Celebrating MLK: Charles McLaurin & Tracy Sugarman
Charles McLaurin, "a foot soldier for freedom," was the featured guest of the Malcolm X Institute of Black Studies at its annual celebration of Martin Luther King, Jr. McLaurin and his life-long friend Tracy Sugarman shared stories of the civil rights movement and of the sharecropper-turned-heroine Fannie Lou Hamer. Said McLaurin, "The only life she knew from birth to 1962 was sharecropping... Her mother taught her reading and writing using the Bible. She owned nothing — no land, no car — but she had God."
Charles McLaurin told stories about his relationship with Fannie Lou Hamer. He said he had been directed to go to Mrs. Hamer's home on a plantation and drive her to Jackson, Mississippi to get qualified to run for U.S. Congress — but he first had to convince her that an African American woman should even try. McLaurin was shocked when Mrs. Hamer responded, "Wait just a minute, I'll be right with you." The two made their way to Jackson, where — despite mountains of paperwork and $500 in fees — they got her registered to run for Congress. McLaurin was tabbed on the spot to be her campaign manager.
Charles McLaurin told the Wabash audience that he was pleased to be invited to campus because it allowed him to recall fond memories, which made him both laugh and cry. He told a lot of funny stories that perhaps softened the cruelty and injustice he suffered in 1963-64. And his funny stories — particularly one about a retired sharecropper named Joe McDonald — had his old buddy Tracy Sugarman cracking up.