them?
WP: If they want a quick fix, it’s not gonna happen. Microwave changes are not gonna happen. I was at the signing of the federal anti-lynching bill with Ida B. Wells’ great-granddaughter. In her speech, she said: “My great-grandmother was here 100 years ago.” We were sitting there all together, President Biden and a whole cadre of people. And she said, “It took 100 years — 200 tries — to get an anti-lynching bill signed.”
"Since my great grandmother's visit to the white house 124 years ago, there have been over 200 attempts to get legislation enacted…But we finally stand here today…to witness this historic moment," Michelle Duster, great-granddaughter of civil rights leader Ida B. Wells, says. pic.twitter.com/Dwm3vOqY0d








