
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


On a hot June evening in 1964, Mickey Schwerner, James Chaney and Andrew Goodman were ambushed by the Ku Klux Klan and killed as they left town.
The atrocity became a seminal moment in the civil rights movement. Yet 60 years after the killings, some people in Philadelphia worry that the country is forgetting what was learned along the way. Others wonder what the past is owed — and for how long. They talked with Susan Levine this spring about their community’s painful legacy of racism.
This episode was produced and mixed by Bishop Sand. It was edited by Lucy Perkins. Thanks also to Allison Michaels.
By The Washington Post4.2
51935,193 ratings
On a hot June evening in 1964, Mickey Schwerner, James Chaney and Andrew Goodman were ambushed by the Ku Klux Klan and killed as they left town.
The atrocity became a seminal moment in the civil rights movement. Yet 60 years after the killings, some people in Philadelphia worry that the country is forgetting what was learned along the way. Others wonder what the past is owed — and for how long. They talked with Susan Levine this spring about their community’s painful legacy of racism.
This episode was produced and mixed by Bishop Sand. It was edited by Lucy Perkins. Thanks also to Allison Michaels.

26,012 Listeners

4,113 Listeners

3,647 Listeners

1,381 Listeners

4,444 Listeners

113,121 Listeners

56,944 Listeners

2,480 Listeners

2,380 Listeners

107 Listeners

10,331 Listeners

7,244 Listeners

2,405 Listeners

2,782 Listeners

6,097 Listeners

6,462 Listeners

2,370 Listeners

16,525 Listeners

232 Listeners

294 Listeners

1,261 Listeners

994 Listeners

405 Listeners

347 Listeners

169 Listeners

57 Listeners

32 Listeners

747 Listeners

632 Listeners