The Powerful Voice of Civil Rights Icon Bill Lawson

Steven Visneau
LL3-811x1024
LL3-811x1024

Among the voices speaking to a crowd of tens of thousands gathered around City Hall in honor of George Floyd yesterday was the steady, reassuring one belonging to Bill Lawson. Charismatic and kind, the pastor and civil rights icon, 91, came to Houston from the Midwest in 1955 as the director of TSU’s Baptist Student Union, and went on to become the city’s greatest advocate for African Americans, Hispanics, women and the poor.


Lawson — whom CityBook honored last year in our Leaders & Legends portrait series, from which this fantastic photo by Steven Visneau was pulled — could not easily be heard over the passionate protestors, but that, Lawson implied, was exactly the point of the entire afternoon. As his fellow advocates and community leaders tried to quiet the crowd from the stage, Lawson pleaded, “They need to make noise.” He added, “You’ve been quiet for a long time.”

“I have seen the civil rights movement from Rosa Parks until today,” Lawson said from his wheelchair. “I see you determined not simply to have three officers prosecuted, but to change the life of these United States. And the people who march with you who are people no longer in simply Minneapolis, no longer in Houston. But all over the world.”

Lawson also urged the people to remember that the movement extends beyond yesterday’s march. “We have to make sure that something is done on Wednesday, and on Thursday, and next week, and the week following that,” he said.

He did, however, commend the day’s events, lauding the organizers and, in particular, Mayor Turner. “This is no longer just a black parade,” he said. “This is a parade of all kinds of races and cultures, and you have been heard. Maybe nobody had heard you before, but with the death of this one, simple Houston man, you have been heard. And the noise will not go down.”

Dispatches

Helen Winchell, Marti Grizzle, Brittany Franklin, Jensen Wessendorff

HUNDREDS OF TREE-LOVING Houstonians savored and celebrated the good life at the La Dolce Vita-themed, 30th-annual Root Ball benefiting Trees for Houston.

Keep Reading Show less
Parties

Leah Lax

A PANICKED MOTHER traveling by foot from El Salvador to reach the U.S.-Mexico border rubs crushed garlic cloves on her skin to ward off the cottonmouth snakes crawling over her legs. A group of half-starved teenage Vietnamese refugees on a boat they hoped would ferry them to safety huddle together as pirates board and steal all their possessions. At a UN Refugee Office, a father of six and a member of the Movement for the Survival of the Ogoni People (a minority ethnic group based in southern Nigeria) whose leadership had been executed by a corrupt Nigerian government, is granted emergency refugee status. The interviewer reaches into her pocket and hands him money to smuggle his family out of Nigeria.

Keep Reading Show less
Art + Entertainment