What Mavis Staples can teach us about resisting Trumpism
What Mavis Staples can teach us about resisting Trumpism
Protecting democracy requires many soldiers in "the army of love
By Chauncey DeVega
Senior Writer
Published June 17, 2025 6:00AM (EDT)
(
Salon) On Sunday, June 8, I sat in a gentle rain at the Chicago Blues Festival with thousands of others, waiting for Mavis Staples to take the stage. At 85, Staples is an icon, with songs that include Why? (Am I Treated So Bad), For What Its Worth, Freedom Highway and Long Walk To D.C. As part of The Staple Singers, she helped provide the soundtrack for the civil rights movement in the 1950s and 1960s, as well as the long Black Freedom Struggle. We must see legends like Staples while they are still with us. We are losing so many of them so fast.
The Staples Singers' music helped people keep marching when it was hard. Those songs taught lessons about how to resist the terror of Jim and Jane Crow and its many forms of evil; they were a literal cadence for people to march toward justice, and they reflect the centrality of music to Black Americans as a source of cultural resistance, struggle, triumph and joy in the face of oppression. As Cornel West said in a 2012 interview, "The blues is an autobiographical chronicle of a personal catastrophe expressed lyrically and endured with grace and dignity. Meaning what? Meaning that the blues are all those who are willing to look unflinchingly at catastrophic conditions.
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Next to me, an Asian brother jumped up and down to the music like he was catching the spirit at a tent revival somewhere in Mississippi. For a moment, I thought he was going to fly away up into the sky.
Near him was an older white sister, smiling, nodding and clapping along. I immediately recognized her as a long-in-the-fight hope warrior, an old hippie or other anti-war peace-and-justice type who was reliving her youth. I would not be surprised if she had some personal stories of marching in places like Selma and Birmingham, singing those same songs. She was "good white people" who had found lots of "good trouble" in her life. I wanted to thank her.
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During her performance, Mavis Staples performed her iconic song Freedom Highway. As she sang, I couldnt help but think that to get through the next 1,300-odd days and potentially longer, if Trump wins a third term the American people will need to internalize Staples loving command to "march for freedom's highway / march each and every day." ..................(more)
https://www.salon.com/2025/06/17/what-mavis-staples-can-teach-us-about-resisting-trumpism/