Clifford Bell could not catch every word. He was in a thick crowd around the reflecting pool in Washington, D.C., doing his best to hear the amplified voice of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. as it rolled across an audience almost as large as todayโs entire population of Buffalo.
Yet something in that 1963 delivery to more than 250,000 people โ in conscience, force and sheer love โ went straight to Bellโs core. In later days and months, by film or article, he would come to appreciate every sentence in Kingโs March on Washington speech, eternally known by four words:
โThis was a congregation,โ said Bell โ โBrother Bellโ to generations in Buffalo, a community extension of his presence in the church โ wrapping together a kind of grace that united the crowd, Black and white.
The violent history of legal or de facto racism, of Jim Crow segregation, โcould get people discouraged because it seemed your efforts werenโt getting you anywhere,โ Bell said.
At that moment, for so many weary or scarred from the long struggle, denominations did not matter: With that speech, Bell said, King โreinforced our faith.โ
That was 60 years ago Monday. Bell was 33, and in the dry cleaning business. He and John Mayo, a close friend then and now, climbed on one of the buses lined up by the Buffalo branch of the NAACP.
The two men recall traveling all night, eating packed lunches, in order to be there on time.
โJust amazing,โ Bell said, โto see so many people, in so many directions.โ
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