Everything about Bobby Shows is big. From his smile
and personality, to his physical presence and spiritual
leadership, Bobby Shows cuts a figure larger than life.
Growing up in rural Mississippi, he learned the value of
family, of God, of community, a sense of humor and a
good hook shot. Heading into college at Mississippi
State University, Bobby Shows hoped to live up to his
status as the number one major college recruit in the
Magnolia State. However, before he could do that, he had
to get right with God. In the end, he and his teammates
won more than championships. Events in which they
participated sparked change in the segregationist
landscape of college sports and college campuses. Bobby
Shows’ early years in rural Mississippi during the 1940s
and 1950s are almost storybook quality. Segregation was
more than black and white; it was saved and lost.
Mississippi buckles the Bible Belt synched down tight.
Though humble, Shows enjoyed a happy childhood, raised
by two strong parents and surrounded by family, friends,
and a faith community. Level fields of play were hard to
find in Bobby’s day. Whether playing basketball on a
hard-scrabble court where you hoped to get the down-hill
end for the second half of play, or working in the
cotton fields alongside other boys like him, old black
men and women and young ones, too. It didn’t matter –
under the scorching sun, the back-aching,
finger-splitting work of picking cotton takes place on
level fields. Any illusion of integration and equality
did not extend beyond the cotton fields Bobby worked as
a boy. “Separate but equal” may have been the slogan of
segregation, but separation of the races remained the
singular emphasis in the South. Equality was at best a
secondary consideration. Bobby’s story starts in the
middle of segregation – an oppressive ‘us against them’
culture about to be turned on its head. His experiences
while at Mississippi State both on and off the
basketball court integrated a love and concern for
people that would lead him into a life of ministry. As
an individual, Bobby remains true to self and to God,
and his story is about how that combination of
self-awareness and devotion to God has led to a
productive and meaningful life.
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