Civil rights icon Benjamin Hooks, who boosted NAACP, dead at 85

by Lucas Johnson II

NASHVILLE (AP)—Civil rights leader Benjamin L. Hooks, who shrugged off courtroom slurs as a young lawyer before earning a pioneering judgeship and later reviving a flagging NAACP, died April 15 in Memphis. He was 85.

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HIGHEST CIVILIAN HONOR—President George W. Bush presents the Presidential Medal of Freedom to civil rights pioneer Benjamin Hooks, during a ceremony in the East Room of the White House in Washington Nov. 5, 2007.


Across the country, political leaders and Hooks’ peers in the Civil Rights Movement remembered his remarkably wide-ranging accomplishments and said he’d want the fight for social justice to continue. State Rep. Ulysses Jones, a member of the church where Hooks was pastor, said Hooks died at his home following a long illness.

“Our national life is richer for the time Dr. Hooks spent on this earth,” President Barack Obama said in a statement. “And our union is more perfect for the way he spent it: Giving a voice to the voiceless.”

Hooks took over as the NAACP’s executive director at a time when the organization’s stature had diminished in 1977. Years removed from the civil rights battles of the 1960s, the group was $1 million in debt and its membership had shrunk to 200,000 members from nearly a half-million a decade earlier.

“Black Americans are not defeated,” he told Ebony magazine soon after his induction. “The Civil Rights Movement is not dead. If anyone thinks that we are going to stop agitating, they had better think again. If anyone thinks that we are going to stop litigating, they had better close the courts. If anyone thinks that we are not going to demonstrate and protest, they had better roll up the sidewalks.”

By the time he left as executive director in 1992, the group had rebounded, with membership growing by several hundred thousand. He used community radiothons to raise awareness of local NAACP branches’ work and to boost membership.

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LANDMARK RULING—Linda Brown Smith, left, the plaintiff in the case that resulted in the 1954 landmark ruling in favor of school desegregation, and Benjamin L. Hooks are shown on the steps of the South Carolina State House during ceremonies observing the 25th anniversary of the U.S. Supreme Court’s ruling in Columbus, S.C. May 17, 1979.


“He came in at a time the NAACP was struggling and gave it a strong foundation. He brought dignity and strong leadership to the organization,” Jones said.

Current NAACP President Benjamin Jealous recalled a speech Hooks gave last year that was “as fiery as any he’s given 50 years earlier,” despite Hooks’ diminished health at the time.

“Right up to the last, he conveyed…the need for us to fight,” Jealous said.

State Rep. John Deberry, a fellow minister and chairman of the Tennessee Black Caucus, said Hooks’ passing is a sobering reminder that “we are losing an incredible generation of men and women who changed the world.”

“And I hope that all these young folks who accept their rights with such a cavalier attitude, those who are disrespectful to their seniors, those who go to these schools and misuse the opportunities…realize that as these men and women move off the scene, that somebody has to step up,” Deberry said.

Hooks’ inspiration to fight social injustice and bigotry stemmed from his experience guarding Italian prisoners of war while serving overseas in the Army during World War II. Foreign prisoners were allowed to eat in “for whites only” restaurants while he was barred from them.

When no law school in the South would admit him, he used the GI bill to attend DePaul University in Chicago, where he earned a law degree in 1948. He later opened his own law practice in his hometown of Memphis.

“At that time you were insulted by law clerks, excluded from White bar associations and when I was in court, I was lucky to be called ‘Ben,’” he once said in an interview with Jet magazine. “Usually it was just ‘boy.’”

In 1965 he was appointed to a newly created seat on the Tennessee Criminal Court, making him the first Black judge since Reconstruction in a state trial court anywhere in the South.

President Richard Nixon nominated Hooks to the Federal Communications Commission in 1972. He was its first Black commissioner, serving for five years before resigning to lead the NAACP.

At the FCC, he addressed the lack of minority leadership in media and persuaded the commission to propose a new rule requiring TV and radio stations to be offered publicly before they could be sold. Minority employment in broadcasting grew from 3 percent to 15 percent during his tenure.

In the waning years of his leadership of the NAACP, Hooks pressed then-President George H.W. Bush for action on a string of gasoline bomb attacks in the South that killed a federal judge in Alabama and a Black civil rights lawyer in Georgia in December 1989. The same month, another bomb was intercepted at an NAACP office in Jacksonville, Fla.

“We believe that this latest incident is an effort to intimidate our association, to strike fear in our hearts,” Hooks said at the time. “It will not succeed. We intend to go about our business, but we will most certainly be taking precautions.”

The man later convicted of the killings and other charges remains on Alabama’s death row.

Hooks later was chairman of the board of directors of the National Civil Rights Museum in Memphis and helped create The Benjamin L. Hooks Institute for Social Change at the University of Memphis.

He also created an initiative that gave more employment opportunities to Blacks in Major League Baseball and launched a program in which corporations supported development projects in Black communities.

President George W. Bush in 2007 presented Hooks with the Presidential Medal of Freedom, one of the country’s highest civilian honors.

“Dr. Hooks was a calm yet forceful voice for fairness, opportunity and personal responsibility,” Bush said in 2007. “He never tired or faltered in demanding that our nation live up to its founding ideals of liberty and equality.”

In his last keynote speech to an NAACP national conv
ention in 1992, Hooks urged members who had found financial success to never forget those less fortunate.

“Remember,” he said, “that down in the valley where crime abounds and dope proliferates…where babies are having babies, our brothers and sisters are crying to us, ‘Is anyone listening? Does anyone care?’”

The Detroit News reported that Hooks’ body would lie in repose April 19 at the Greater New Mount Moriah Baptist Church, where he was pastor from 1964 to 1994. The funeral was scheduled at 11 a.m. April 21 at Bountiful Blessings Temple of Deliverance Church of God in Christ in Memphis. The burial will take place at Elmwood Cemetery.

(Associated Press writers Joe Edwards in Nashville, Yvette Blackman in New York, Daniel Yee in Atlanta contributed to this report.)

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