In February 1960, four young...
Illustration
In February 1960, four young African-American college students decided to integrate a segregated Woolworth's lunch counter in Nashville, Tennessee. It was not an easy decision, for they realized the personal risks. They were scared, yet they knew it needed to be done. They walked from a church to Woolworth's, heads held high, courage masking the inner fears and doubts. At the counter they faced the indignity of racial epithets and ketchup and coffee poured on them. Reading the story after decades of slow advancement in racial relations, it is easy to wish that people had known then what they know now. It is easy to wish that the story had ended with decent townspeople coming to the aid of these courageous students. But that is not the way it was in Nashville in 1960. Comfort with the present order and fear of change led to opposition at lunch counter after lunch counter, place after place. If they had only known then what many have learned since, they would not have crucified the Lord of glory in Jerusalem, or anew in Nashville in 1960.
-- Olson
-- Olson
