Harry Belafonte has really
gotten under the rightwingers' and racists' skins - and
that's a good thing. As part of a thirteen-member African
American delegation to Venezuela, Belafonte called George
Bush "the greatest tyrant in the world, the greatest
terrorist in the world" - a sentiment shared by a
huge chunk of world opinion. Belafonte also said that
"millions of the American people" support Venezuela's
revolution.
Not just the Hard Right, but
much of the corporate media scoff at the second part of
Belafonte's statement. They can't believe that millions
of Americans feel that way about George Bush, or are glad
to see a Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez thumbing his
nose at the United States. But I maintain that many millions
of Black Americans are saying Right On! to Harry. When
competently questioned, African Americans consistently
express solidarity with Third World nations seeking to
distance themselves from United States power. Black Americans
have consistently opposed U.S. military adventures abroad,
including the current one.
Harry Belafonte is an icon
in Black America, especially among those who remember
his deep involvement in our struggles over the decades.
When he called Condoleezza Rice and Colin Powell "house
Negroes," only a minority of Black people were upset.
And George Bush's name is anathema to the vast bulk of
African Americans, especially after Katrina. Belafonte
can say anything he wants about Bush, and most of us will
applaud.
Thinking they were being cute
and witty, corporate commentators reacted to Belafonte's
Venezuelan remarks with references to his "Banana
Boat" song; they attempted to belittle
him as a singer who doesn't have the brains or right to
speak on world affairs. But Belafonte and the late Ossie
Davis are cut from the same cloth as Paul Robeson, possibly
the greatest singer of the Twentieth Century, who used
his worldwide reputation to tirelessly fight for peace
and social justice. Robeson was punished by the taking
away of his passport and the imposition of the harshest
blacklist imaginable.
Now, folks are calling for
Belafonte's head, some calling him treasonous. Yet it
is George Bush who violates international law as a matter
of policy, and whittles constantly away at the freedoms
of Americans. Hugo Chavez has held three national elections
since 2000, none of them as tainted and suspect as George
Bush's two presidential campaigns. Chavez is the leader
with the genuine claim to democracy. George Bush Bush
is, indeed, the most dangerous tyrant in the world. Belafonte
got it right. For Radio BC, I'm Glen Ford.