There went the rallying point for unity.
No longer were the churches calling our for unity.
The churches focused on sweet Jesus.
Without the church pushing for unity and actions of self-determination, there is no Civil Rights Movement of the 1950s and 60s. Dr. Eloise Hooker, recounting the nature of the mindset of Africans in the area in Tulsa, Oklahoma now called Black Wall Street.
”...all the entrepreneurs worked together...the people of Greenwood were inclined to stick together, I mean they'd go an extra mile to buy something in my dad's clothing store or by something in the Man's Grocery Store. They were very very loyal to the entrepreneurs that were out there and the ministers in the churches emphasized that. Through thrift and foresight was what they had most of, not money but they helped each other.” (min 3:15)In terms of a plan, it really is that simple.
Why do you need a leader to do this?
Why do you need to be unified to do this?
Justice is to do just it, Just do it.
Give yourself justice by doing what you know you should do by helping each other and working together.