C.P. Ellis was born in 1927 and was 53-years-old at the time of this interview with Studs
Terkel. For Terkel, America's foremost oral historian, this remains the most memorable and moving of all the interviews he's done in a career spanning more than seven decades, for C.P. Ellis had once been the exalted cyclops
of the Ku Klux Klan in Durham, N.C. During the interview, Terkel learned
that Ellis had been born extremely poor in Durham, North
Carolina; had struggled all his life to feed his family; had
felt shut out of American society and had joined the Klan
to feel like somebody. But later he got involved in a local
school issue and reluctantly, gradually, began to work on a
committee with a black activist named Ann Atwater,
whom he despised at the time. Eventually, after
many small epiphanies, he realized that they shared a
common concern for their children, common goals as
human beings. More surprising still, Ellis became a union organizer for a janitor's union—a long way from his personal philosophical roots. The Ellis-Atwater story is best documented in The Best of Enemies, a book by Osha Gray Davidson that tells of the unlikely friendship that developed between Ann and C.P. Ellis, when they first met in the 1960's. Apparently, their commonalities as oppressed human beings proved far stronger than the racial hatred that initially divided them.
All my life, I had work, never a day without work, worked all the overtime I could get
and still could not survive financially. I began to see there's something wrong with this
country. I worked my butt off and just never seemed to break even. I had some real
great ideas about this nation. They say to abide by the law, go to church, do right and live
for the Lord, and everything'll work out. But it didn't work out. It just kept getting worse
and worse...
Tryin' to come out of that hole, I just couldn't do it. I really began to get bitter. I didn't
know who to blame. I tried to find somebody. Hating America is hard to do because you
can't see it to hate it. You gotta have somethin' to look at to hate. The natural person for
me to hate would be Black people, because my father before me was a member of the
Klan...
So I began to admire the Klan... To be part of somethin'. ... The first night I went
with the fellas . . . I was led into a large meeting room, and this was the time of my life!
It was thrilling. Here's a guy who's worked all his life and struggled all his life to be
something, and here's the moment to be something. I will never forget it. Four robed
Klansmen led me into the hall. The lights were dim and the only thing you could see was
an illuminated cross... After I had taken my oath, there was loud applause goin' throughout the buildin', musta been at least 400 people. For this one little ol person. It was a
thrilling moment for C. P. Ellis...
The majority of [the Klansmen] are low-income Whites, people who really don't
have a part in something. They have been shut out as well as Blacks. Some are not very
well educated either. Just like myself. We had a lot of support from doctors and lawyers
and police officers.
Maybe they've had bitter experiences in this life and they had to hate somebody. So
the natural person to hate would be the Black person. He's beginnin to come up, he's
beginnin' to . . . start votin' and run for political office. Here are White people who are
supposed to be superior to them, and we're shut out... Shut out. Deep down inside, we
want to be part of this great society. Nobody listens, so we join these groups...
We would go to the city council meetings and the Blacks would be there and we'd
be there. It was a confrontation every time... We began to make some inroads with the
city councilmen and county commissioners. They began to call us friend. Call us at night
on the telephone: "C. P., glad you came to that meeting last night." They didn't want
integration either, but they did it secretively, in order to get elected. They couldn't stand
up openly and say it, but they were glad somebody was sayin it. We visited some of the
city leaders in their homes and talked to em privately. It wasn't long before councilmen
would call me up: “The Blacks are comin up tonight and makin outrageous demands.
How about some of you people showin up and have a little balance?
We'd load up our cars and we'd fill up half the council chambers, and the Blacks the
other half. During these times, I carried weapons to the meetings, outside my belt. We'd
go there armed. We would wind up just hollerin' and fussin' at each other. What happened? As a result of our fightin' one another, the city council still had their way. They
didn't want to give up control to the Blacks nor the Klan. They were usin' us.
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I began to realize this later down the road. One day I was walkin' downtown and a certain city council member saw me comin. I expected him to shake my hand because he was talkin' to me at night on the telephone. I had been in his home and visited with him. He crossed the street [to avoid me]... I began to think, somethin's wrong here. Most of 'em are merchants or maybe an attorney, an insurance agent, people like that. As long as they kept low-income Whites and low-income Blacks fightin', they're gonna maintain control. I began to get that feelin' after I was ignored in public. I thought: . . . you're not gonna use me any more. That's when I began to do some real serious thinkin'. |
Ann Atwater and C.P. Ellis, in fraternal times |
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The same thing is happening in this country today. People are being used by those in
control, those who have all the wealth. I'm not espousing communism. We got the greatest
system of government in the world. But those who have it simply don't want those who
don't have it to have any part of it. Black and White. When it comes to money, the green,
the other colors make no difference.
I spent a lot of sleepless nights. I still didn't like Blacks. I didn't want to associate with
them. Blacks, Jews, or Catholics. My father said: "Don't have anything to do with 'em." I
didn't until I met a Black person and talked with him, eyeball to eyeball, and met a Jewish
person and talked to him, eyeball to eyeball. I found they're people just like me. They
cried, they cussed, they prayed, they had desires. Just like myself. Thank God, I got to the
point where I can look past labels. But at that time, my mind was closed.
I remember one Monday night Klan meeting. I said something was wrong. Our city
fathers were using us. And I didn't like to be used. The reactions of the others was not too
pleasant: "Let's just keep fightin' them niggers."
I'd go home at night and I'd have to wrestle with myself. I'd look at a Black person
walkin' down the street, and the guy'd have ragged shoes or his clothes would be worn.
That began to do something to me inside. I went through this for about six months. I felt I
just had to get out of the Klan. But I wouldn't get out...
[Ellis was invited, as a Klansman, to join a committee of people from all walks of life
to make recommendations on how to solve racial problems in the school system. He very
reluctantly accepted. After a few stormy meetings, he was elected co-chair of the committee, along with Ann Atwater, a combative Black woman who for years had been leading local
efforts for civil rights.]
A Klansman and a militant Black woman, co-chairmen of the school committee. It
was impossible. How could I work with her? But it was in our hands. We had to make it a
success. This gave me another sense of belongin', a sense of pride. This helped the
inferiority feeling I had. A man who has stood up publicly and said he despised Black
people, all of a sudden he was willin' to work with 'em. Here's a chance for a low-income
White man to be somethin. In spite of all my hatred for Blacks and Jews and liberals, I
accepted the job. Her and I began to reluctantly work together. She had as many problems
workin with me as I had workin with her.
One night, I called her: "Ann, you and I should have a lot of differences and we got
'em now. But there's somethin' laid out here before us, and if it's gonna be a success, you
and I are gonna have to make it one. Can we lay aside some of these eelins? She said: "I'm willing if you are." I said: "Let's do it."
My old friends would call me at night: "C. P., what the hell is wrong with you? You're
sellin' out the White race." This begin' to make me have guilt feelings. Am I doin' right? Am I
doin' wrong? Here I am all of a sudden makin' an about-face and tryin' to deal with my
feelings, my heart. My mind was beginnin' to open up. I was beginnin' to see what was right
and what was wrong. I don't want the kids to fight forever...
One day, Ann and I went back to the school and we sat down. We began to talk and
just reflect... I begin to see, here we are, two people from the far ends of the fence, havin'
identical problems, except hers bein' Black and me bein' White... The amazing thing about
it, her and I, up to that point, has cussed each other, bawled each other, we hated each
other. Up to that point, we didn't know each other. We didn't know we had things in
common...
The whole world was openin' up, and I was learning new truths that I had never
learned before. I was beginning to look at a Black person, shake hands with him, and see
him as a human bein'. I hadn't got rid of all this stuff. I've still got a little bit of it. But
somethin' was happenin to me...
I come to work one morning and some guys says: "We need a union." At this time I
wasn't pro-union. My daddy was antilabor too. We're not gettin' paid much, we're havin'
to work seven days in a row. We're all starvin' to death... I didn't know nothin' about
organizin' unions, but I knew how to organize people, stir people up. That's how I got to
be business agent for the union.
When I began to organize, I began to see far deeper. I begin to see people again bein'
used. Blacks against Whites... There are two things management wants to keep: all the
money and all the say-so. They don't want none of these poor workin' folks to have none
of that. I begin to see management fightin' me with everythin' they had. Hire antiunion law
firms, badmouth unions. The people were makin $1.95 an hour, barely able to get through
weekends...
It makes you feel good to go into a plant and ... see Black people and White people
join hands and defeat the racist issues [union-busters] use against people...
I tell people there's a tremendous possibility in this country to stop wars, the battles,
the struggles, the fights between people. People say: "That's an impossible dream. You
sound like Martin Luther King." An ex-Klansman who sounds like Martin Luther King. I
don't think it's an impossible dream. It's happened in my life. It's happened in other
people's lives in America...
When the news came over the radio that Martin Luther King was assassinated, I got
on the telephone and begin to call other Klansmen... We just had a real party... Really
rejoicin' 'cause the son of a bitch was dead. Our troubles are over with. They say the
older you get, the harder it is for you to change. That's not necessarily true. Since I
changed, I've set down and listened to tapes of Martin Luther King. I listen to it and
tears come to my eyes cause I know what he's sayin now. I know what's happenin'.
Copyright © 1980 by Studs Terkel. Reprinted with permission from Studs Terkel, American Dreams: Lost
and Found (New York: Pantheon Books, Random House, Inc., 1980). Cyrano receives no pecuniary benefit from this link to Amazon.com. It is provided as a convenience to our readers, and to help the sale of this title.
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