Image
Abel Meeropol
"I wrote Strange Fruit because I hate lynching and I hate injustice and I hate the people who perpetrate it."
— Abel Meeropol

#Strange Fruit Mention of the Day

Share your own Strange Fruit MOTDs

Did you know?
  • There is a strange fruit quilt, made by "April Shipp a quilt-maker from Detroit. She spent four years working on a large quilt called Strange Fruit. It bears the names of over 5,000 lynched men, women and children, each one lovingly sewn in gold thread on black fabric."

    Source: https://www.bbc.com/news/entertainment-arts-25034438
  • In 1953 Abel Meeropol (who wrote Strange Fruit) was asked to be a pallbearer for Julius and Ethel Rosenberg after their execution... Later that year he attended a Christmas party at the residence of W. E. B. Du Bois, who had publicly campaigned against lynching. At that party Meeropol met the Rosenbergs’ two orphaned sons; he and his wife later adopted them.

    Sources: https://commonreader.wustl.edu/c/the-deliberate-knot/ & "The Deliberate Knot The Thirteenth Turn explores the noose as metaphor, and mob" by David Thomas Konig, The Common Reader: A Journal of The Essay, June 1, 2015
  • "Eighty years ago, two young African-American men, Thomas Shipp and Abram Smith, were lynched in the town center of Marion, Ind. Local photographer Lawrence Beitler took what would become the most iconic photograph of lynching in America... The photograph helped inspire the poem and song "Strange Fruit" written by Abel Meeropol -- and performed around the world by Billie Holiday. But there was a third person, 16-year-old James Cameron, who narrowly survived the lynching."

    Source: https://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=129025516

Performances & Recordings

Abel Meeropol & "Strange Fruit"

Guest blog by RFC Founder Robert Meeropol, "My father Abel Meeropol was born in The Bronx in 1903 and grew up there. He was the son of Jewish immigrants..."

"Lady Day: Billie Holiday" Smithsonian Spotlight

Smithsonian collection of Billie Holiday photos, artworks, recordings and more

Lady Day at Emerson's Bar & Grill

Performance clips of Audra McDonald as Billie Holiday in "Lady Day at Emerson's Bar & Grill".

"Strange Fruit" podcast

Weekly podcast of musings on politics, pop culture and black gay life (WFPL)

Lady Day at Emerson's Bar & Grill

Information about the Tony award-nominated musical "Lady Day at Emerson's Bar and Grill," that recounts Billie Holiday's life story through the songs that made her famous.

Lynching in America

A multi-media history and education project by Equal Justice Initiative documenting the history of lynching in America