Working Toward A Truly 'United' States
Working Toward A Truly âUnitedâ States
By Larissa Lytwyn
His approach was like that of a kindly grandfather â a bestower of wisdom encouraging his children to understand a history that still reverberated in their seemingly auspicious world.
That history was the Civil Rights movement, the âgrandfatherâ Jefferson Wiggins, PhD, an esteemed author, lecturer, and decorated Army officer who served in World War II.
During a recent visit to third and fourth grade students at Middle Gate Elementary School, Dr Wiggins told stories from his segregated rural Alabama upbringing with themes of cultural unity and acceptance of all people.
âDonât make assumptions about anybody or anything!â he boomed, a sudden shift from his previous near-whisper. Throughout his presentation, Dr Wigginsâ undulating voice, ranging from an easy, conversational style to a downright shout, kept listeners rapt.
He talked about making a life-changing delivery to an army sergeant at age 13. âThe sergeant asked me how much the package was,â Dr Wiggins recalled. At the time he could scarcely read or write because of the inferior conditions of the segregated blacks-only grade school education he had received. Dr Wiggins told the sergeant that the amount was âon the box.â The sergeant laughed at him, sneering, âAre you so dumb that you canât tell me how much this package is?â
As Dr Wiggins turned to leave, however, the sergeant called him back and encouraged him to sign up for the Army, that is, if he was 18. Falsely telling the sergeant that he was indeed 18, Dr Wiggins gained permission from both his parents to pursue a career in the Army. It was, after all, the only viable way he could escape his impoverished condition in his racially charged hometown.
Dr Wiggins trained at a Staten Island boot camp, often venturing into nearby New York City. Growing up in Alabama, Dr Wiggins could not go into the town library because it was marked âWhites Only.â In desegregated New York City, however, Dr Wiggins was able to go into the cityâs famed library.
âI was like a child!â he exclaimed. âI was running down the aisles!â
Suddenly a white woman with âlong blond hair and eyes bluer than I have ever seen sinceâ approached him.
Though he was sure she was going to ask him to leave, she ended up asking him if he was looking for a âspecial book.â
With a laugh, Dr Wiggins recalled, âI told her, âOf course I am looking for a special book!â She asked me the title. I didnât know a single one. Then she just smiled.â
The librarian, Anna Marie Merrill, became a mentor to Dr Wiggins, teaching him how to read and eventually encouraging him to pursue higher education.
âThe only book I really knew was the Bible, and that was something I had memorized [from it being recited] and then from reading it,â Dr Wiggins said. In two years of Army training and working with Ms Merrill, however, Dr Wiggins developed higher-than-average reading skills.
Going to college, though, was another matter.
âI told her, you are one crazy white woman!â Dr Wiggins remembered, grinning wildly. âBut she petitioned my high school in Alabama for nine months. She called them a few times a week and kept telling [the administrators] that through my work with her and in the Army I deserved the degree.â
He finally received one, Dr Wiggins said, and attended Tennessee State University and later the Sorbonne in Paris.
The New Fairfield resident has an Honorary Doctorate of Humane Letters from Briarwood College in Southington and was the 2001 recipient of Connecticutâs Multicultural Educator of the Year award.
He heads the Wiggins Institute for Social Integrity from his home in New Fairfield. âWe are a nonprofit organization that has been in operation for about eight years now,â he said. The instituteâs half-dozen volunteer staff delivers presentations to schools and communities through New York, Connecticut, and New Jersey.
The presentations emphasize the importance of building community with one another. Dr Wiggins said he is troubled with the self-imposed segregation at schools of varying levels of diversity. âYou go into [most] school cafeterias and you will see the white kids sitting with the white kids and the black kids sitting with the black kids,â he said. He believes making curricular changes with a greater emphasis on cultural unification is key to building bridges across âour cultural chasm.â
âThere are 47 different languages spoken at Danbury High School,â Dr Wiggins said. âNow I am not suggesting that everyone learn Vietnamese or Spanish, but we need to be more open toward each other. We need to find the likeness in each other and build on that, not our differences.â
Recently the Wiggins Institute completed a survey of New Fairfield high school and middle school students on bullying. âA sizable majority believes that bullying is a problem in their school,â said Dr Wiggins. The institute is currently in the process of presenting the report to New Fairfieldâs Superintendent of Schools.
His latest book, Another Generation Almost Forgotten, is a personal memoir of overcoming social adversity. He has also authored numerous books on Martin Luther King, Jr. For more information on the Wiggins Institute for Social Integrity, contact Dr Wiggins at 746-4520.