Anne Braden

Album: Fight With Tools (2007)
Play Video
  • [Spoken]
    What I've realized since is that it's a very painful process but it is not destructive. It's the road to liberation. The what really happened in the sixties was that this country took just the first step toward admitting that it had been wrong on race, and creativity burst out in all directions.

    From the color of the faces in Sunday songs
    To the hatred they raised all the youngsters on
    Once upon a time in this country, long ago
    She knew there was something wrong
    Because the song said "yellow, red, black, and white
    Every one precious in the path of Christ"
    But what about the daughter
    Of the woman cleaning their house?
    Wasn't she a child they were singin' about?

    And if Jesus loves us, black and white skin
    Why didn't her white mother invite them in?
    When did it become a room for no blacks to step in?
    How did she already know not to ask the question?
    Left lasting impressions
    At a lesson, comfort's gone
    She never thought things would ever change
    But she always knew there was something wrong

    Always knew there was somethin' wrong.
    She always knew there was somethin' wrong

    Years later, she found herself
    Mississippi bound to help
    Stop the legalized lynching of Mr. Willy McGee
    But they couldn't stop it
    So they thought that they'd talk to the governor about what'd happened
    And say, "We're tired of being used as an excuse to kill black men"
    But the cops wouldn't let 'em past
    And these women, they struck 'em as uppity
    So they hauled 'em all off to jail
    And they called in protective custody

    Then from her cell
    She heard her jailers
    Grumblin' about "outsiders"
    When she called 'em out
    And said she was from the south, they shouted,
    "Why is a nice, Southern lady makin' trouble
    For the governor?"
    She said, "I guess I'm not your type of lady
    And I guess I'm not your type of Southerner
    But before you call me traitor,
    Well it's plain as just to say
    I was a child in Mississippi
    But I'm ashamed of it today"

    She always knew there was somethin' wrong
    She always knew there was somethin' wrong
    She always knew there was somethin' wrong
    She always knew there was somethin' wrong
    ([spoken] And, all of a sudden, I realized I was on the other side)

    Imagine the world that you're standing within
    All of your neighbors, they're family-friends
    How would you cope facing the fact
    The flesh on their hands was tainted with sin?
    She faced this every day
    People she saw on a regular basis
    People she loved, in several cases
    People she knew were incredibly racist

    It was painful, but she never stopped loving them
    Never stopped callin' their names
    And she never stopped being a Southern woman
    And she never stopped fighting for change
    And she saw that her struggle was
    in the tradition of ancestors never aware of her
    It continues today:
    The soul of a Southerner
    born of the other America

    She always knew there was somethin' wrong
    She always knew there was somethin' wrong
    She always knew there was somethin' wrong
    She always knew there was somethin' wrong

    [Spoken]
    What you win in the immediate battles is little compared to the effort you put into it but if you see that as a part of this total movement to build a new world, you know what could be (????? "oooh, ooooh"). You do have a choice. You don't have to be a part of the world of the lynchers. You can join the other America. There is another America! Writer/s: ANDREW GUERRERO, JAMIE LAURIE, JESSE WALKER, KENNETH ORTIZ, MACKENZIE ROBERTS, STEPHEN BRACKETT
    Publisher: Bluewater Music Corp.
    Lyrics licensed and provided by LyricFind

Comments: 1

  • Helena from Bealeton, Albaniai LOVE this song!!! my brother got me into flobots and now there 1 of my favorite bands
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