By Chyna Brodie and Parker Butler
RICHMOND, Va. 鈥 After the rousing applause of the Sunday morning sermon lowered to a quiet simmer, Rita Willis, president of the Women鈥檚 Missionary Society at the Third Street Bethel AME Church, talked about the Black vote in the capital city and the intergenerational split.
Willis, born in the segregated South in the former capital of the Confederacy, described her unique connection to voting rights that keeps her mobilized.
As a Richmond native who was impacted by discrimination and racism during the age of Jim Crow, Willis was blunt about her experience growing up.
鈥淚鈥檓 from the generation where I couldn鈥檛 go to school. We used to have to walk to school. We walked seven miles to school and seven miles back鈥nd it was pure hell,鈥 she said. 鈥淭hey used to spit at us, call us the n-word.鈥
Despite her struggles, she focused on the silver lining: 鈥淲e got a good education. Eventually, when President Johnson came into office, I鈥檒l never forget it, he said any colored child who wants to go to the white school may do so.鈥
She said her siblings didn鈥檛 want to go, 鈥渂ut I went and it made the difference.鈥
Willis takes this same optimistic attitude when it comes to the Virginia gubernatorial election. Does she trust the Democratic nominee, Terry McAuliffe? She paused before answering.
鈥淵ou know I would have to say I do; I trust him to a certain extent,鈥 she said. 鈥淏ut I don鈥檛 really trust any politician. I guess for me, it really goes back to that lesser of two evils conversation and who鈥檚 going to stay and be in this fight with us.鈥
Some Black voters said that鈥檚 not enough to get them out to vote. But Richmond Mayor Levar Stoney stumped for McAuliffe with reminders that their vote counts and they shouldn鈥檛 stay home because of political polarization.
鈥淒ivision and hate don鈥檛 motivate me to turn out,鈥 he said in an interview with American University students a few days before the election. 鈥淵ou have to give voters hope about what can happen as well.鈥
As a student of the civil rights movement, Willis was proud to join recent protests for racial justice: 鈥淚 am from the Martin Luther King era, and I marched with the BLM [Black Lives Matter],鈥 she said. 鈥淏ut I marched with voter applications every time鈥 . because you can鈥檛 just walk and do what you鈥檙e doing if you are not registered to vote.鈥





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