Great Wall Institute: The Process of the Great Wall of Los Angeles

1960s Reverend Lawson

Rev. James M. Lawson, Jr. 

Summary: 

TIMELINE

Early Life

James M. Morris Lawson, Jr. was born in Uniontown, Pennsylvania. His father and grandfather were Methodist ministers. His paternal great-grandfather escaped slavery in the South after hand-to-hand combat led ot the death of his owner. 

 

Henry, Rev. Lawson’s grandfather married into a family of abolitionists after his father escaped to Canada. Lawson’s own father went to college, rejected a farmer's life, and he became a minister for the AME Zion Church. 

 

Lawon was raised in Massillon Ohio. He describes being raised in a family and community full of love. He recalls his earliest memory of a racial epithet thrown at him at the age of 4. He punched the other child back and described in an Oral History interview that this became his practice. 

 

In fourth grade, he recalls another incident in which a child hurls a racial epithet while running an errand for his mother. Lawson smacks the boy and finishes the errand. He relays this to his mother who asks her son to reflect on what good that did. She then went through a soliloquy about God, the church, and that he was loved; there was no verbal insult that could change his humanity.  She told him, “Jimmy there must be a better way.” He remembers a quiet and a stillness descending upon the house. It was here that he adopted nonviolence as a way of life though he didn’t call it then or know that term at the time. He recalls his inner voice, though it initially felt outside of himself, saying “I will never again fight with my fists…and Jimmy you will find a better way.” 

Adolescence to adulthood

He conducted his first sit-in as a junior in high school while attending a youth conference in Indianapolis. He began attending Baldwin-Wallace College where he eventually earned his AB (artium baccalaureus; “bachelor degree”) in 1951. While in college he joined CORE which advocated non-violence. 

 

Resists the Korean war draft, and is imprisoned for refusing to register with the armed forces. Serves 14 months after refusing to accept a student deferment or ministerial deferment. Initially he was incarcerated at a federal work camp in Mill Point, WV. Although the prison was segregated, African Americans and white prisoners could spend time together in the prison library. While there he created a study group with 5 white draft resisters. Seen as troublemakers, they are transferred 8 months later to a maximum-security custody in a federal penitentiary in Ashland, KY. 

 

After his parole ends, he moves to Nagpur, India deepening his study of Gandhi’s principles of nonviolence, though Gandi had already been assassinated. He is inspired by reading about the principles of nonviolence being put into action in the Montgomery bus boycotts in Dec. 1955. He decides to return to the United States. Before doing so, he travels through Africa for six weeks as independence movements are erupting. 

 

In 1956, he returned to the US, and enrolled at Oberlin College’s Graduate school of Theology in Ohio. On February 6, 1957, Lawson and MLK met for the first time. King urges Lawson to move to the South to teach nonviolence on a larger scale. Lawson drops out of Oberlin. 

Nonviolence Workshops & Lunch Counter Sit-ins Organizing 

1957-1969: Lawson is involved with the Fellowship of Reconciliation (FOR), a pacifist organization founded in Europe at the outbreak of WWI and the oldest pacifist organization in the U.S. He serves as a southern director of FOR and begins organizing workshops on nonviolence for community members & students at Vanderbilt and the city’s four black colleges (Tennessee State University, Fisk University, Meharry College, and American Baptist College). He then enrolls at Vanderbilt University Divinity School in Nashville. As of 2011, Lawson identified himself as a member of FOR. 

 

From Jan.-May in 1958 Lawson held nonviolence workshops in Little Rock, a year after the Little Rock Nine had begun desegregation of the local high schools. In 1959, Lawson alongside Diane Nash, Marion Barry, John Lewis, Bernard Lafayette, & James Bevel plan nonviolent demonstrations in Nashville & conduct test sit-ins. These organizers are met with resistance and considered “radical” in Nashville as the belief was that Nashville was a “moderate” city with “the best working relationships with Black people and that in fact the sit-in was not the way to do it.”

 

In 1958, Lawson attended his first meeting with the Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC) where he met with King and led his first workshop on nonviolence.  

 

Following the Greensboro lunch counter sit-ins in 1960, Lawson and other activists launched similar protests in downtown Nashville. More than 150 students were arrested before the city began desegregating lunch counters. First sit-in in Nashville on February 13th 1960. The city of Nashville officially desegregated its downtown lunch counters in May of 1960. In 1960, Lawson was expelled from Vanderbilt due to involvement with the desegregation movement. 

SNCC Takes Root (April 1960) 

Lawson and the Nashville student leaders were influential in the founding conference of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC), held April 1960

 

Around 200 students attended the conference Easter weekend at Shaw University from April 16-18, 1960, during which the SNCC was born. Though King and others hoped that SNCC would function as the youth wing of the SCLC, veteran civil rights organizer Ella Baker stressed the importance of remaining independent and unaffiliated with other civil rights groups. Baker was emphatic in the call: “Adult Freedom Fighters will be present for counsel and guidance, but the meeting will be youth centered.” Beginning its operations in a corner of the SCLC’s Atlanta office, SNCC dedicated itself to organizing sit-ins, boycotts and other nonviolent direct action protests against segregation and other forms of racial discrimination. In April 1961, SNCC activists joined a campaign launched by the Congress of Racial Equality (CORE), another civil rights group, to desegregate interstate bus transportation. 

 

Following the conference, Rev. Lawson would become SNCC’s primary tutor of the technique of nonviolent action, while continuing to advise Dr. King and the SCLC, where he ran workshops on nonviolent civil resistance at every meeting for as long as King lived.

 

In the early 1960s, Rev. Lawson participated in the Freedom Rides in Alabama in 1961 as part of the third wave of Freedom Rides, in Birmingham’s 1963 desegregation campaign, and Mississippi Summer voter registration drives during this time. 

 

In August 1960, Lawson completed his theology degree at Boston University. Lawson begins engaging in debates within SCLC that focus on whether to oppose the war. Lawson participated in a peace-seeking mission to Vietnam and Southeast Asia in MLK’s place in 1962.  In 1962, Rev. Lawson also became the minister of Centenary Methodist Episcopal Church in Memphis while continuing to volunteer with SCLC.

Memphis Sanitation Strike 

1967-1968: Lawson becomes one of the leaders of the Memphis sanitation workers’ strike. The workers adopt the slogan “I Am a Man.” He invites MLK to participate in the strike. It is here while supporting the striking sanitation workers that Dr. King was assassinated in April 1968.

 

Time in Los Angeles

In 1974, Lawson moves to Los Angeles and began a 25 year turn as the pastor of Holman United Methodist Church. According to Kent Wong (2022), “in Los Angeles, he helped to launch civil rights, peace, labor, and immigrant rights campaigns. His work with Black, Brown Asian, and white hotel and service workers helped to build one of the strongest organized labor and immigrant rights movements in the United States today.” He opposed the Vietnam war and continued to oppose U.S. military interventions. 

 

He led various antinuclear efforts throughout the 1980s, opposed US imperialist/colonialist policy in El Salvador, Nicaragua, and Guatemala. “As part of an interfaith task force on hunger, Lawson helped organize the Adams-Vermont farmers’ market to bring fresh food to the South Los Angeles food desert” (Wong 2022, p120). 

 

In the late 1980s-1990s, Lawson taught the principles and tactics of nonviolence to LA union organizers in the hotel and custodial industries at Maria Elena Durazo’s outreach. In the early 1990s, Lawson advised the HERE Local 11 campaign at the Hyatt Hotel in downtown Los Angeles.

 

 “In 1996, Lawson helped found Clergy and Laity United for Economic Justice–Los Angeles, an interfaith organization focused on worker justice, which continues to mobilize the faith-based community to actively support immigrant and workers’ rights.” While unions have waned elsewhere, unions have grown stronger in Los Angeles. 

 

The “Holman group,” a young group of emerging leaders, met regularly with Lawson as part of a study group. Members include Antonio Villaraigosa, Kent Wong, Gilbert Cedillo, Karen Bass, Anthony Thigben, Maria Elena Durazo.  

 

“‘I got arrested for labor struggles more in Los Angeles than I ever did in the Civil Rights Movement,’ Lawson noted. This pioneering work led to the transformation of the labor movement in Los Angeles, embracing immigrant worker organizing, forging labor and community alliances, and developing comprehensive campaigns rooted in nonviolence and civil disobedience. Lawson also participated in the 2003 Immigrant Workers’ Freedom Ride” (Wong 2022, p. 121) 

 

Since 2002, Rev. Lawson has taught the Nonviolence and Social Movements course with the UCLA Labor Center. Many UCLA undocumented student leaders have taken Rev. Lawson’s class over the years. 

 

In 1973, Rev. Lawson became a board member of SCLC. He served as president of SCLC’s Los Angeles chapter from 1979-1993. 

Principles of Nonviolence 

Drawing on Gandhi and his work, Rev. Lawson has boiled down nonviolence organizing into four steps. The first step is preparation of individuals and communities for nonviolent struggle. This includes research and building a framework in which everyone can participate. Step two is negotiations. Step three is direct action. And step four is follow-up. “He tells us how to acknowledge when we have won a victory, however small, how to consolidate our gains, and how to discern and plan the next step for action.”

 

 

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