a special feature the summer daily 'Fighatintg for human rights and dignlity' NIGHT ED )ITOR: NADINE COHODAS CHARLESTON Blacks strike S Carolina autocracy By JUDY SARASOHN, CHRIS STEELE and RON LANDSMAN CHARLESTON, CHARLESTON, S.C., Rep. Mendel Riv- er's (D )city 'and one of the world's most heavily armed metropolises with its Polaris base and Navy shipyard, is' under seige by a strike of the black community. This city is fondly remembered as the social mecca of the south but ex- cept for about five blocks of the beau- tiful old southern mansions, Charles- 'ton is a grungey town polluted with a heavy industrial smog and a strong will "to keep the blacks in their place." However,, Charleston's blacks have left their "place," and the black non- professignal 'workers-hospital order- lies, cooks, attendants, nurse's Aides, and laundry workers-who, perform needed, menial tasks have walked out of the two largest hospitals in the city. It's no wonder that blacks are "leav- ing their place" as they are usually paid only $1.30 an hour, a raise from the 90c an hour they were earning up to February of this year. They receive no fringe benefits. Although the majority of strikers are sole supporters of three- to five-child- ren families, no one is going hungry yet. Besides community support and the strike fund, many strikers have ap- plied for and received food stamps. In, fact most, strikers were eligible for, food stamps even before they went on strike. '[HE CHARLESTON strike is one of a new breed that has hit the South in the last two years. The strikers are the blacks who do the menial jobs for local and state governments. They are' being helped by the two allies of the liberal tradition-the unions and the civil rights organization Rev. Martin Luther Kings' death was the price paid to settle a similar com- munity strike in Memphis,. In Charles- ton, the black hospital workers are a long way off from getting any of their demand s-higher wages, better work- ing conditions, fringe benefits, and at least informal bargaining rights. But, they are not striking alone-- virtually the entire black community of Charleston is on strike with them. The 500-plus striking hospital workers enjoy physical and financial as well as moral support from the black com- munity.. The hospital workers in Charleston have been organizing for more than a year now. They began by holding "gripe" sessions among the mostly women workers. No one took them seriously at first. Dr. William McCord, head of the S. C. Medical College Hospital - the first hospital to be struck -Pnly replied with a few jokes and an anti-union memo to the hospital staff. It was then that local blacks re- quested help from New York City Local 1199 of the Retail, Wholesale, and Department Store Workers Union (RWDSU), the Hospital sand Nursing Home Union; the Charleston "union" then gained at least unrecognized le- gitimacy, and organizing became more earnest. MORE THAN 200 blacks walked out of the college hospital when 12 members, including the president of the new union Local 1199B were fired late in Ma ch. Another 300 employes at the Charleston County Hospital walked out eight days later. The Charleston blackiwill begin the tenth week of their strike. Since the walkout, the strikers have not limited themselves to the 10-pickets-20-feet- apart-injunction. Knowing that the, blacks would not obey a full injunction, the court issued this compromise in- junction right after the walkout. The strikers plan daily activities to harass and presure the white es- knew they would have to make sac- rifices."? Shop-ins are the strikers' best form of harassnient. A crowd of would-be shoppers descends on several stores and spendsthe entire afternoon trying on clothes and keeping clerks busy. Nobody buys. High school students are also an integral part of the strike. Besides boycotting classes for two weeks and joining their parents, teenagers stage their own sing-in-carolling the state police who line the streets outside the stores. THERE ARE SIGNS that the strikers' effect is being felt. A number of white businessmen are reportedly sup- porting the strike, at least covertly, in an attempt to ease the financial strain. "If strikers march by his store," claims Mary, "the store owner will im- mediately call, 'I donated money, why are you people ignoring my store?"' To keep the community spirits from flagging, the union holds nightly ral- lies at different churches in Charles- ton to keep identity and a feeling of purpose. When Coretta King, widow of the Rev. King and honorary chairman of Local 1199, came to Charleston in late April she spqke to a crowd of nearly 4,000 people. The rallies usually draw at least 400. IT IS CRUCIAL that the strike is a 'fight between communities; for if the blacks were anything less than unified, they would be marked for im- mediate failure. The implications of community or- ganizing as practices here make this strike doubly 'significant and one of the foremost in community move- ments. The Charleston strike is not black power as that idea has developed in the North. This is indicated by the allies the hospital workers choose or are willing to accept, and by their rhetoric. Among their allies are the big unions- the United Auto Workers' Alliance for Labor Action and the AFL-CIO-and their allied Local 1199 But the Charleston strikers are Southern blacks, and thus they are forced to be racially aware of them- selves. Everything they are or do has always been sharply defined as black. They have all the substance of black power, but they don't speak the same militant language. They have not de- veloped the indigenous black power ;spokesmen who have defined the movement in the North. The hospital workers' fight is not strictly an economic one either, al- though this is often hard to differen- tiate since most blacks in Charleston are poor and most poor people are black. However, blacks who are not poor support the strike and whites who are poor don't. 'THE WHITE and black communities are polarized here and the over- whelming presence' of the 1,000 Na- tional Guardsmen and legions of the police force into every. visitor's uncon- sciousness an awareness of the struggle between the white and black commun- ities. These men, ordered into the city by Gov. Robert McNair to preserve law and order when more than ten picket- ers appeared in' front of the county hospital, are the Ku Klux Klanners from upstate areas. These are the men the blacks really fear; these are the men whose presence constantly re- minds the strikers they are venturing from their ."place." AT THE COST of some $12,000 per day-very upsetting to food-stamp blacks-the state police and guards- men are kept in the city's most elegant hotel, the Francis Marion; these are the men who' enforce the city's 11 p.m. to 5 a.m. curfew. News and Courier belabors its hatred of "outside agitators." In a two-part series, the paper ran a detailed run down of some obscure "communist" connections of the president and vice president of Local 1199, 40 years ago, and a detailed examination of how the dying national labor unions were making last gasp efforts to save them- selves by joining the civil rights move- ment. The Courrier's blatant Red-baiting, anti-union front page pieces com- pletely ignored the real issues facing blacks and whites in Charleston.- As far as the blacks are concerned, they "don't give a damn about Com- munists," says Henry Nichols, assis- tant director of the National Or- ganizing Committee of the hospital employes union. "They just want their rights." The other local paper, the Evening Post, appeared to be fairer and more rational. The Post published an article focusing on the deveopment and is- sues of the strike, even recognizing that there were valid points of com- plaint by the strikers. However, the strikers claim the Post's fair treatment wasn't quite the rule. The newspapers, however, only re- flect the opposition that is exerted by the government officials in Charleston and the rest of the state. THE BASIS of South Carolina's oppo- sition to the strike is a state attor- ney general's ruling that it is illegal for the state to bargain with a union of state employes because no specific legislation has ever been passed 'to allowasuch negotiations. It is this de- cision especially which angers the hos- pital strikers. "It's South Carolina 'custom' that unions aren't recognized," Isaiah Ben- nett, state director of the hospital workers' organizing committee, bitterly explains. "They know they could recog- nize this union just as soon as they wanted to. It's just the attorney gen- eral's opinion that they hide behind, and that's all, that keeps them from acting.,, The black leaders in Charleston also tend to blame the stalemate on S.C.. College Hospital president McCord. "We can talk to every politician in the state," says Bennett, "and they're as cordial and gentlemanly as possible. But it's McCord who won't talk to us, and he's the one that counts." HOWEVER, other sources indicate that it isn't McCord who is de- laying the beginning of talks with the union, but South Carolina Gov. Robert McNair. It was McNair who blasted a com- mittee set up by Mayor J. Palmer Gail- lard, saying, "No committee appointed ... has any right, nor can any com- mittee appointed compromise the pol- icy of South Carolina in reference to collective bargaining or union recog- nition." McNair's comments came after a bi- racial committee set up by the mayor reported making some progress toward settling the strike. It isn't just the unionization of gov- ernment employes that makes McNair adamant, though. I James Wooten, writing in the New York Times May 10, said informed sources indicated the governor' is "acting out of loyalty to the state's anti-union industrial in- terests and a resolve not to allow civil rights leaders to gain a foothold or victory." One of South Carolina's big attrac- tions to northern industrialists think- ing about moving south is its supply of cheap and quiet labor. South Caro- lina is one of 18 states with "right-to- work" laws-laws that forbid closed- shop unions. But McNair's position is made more untenable by statements made by Local 1199 Vice President Elliot Godoff pub- workers would lead to a rash of other union demands. The state would be hard-pressed to deny any once it rec- ognized one union. McNAIR IS implacable, nonetheless, and so far the considerable moral support for the \strikers coming from outside Charleston has merely infuri- ated him and made hime more visibly opposed to the strike. A. month after the strike began a group of 14 civil rights leaders wrote to McNair asking him to recognize the union. The letter had a sterling collec- tion of black spokesmen, including Mrs. King, Roy Wilkins of the NAACP, Roy Innis of CORE, Rep. Shirley Chisoln (D-NY), Rep. John Conyers (D-Mich), Rep. Julian Bond (I)-Ga), and Mayors Richard Hatcher of gary, Ind., and Carl Stokes of Cleveland. The strike, they wrote, "tells much about what is wrong in America today," and they called it a "fight for human rights and human dignity." They were followed a few weeks later by a group of 17 U.S. senators, includ- ing Jacob Javits of New York and Ed, ward Kennedy of Massachusetts, who also penned a letter to McNair. Their senatorial colleagues from South Caro- lina, Strom Thurmond . and Ernest Hollings, along with McNair, were out- raged at the gall of the 17 liberal sen- ators for interfering in the internal af- fairs of their state and quickly issued press releases to that effect. THE STAUNCH opposition of the higher level state government of- ficials is in marked contrast to some local officials, such as the mayor and Charleston Police Chief John Conroy. Conroy has quite a few supporters among the black community for his cool handling of the picketing and other protest activities of the strikers. The negotiated court injunction lim- its the strikers to 10 picketers, spaced 20 yards apart, at each of the two hos- pitals. Conroy enforces the injunction, but he's the antithesis' of the Bull Con- nors' that have given southern sheriffs their brutal reputation. When a local SCLC organizer led picketers in defiance of the injunction Conray spared verbally with him, ex- plaining his obligation to enforce the law, countering the minister's moral arguments as best he could. And Con- roy has earned kind statements from other strike leaders for his care about the handling of picketers before and after they've been arrested. Conroy walks along with the march- ers to insure that none of his police- men or any civilians can harrass then. THE CHARLESTON movement, is sup- ported and organized by the out- side but it is in no way defined by these outside supporters. Rev. James Orange of the SCLC, who was working out of an NAACP office near downtown Charleston, didn't want to talk to re- porters. He wanted them to talk to the community people who were leading the fight. To a certain extent it is a test of the SCLC's value for the 1970's and of the Rev. Ralph Abernathy's leadership. But the SCLC has been careful not to pre-empt the Charleston blacks. One outsider who has been crucial is Nicholas. Nicholas explains the strike was no accident, and that the com- munity support which has helped to sustain the strike was no accident either, but a well-planned scheme for insuring involvement. "We won the support early of the community leaders, the potential Uncle Toms who might have sold us out," Nicholas'says. With verbal support won early in the game, community and or- ganizing committee leaders moved slowly to what in Charleston was an extreme position-the strike. "We made it impossible for anyone, Three against the good state of S. Carolina: hospital workers' state organizer Isiah Bennett (top); Mary, a striking hospital worker; and the SCLC's Rev. James Orange. peting for the allegiance of the hos- pital workers-the AFL-CIO donated $25,000 to the local a few days after UAW President Walter Reuther kicked in $10,000 on behalf of the ALA. And the National Organizing Committee of the hospital workers union has helped with both organizing and money, using its strike fund of more than $350,000. It is supplying the Charleston union with $20,000 a week, according to Nich- olas, which has been used for-among other things-rent payments for the strikers. It is this type of outside help and the strong will of the strikers that really angers the local power structure. TIIS WEEKEND is another big one for the' Charleston hospital strike. With two of the best out-of-town lead- ers in the city-Mrs. King and SCLC's Rev. Abernathy-the strikers are plan- ning the biggest confrontation to date. They expect some 7,000-8,000 adults and students to get arrested for viola- ting the court injunction and the cur- few. They will be, above all, non-violent, as they have always religiously been. One source of difficulty in comparing what is happening in Charleston today JT IS DIFFICULT to know what the the Charleston blacks will do when they have -used these tools to their end. Like the legal tools of the civil, rights movement of the late '50s and early '60s, the social tools they are using cannot themselves produce an egalitarian and just society. Unionizing black orderlies does not lead to staffing country hospitals with black doctors. When Charleston blacks begin to hit their heads against the social walls the black-is-beautiful rhe- toric might be needed to bolster their self-confidence. The question for both the black and white communities in Charleston is where will they- go from there? Hope- fully the white community will drop its racial antagonism and begin to con- front the real issues. If not the blacks may be forced to go the route of com- plete racial separatism and racial hatred. Hopefully again, they may not have to, but only time will tell. A WHITE BOY employed, by a Charle- ston supermarket helps b la c k women home with their groceries from the downtown area. He is paid to be helpful to customers, but it strikes an observer immediately that his actions