SIPGPO_191017_073
Existing comment: John Lewis, born 1940
Born near Troy, Alabama
Advocating nonviolence "not just as a technique, but as a way of life," activist John Lewis (now a longstanding member of Congress) endured repeated beatings and arrests while leading civil rights protests during the 1960s. A founder of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) when he was just nineteen, Lewis took the lead in organizing the freedom rides, sit-ins, marches, and other demonstrations that were part of the SNCC's drive to end racial segregation and secure voting rights for millions of disenfranchised African Americans. In the summer of 1962, he initiated a direct-action campaign challenging segregation in the community of Cairo, Illinois. As Lewis (far left) and other demonstrators knelt in prayer during a vigil outside the city's "whites only" swimming pool, Danny Lyon captured this compelling image. A University of Chicago student, Lyon soon became SNCC's official photographer and documented the organization's civil rights efforts for several years.
Danny Lyon, 1962
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