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Emmett Till honored 60 years after his slaying

JACKSON, Mississippi -- Sixty years after a black Chicago teenager was killed for whistling at a white woman in Mississippi, relatives and civil rights activists are holding church services and a movie screening to remember Emmett Till.

They're also trying to continue the legacy of his late mother, Mamie Till Mobley, who worked with young people and encouraged them to challenge injustice in their everyday lives. It's a message that Deborah Watts, a distant cousin of Till's, sees as relevant amid the killings in recent years of unarmed young black men such as Trayvon Martin in Florida and Tamir Rice in Ohio.

Tree planted on Capitol Hill commemorates Emmett Till 02:34

Watts was a toddler when Till was killed. She said that as she grew up, she spoke often with Mobley about Till.

"It was her motivation to turn his death into something positive," Watts said Thursday in Jackson.

The 14-year-old Till was visiting relatives in the cotton country of the Mississippi Delta on Aug. 24, 1955, when witnesses said he violated the Jim Crow social code by whistling at Carolyn Bryant, a white woman working behind the counter of a store in the tiny town of Money.

On Aug. 28, he was kidnapped from his uncle's home a few miles away. Willie Louis, then an 18-year-old sharecropper, saw Till in a truck with several other men. Louis heard a beating coming from inside the shed.

Louis told "60 Minutes" in 2004: "I heard this screaming, beating, screaming and beating. And I said to myself, 'Milam and them beating somebody in the barn.' I could hear the beating. I mean, I could hear the licks."

On Aug. 31, his body was recovered from the Tallahatchie River, with a bullet hole in his head and severe cuts on his face. Barbed wire was wrapped around his neck and he was weighted down with a cotton gin fan.

Till's mother insisted on an open-casket funeral in Chicago, and Jet magazine published photos of his corpse. The brutality sparked outrage that galvanized the civil rights movement.

In September 1955, an all-white, all-male jury in Sumner, Mississippi, acquitted the two white men charged in the slaying - J.W. Milam and his half brother, Roy Bryant, the husband of Carolyn Bryant.

On Friday in Chicago, a gathering is scheduled at Roberts Temple Church of God in Christ, where Till's funeral was held. Organizers say that will be followed by a motorcade to Burr Oaks Cemetery, where both Till and his mother are buried. A wreath will be laid at the gravesite of Mobley, who died in 2003.

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