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- <text id=93TT2469>
- <title>
- Feb. 08, 1993: Fanfare for an Uncommon Man
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Feb. 08, 1993 Cyberpunk
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- APPRECIATION, Page 32
- Fanfare For an Uncommon Man
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>By RANDALL KENNEDY
- </p>
- <p>Randall Kennedy is a professor at Harvard Law School and
- editor of Reconstruction magazine. He clerked for Justice
- Marshall in 1983.
- </p>
- <p> Last Wednesday, Thurgood Marshall lay in state in the
- Great Hall of the Supreme Court of the U.S. From 10 in the
- morning until 10 that night, a steady flow of people filed past
- his casket, which was draped with a flag and supported by the
- same bier on which Abraham Lincoln's coffin had rested. By
- evening, the number of mourners had reached nearly 20,000.
- </p>
- <p> The Justice would have been surprised by the breadth and
- intensity of this outpouring of gratitude. A strong and
- consistent liberal, he was no sentimentalist. He possessed a
- rather dim view of human nature, a view nurtured by his constant
- battling against social cruelties and reflected by the nature
- of the stories he loved to tell.
- </p>
- <p> The Justice's skillfully rendered tales were seldom sweet.
- He liked to tell his law clerks about the time he confronted a
- "moderate" white-supremacist politician in the Jim Crow South
- with the fact that contrary to the segregationist promise of
- separate but equal facilities for blacks and whites, the whites
- in the state had a school for nursing while the blacks had
- none. The politician told Marshall that he could get the state
- to build a school for blacks, but that Marshall had to allow
- the politician to use his own methods. Marshall agreed,
- whereupon the politician immediately called a press conference
- and announced that he had just witnessed a most sickening
- spectacle: a white female nurse washing the back of a black man.
- The politician then demanded that the state legislature
- immediately appropriate money for "a nigger school" so that this
- sort of thing would not happen again.
- </p>
- <p> The money was appropriated, the school was built, and some
- good was accomplished, albeit by foul means. Justice Marshall's
- telling of this story could elicit laughs. But it also imprinted
- upon the minds of scores of clerks the degradations that the
- Justice--and many millions of other blacks--had had to
- endure.
- </p>
- <p> As a realistic appraiser of human nature, Marshall knew
- that people often quickly forget those things that should never
- be forgotten. When I clerked for him in 1983, I heard him
- bitterly grumble about the way that in his view, many people
- seemed to have forgotten completely the civil rights champions
- of the '30s, '40s and '50s: people like Roy Wilkins, Walter
- White, William Hastie and Charles Hamilton Houston. I got the
- impression that Justice Marshall felt that he too had been
- slighted in favor of those who led the protest demonstrations
- of the '60s, particularly Martin Luther King Jr. At last week's
- memorial services, however, people from all walks of life showed
- their appreciation of how indelibly he has marked our society.
- Beneath a portrait of the Justice that was displayed alongside
- his casket, a mourner placed a copy of the Supreme Court's
- opinion in Brown v. Board of Education, the landmark case in
- which Marshall the lawyer successfully argued that the
- Constitution prohibits racial segregation in public schooling.
- At the bottom of the first page of the opinion, the anonymous
- admirer wrote, "You shall always be remembered."
- </p>
- <p> As I stood with other clerks and family members beside
- Justice Marshall's casket, my own memories grew more vivid: his
- delightfully unfashionable dress (the Justice often wore white
- socks with black shoes); his way of letting clerks know that
- their advocacy for a certain course of action had degenerated
- from advice to nuisance ("I'm the one who was nominated by
- President Lyndon B. Johnson and confirmed by the Senate of the
- United States...not you); his insistence upon using the word
- Negro to identify an African American (though recently he had
- begun to use the term Afro-American); his deep and passionate
- sympathy for all downtrodden people; the uniqueness of his
- questioning of attorneys at oral argument (in a case involving
- the constitutionality of a regulation prohibiting people from
- sleeping in public parks, the Justice asked the Deputy Solicitor
- General whether he had ever been homeless).
- </p>
- <p> The Justice entertained his clerks for hours by recalling
- the wide range of people he had come to know throughout his
- life. He could talk as easily about his encounters with Duke
- Ellington (whom he liked and admired) as he could about his
- testy confrontations with General Douglas MacArthur (whom he
- disliked and considered a racist). To a remarkable extent, he
- inoculated himself against the tiresome affectations that often
- afflict famous, high-achieving people. He didn't stand on
- formality (clerks simply called him "Judge"; he often called us
- "Knucklehead" and shared his macadamia nuts when our work
- pleased him). He spoke cordially to everyone, high and low,
- though his unpretentiousness sometimes tempted people to
- underestimate him. Every time I did, he caught me. Late in the
- court's term, I wrote a draft of an opinion in which, in an
- obscure footnote, I proceeded to grind my own little ax. He
- returned the draft quickly, having etched a big X across the
- offending text.
- </p>
- <p> At the end of my year with Justice Marshall, a year in
- which he found himself on the losing side of many of the cases
- that meant the most to him, particularly those involving
- capital punishment, I asked whether he felt discouraged by the
- court's increasingly conservative tilt. He told me that he did
- not, that he had seen a lot worse than was remotely conceivable
- nowadays, that the progressive changes wrought by the civil
- rights revolution would prove more lasting than the reaction
- against them, and that, in any event, hand wringing was a futile
- response to challenge.
- </p>
- <p> I thought of his words as the Howard University choir led
- the congregation in singing Lift Every Voice and Sing, long
- known as the Negro National Anthem, at the conclusion of the
- service that was held at the National Cathedral the day after
- the Supreme Court's memorial ceremony. As the pallbearers slowly
- rolled the Justice's casket across the cathedral's floor, I
- imagined that he would have especially appreciated this stanza:
- </p>
- <p> Stony the road we trod,
- </p>
- <p> Bitter the chastening rod,
- </p>
- <p> Felt in the days when hope unborn
- </p>
- <p> had died;
- </p>
- <p> Yet with a steady beat,
- </p>
- <p> Have not our weary feet
- </p>
- <p> Come to the place for which our
- </p>
- <p> parents sighed?
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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