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He worked as a security guard at a mall near her home in Meridian, Mississippi. But Lewis knew him as someone else – the man who murdered the father that she had never known.
He was called Lawrence Rainey and was part of a group of men arrested in the infamous "Mississippi Burning" murders of three young civilians. Rainey, who was a Mississippi sheriff at the time of the murders, was arrested but later acquitted by a white jury. He will live openly in Mississippi until his death in 2002 at age 79, widely regarded as someone who took part in these infamous murders and got out of it with him.
Lewis was born a week after the murder of his father and did not learn how he died until the age of 13. She kept her identity secret as a young woman. When the murders were raised in her high school history class, she said nothing.
She did the same every time she walked by Rainey in the mall.
"I do not think he has ever changed," said Lewis, who became a nurse and married a policeman. "I do not think that a conversation would have changed, according to what I heard, he was still talking to us about" n ". "
I interviewed Lewis for a book years ago and I thought about his story when I heard this week that the federal government had reopened its investigation into the murder of Emmett Till in 1955. The 14-year-old black man was murdered in Mississippi for allegedly flirting with a white woman
Two men were arrested in the murder of Emmett but were acquitted less than a month later by an all-white jury, knowing that the double jeopardy laws prohibited them from being tried again, they confessed to the murder a year later in an interview with Look magazine.
Now the Department of Justice says it reopens the investigation, 63 years after the murder, based on new information: A central witness has apparently changed its story.
Most of the recent stories about Emmett Till deal with the same themes: the legal challenges of resuscitating civil rights cases; the relevance of his murder in an era of "Black Lives Matter"; the impact of these macabre images of Emmett on the psyche of African Americans.
Yet there is another side to stories like Till that we rarely talk about:
How did family members cope with pain see the killers of their loved ones released or slapped at the wrists by all-white juries?
And even worse, how did they cope with bumping into these men again and again in their communities for years?
& # 39; She was to serve him coffee & # 39;
Many Americans assume that the killers of people like Emmett Till have been brought to justice. Massive publicity usually included such cases, investigations were launched, and in many cases people knew who the killers were.
The truth is much uglier. Many have been celebrated as heroes – the pillars of their community – while family members of the victims have been treated as lepers and driven out of their community
"The cities of the South over the last six or seven decades have been well populated by whites who have killed blacks and pulled out of them," says Hank Klibanoff, Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist whose podcast, "In one of the most notorious cases, four black girls were killed in 1963 when members of the Ku Klux Klan planted sticks of dynamite in the 16th Street Baptist Church in Birmingham, Alabama The investigators quickly appealed to four suspects, but the FBI filed the case five years later without filing a complaint. 1977 that one of the suspects was tried and re Two others were eventually sentenced in the early 2000s.
Klibanoff remembers a case of a black man who was beaten to death by police in a southern city. . The same sheriff widely known for committing the murder often visited a cafe where the black man's sister was working.
"And she had to serve him coffee," said Klibanoff.
People forget the psychic tribute that she took – and still takes – on people like her.
Some have survived their faith.
"That's what the families themselves brought them. ", Said Klibanoff." It was a deep religious foundation for some, they are deeply spiritual people, they control their emotions a lot and do not let their anger devour them alive. "