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August 18, 2019






          ⬤ Feb. 12, 1946: Isaac        Woodard, a decorated 26-year-old Army sergeant, is severely
          beaten b
                      y white police officers while taking a bus to meet his wife. He is still wearing






          his uniform. Accused of drinking with other soldiers on the bus, Woodard is

          arrested on a charge of drunk and disorderly conduct and denied medical assistance.




          The attack leaves him permanently blind.



                                           Keep an eye on the restrooms. They’ve always come for us through


                                         them. ’Cuz    who doesn’t ever have to use one? Straight peeps and
                                         trans peeps, black peeps and   white peeps, we all have to go sometime.



                                         And back in the day, if   the Colored Only signs didn’t work or weren’t


                                                  still had black folks having the audacity to put on a uniform
                                         enough, or


                                         and go fight in a war     — let’s call this one World War II — they found




                                         other   ways to come for us.
                                           Feb. 12, 1946, 17 years to the day before I   was born — and when I was





                                         born, know those Colored Only signs   were still up all over the South
                                         — a South I
                                                   would live in until I was 7 years old — Sgt. Isaac Woodard,






                                         in full uniform, boarded a bus in Georgia, heading home to his   wife in



                                         Winnsboro, S.C. Ninety-eight miles away from the town in   which I was





                                         raised, Sergeant   Woodard asked the driver if there was time to use the





                                         restroom.   This was near Augusta, S.C., where the driver said, ‘‘Hell no.’’

                                         And then there was an argument.   And the driver conceding with a ‘‘Go
                                         ahead then, but hurry back.’’




                                           Keep an eye on the history of black   veterans in America. On the


                                         thousands that    were attacked, assaulted, killed. Because they were


                                         black. Because they   were in uniform. Because they had the audacity to


                                         believe that leaving this country to fight for   it would indeed make it a




                                         better place for them to return to.




                                           Keep an eye on a   white Southern bus driver conceding to a black

                                         man.   At a later stop, Sergeant Woodard was ordered off the bus by






                                         the local chief of police, Lynwood Shull, and another officer. Lynwood


                                         beat him blind.   Two months later, Woodard’s family moved him from

                                         the   V.A. hospital in Columbia, S.C., to New York City. At trial, Shull





                                         admitted to blinding   Woodard. After 30 minutes of deliberation, an

                                         all-white jury acquitted him.

                                           Keep an eye on the long, bleak   legacy of police brutality against




                                         black   men. It happened in America. It happened when many of us

                                         were living. It happened again and again.   And as Woodard himself


                                         said, ‘‘Negro   veterans that fought in this war … don’t realize that the


                                         real battle has just begun in   America.’’





                                              It happened on a Greyhound bus. To a man who was just trying to

                                         get himself home.
                               Woodson
          By Jacqueline
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