On the first day of the sit-in, Ayanna and the other kids sat at the lunch counter until the restaurant closed for the night. No one ever took their order.
So the kids went back the next day. That’s when the situation grew tense. Some White customers yelled at the kids, and others threw ketchup on them. Through it all, the kids remained peaceful and polite.
During the third day of their sit-in, the kids got good news. The owners of the store agreed to start serving Black customers at the lunch counter.
“It was a big deal,” Ayanna remembers. “It was a slam dunk to be able to sit there and have a hamburger and Coke.”
Ayanna and her friends weren’t done, though. For six years, they took part in sit-ins at other restaurants in Oklahoma. One by one, many of the restaurants became integrated. Their last sit-in took place in 1964. That same year, President Lyndon B. Johnson signed the Civil Rights Act. The law made segregation illegal throughout the U.S. Ayanna and the other kids were proud to do their part to bring about change in their hometown—and their nation.
“Even though I was little, my voice was just as important as everyone else’s voice,” Ayanna says.