Monday, July 17, 2017

50 Years Ago This Week: Newark Rebellion Featured in Time Magazine
Lily Rothman
9:00 AM ET

Milestone moments do not a year make. Often, it’s the smaller news stories that add up, gradually, to big history. With that in mind, in 2017 TIME History will revisit the entire year of 1967, week by week, as it was reported in the pages of TIME. Catch up on last week’s installment here.

Week 29: July 21, 1967

In the wake of rioting that had swept the city of Newark, N.J., the magazine devoted its cover story to the question of what had sparked the conflagration and what was to be learned from one of the most violent race riots of the decade.

The proximate cause was relatively easy to explain: A cab driver named John Smith, pictured on the cover, was arrested after a minor traffic incident. As he was brought to the police station, a rumor spread that he had been killed by the police. Neighbors, many of them residents of a nearby housing project, gathered outside the station, hoping to find out more. With no sign of Smith (who was beaten but not in fact killed), eventually the crowd began to throw stones at the station windows. The National Guard was called in and a state of emergency declared. The situation escalated, with looting and violence, and over the course of the following days 26 people were killed.

"The very triviality of the riot's immediate cause made the Newark outburst particularly terrifying," TIME attested. "It seemed to say that a dozen or so people could be killed in almost any city, any night, by the purest chance."

In the very same article, however, the magazine showed that such an idea — that the cause was "trivial" — spoke to a lack of understanding of the situation. Yes, it did seem slightly random that this particular incident with John Smith would have resulted in dozens of deaths. But while it certainly took an element of chance to bring Newark to boil on that day rather than some other, Smith's arrest, to those watching from within the community, wasn't a small thing. Instead, it was just one more example of what life was like in a majority-black city with a majority-white police force, facing budget cuts to critical assistance programs and urban-development proposals that would have displaced them from their homes.

As NAACP executive director Roy Wilkins explained, concentrating on quelling unrest wouldn't prevent future incidents if the problem of injustice was not also addressed. And, real as the progress that had been achieved in the prior decade was, that didn't mean further progress could wait.
"In his desire for 'more,' the Negro has joined the rest of the crowd," TIME noted. "But in his realization that he has a terribly long way to go before he will have as much as most whites — in jobs, in homes and in schooling he has become social tinder, easily kindled."

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