Olympic Black Power Salute
Back in the day on October 16th, 1968, two African-American athletes,
Tommie Smith and John Carlos, raised their fist in a black power salute
during the Olympics. The two had just placed medal times in the 200 meter
dash during the Mexico City games. Smith?s record setting sprint brought
him gold and Carlos took bronze. As the National Anthem began playing, the
pair lowered their heads and raised their fists in what would become an
iconic image of the black struggle for equality. As members of the Olympic
Project for Human Rights, the athletes also were shoeless to protest black
poverty and wore beads to highlight the crime of lynching. For their
symbolic protest, Smith and Carlos were promptly banned from the games and
expelled from the Olympic Village. The corporate press back in the U.S.
had a field day ostracizing the two for their supposed lack of respect.
Both Smith and Carlos faced hard times and death threats when they
returned home from the games, but the image of resistance they staged
lives on, not in infamy, but in annuls of subversive history.
For Uprising, this is your truth professa? saying it?s no mystery why they
conceal our people?s history
Listen to this segment:
http://www.archive.org/download/DailyDigest-101609_180/2009_10_16_s...