Grasping
what has been achieved in the past is an important foundation upon
which to build for the present and the future. Without this foundation
we are but directionless leaves, blowing in the wind.
The
Black Panther Party awakened a radicalized political consciousness
in the United States and throughout
the world, whose impact is multi generational and continues down
to this very day. Two veterans of that era and of “the [Black Panther]
Party” are today utilizing both art and history as a means of linking
the not-so-distant past with the pressing concerns and ongoing political
struggle of the present. These two persons are artist extraordinaire
and former national Minister of Culture of the Black Panther Party,
Emory Douglas, and premier historian and former Black Panther
Party member, Billy X Jennings.
Brothers
Emory and Billy X both made it quite clear to this writer that they
have been, and are continuing, to work in concert with many
other sisters and brothers to educate and “inspire” the generations
of today and the future. It is in this vein that the ongoing
stories of Emory Douglas and Billy X Jennings are presented to you,
the reader. May you too be inspired…
No
successful political movement, party, or organization can effectively
function in a vacuum. There are various components needed to sustain,
nurture, and spread it. Art is one of those components that plays
a significant role in this regard. With respect to the Black Panther
Party and beyond, the art of Emory Douglas shaped and crystallized
the imaginations and political consciousness of an entire generation
of Black, Brown, Red, Yellow, and White peoples, nationally and
around the world. The relatively recently released book titled,
Black
Panther: The Revolutionary Art of Emory Douglas[Edited
by Sam Durant and Published by Rizzoli Publications], presents
225 images that definitively illustrate the power and increasing
significance of Emory’s art. There is an adage which says that ‘the
proof of the pudding is in the taste.’ Indeed, this book makes that
point poignantly clear in the case of the art work of Emory.
Complementing
Emory’s art is the stalwart work of Billy X Jennings, whose visionary
understanding of and commitment to preserving the enormously important
legacy of the Black Panther Party is manifested on the It’s
About Time website at www.itsabouttimebpp.com
of which Billy X is the primary architect. Virtually any and everything
of significance, pertaining to the sisters and brothers of the Black
Panther Party and its continuing legacy today, is to be found on
the It’s
About Time website. Among his many tasks in the Black Panther
Party, Billy X served as the assistant to the late Brother Huey
P. Newton, and is now and has for many years been, putting former
[Black Panther] Party members and/or their families in touch with
one another while researching, sharing, and spreading the true legacy
of the Black Panther Party nationally and internationally. Notwithstanding
the hard work of the former national leadership of the [Black
Panther] Party, Brother Billy X correctly emphasizes that there
would have been no Black Panther Party without the brothers and
sisters of its “rank and file,” many of whom made the ultimate
sacrifice in the struggle by giving their very lives, while others
still today are languishing in U.S. prisons.
Nevertheless,
the legacy and enormous impact and relevance today of the former
Black Panther Party and the ongoing struggle for justice are, in
fact, inseparably intertwined. This is why, for example,
the ‘George Jackson Lives’ Photo & Mixed Media Exhibit,
which will be on view from September 21 - October 19, 2008 at the
New Black World in West Oakland, California, [sponsored by It’s
About Time and Marcel Diallo] is already causing much excitement
and anticipation. It is very important to note that the aforementioned
exhibit is “the first George Jackson exhibit in America.” It will
include videos, numerous photos, and period articles from the Oakland
Tribune, the San Francisco Chronicle, The San Francisco
Sun Reporter, The Black Panther Paper, The Berkeley
Barb, The Berkeley Tribe, LIFE Magazine, TIME
etc. The late George Jackson was an internationally known member
of the Black Panther Party and the author of the two best selling
books titled, Blood
in My Eye,
and Soledad
Brother: The Prison Letters of George Jackson.
He was ultimately murdered by prison guards at San Quentin prison
in August of 1971. [Reference the It’s About Time website for more
information on the exhibit and George Jackson].
Also,
on October 17 & 18, 2008, in Atlanta,
Georgia, there will be an ‘Arts & Culture
Conference of the Black Panther Party’ where, among other things,
there will be an art exhibit of Emory Douglas. The exhibit
will be located at the Southwest Arts
Center, The Auburn Library, of Georgia
State University.
However, it must be reiterated that ‘the impact and relevance today
of the former Black Panther Party and the ongoing struggle for justice
are in fact inseparably intertwined.’ Thus, at the conference,
there will be workshops including one wherein former U.S. Congresswoman
& current ‘Power To The People’ U.S.
Presidential candidate - Sister Cynthia
McKinney. along with noted author, law professor, and former
national Secretary of Communications for the Black Panther Party
- Sister Kathleen Cleaver will be discussing the infamous
[and no doubt ongoing U.S. Government program to “neutralize,
frame, discredit, imprison” and/or “murder” political activists]
known as COINTELPRO i.e. the Counter Intelligence Program. The current
cases of the “SF8” (San Francisco), the “Angola
3” (Louisiana), and the “Omaha
2” (Nebraska) are three
cases of imprisoned veteran Black Panthers today that are
related to infamous U.S. Government COINTELPRO activities. [Reference
the It’s About Time website for further information].
The
international dimensions and impact of the Black Panther Party,
are further highlighted by the fact that poet, musician, activist,
and former member of the Black Panther Party - Sister Charlotte
O’Neal will be traveling to the conference from where she lives
in Tanzania, East Africa. Additionally, it should be noted
that the week after the Atlanta conference, there will be a major exhibit on the Black Panther
Party in Manchester, England
from the 30th of October into March, 2008. Subsequently, Brother
Emory Douglas will be making a presentation in London,
England, at the London School of Economics, prior
to traveling to Cologne,
Germany, where
he will make an additional presentation.
It
is noteworthy that October is Black Panther History Month
and it will be observed by persons not only in the United
States, but also in Africa, Europe,
and elsewhere on the globe. The legacy lives and is embodied in
today’s ongoing struggles for social, economic, and political
justice.
In
conjunction with today’s ongoing struggle and the legacy of the
Black Panther Party, Brother Billy X noted that, “People don’t realize
that [for example], the [Black Panther] Party also worked with and
supported [labor] unions” including “the MUNI [transportation] union
of municipal drivers in San Francisco, the [automobile workers]
union in Fremont [CA], the ATF [American Teachers / Association
Federation]”, etc. There continue to be many unknown and positive
dimensions to the legacy of the Black Panther Party that relate
directly to the struggles of the present day 21st Century. These
are being shared and delineated to people far and wide by de facto
Black Panther Party historian Billy X.
Both
Brothers Emory Douglas and Billy X highlighted that they were and
continue to be “inspired” by the Black Panther Party. Brother Emory
put it this way: “I was inspired by what was going on [in the 1960s
and 1970s] and fortunate enough to have the desire to want to do
something and be a part of the movement, particularly the Black
Panther Party, and my art work is a reflection of the ideology and
the politics of the [Black Panther] Party. This art work would not
have existed the way it was had it not been for the Black Panther
Party.” In fact, the young people of today who are doing with some
of the same and/or similar issues that were being addressed when
the Black Panther Party existed can, as Emory stated, draw upon
his art work “to be inspired, not necessarily to duplicate it.”
In this, the 21st Century, the art of Emory Douglas continues to
be in service to the people, young and old alike.
Brother
Billy X Jennings commented that: “Many of the social programs that
exist in the United States today
are watered down versions of programs started by the Black
Panther Party, including medical programs, programs for prisoners,
seniors programs, and community police review board programs as
well as numerous other programs. They began with the Black
Panther Party.” Indeed, an example Brother Billy X noted is a dental
program, originally started in Portland,
Oregon, by the Black Panther Party, though
no longer staffed by Black Panther Party members, “still
functioning today.” Thus, even though the Black Panther Party was
ultimately physically “neutralized” and decimated, its accomplishments
are nonetheless in many ways indelibly stamped on the political
and social landscape and ongoing struggles of today. For a certainty,
the true legacy of the Black Panther Party continues to “inspire.”
The
misconception held by some that the Black Panther Party was strictly
a male political organization is forthrightly dispelled by historian
Billy X on the It’s About Time website with a huge section
(including subdivisions) devoted to ‘Women
of the Black Panther Party’ [http://www.itsabouttimebpp.com/Women_BPP/salute_women_index.html].
There could have been no viable Black Panther Party without the
many women who were an integral part of the rank and file and
of its national leadership. Indeed, as Brother Billy X stated, “The
It’s
About Time website of the Black Panther Party Legacy and
Alumni serves a multitude of functions.” Another of those
functions was in evidence when, in the aftermath of hurricane Katrina,
it served as a communications lin,k putting storm victims
in touch with each other, be they former [Black Panther] Party members
or not.
From
the poignant, incomparable, and inspirational art work of Emory
Douglas to the diligence and integrity of Billy X Jennings in preserving
the true legacy of the Black Panther Party; the essence of our struggle
- the struggle of Black, Brown, Red, Yellow and White peoples -
continues to be that of attaining real economic, social,
and political justice in our communities, our nation, and our world.
Billy
X Jennings and Emory Douglas, along with so many other sisters and
brothers, remain true to the embodiment of this continuing struggle.
They continue to inspire and challenge us. Can we do any less?
Onward
then brothers and sisters! Onward…
BlackCommentator.com Editorial Board Member, Larry Pinkney, is a veteran of the Black
Panther Party, the former Minister of Interior of the Republic of
New Africa, a former political prisoner and the only American to
have successfully self-authored his civil/political rights case
to the United Nations under the International Covenant on Civil
and Political Rights. In connection with
his political organizing activities in opposition to voter suppression,
etc., Pinkney was interviewed in 1988 on the nationally televised
PBS NewsHour, formerly known as The MacNeil/Lehrer NewsHour. For more about Larry Pinkney see the book, Saying No to Power: Autobiography of a 20th Century Activist
and Thinker, by William Mandel [Introduction by Howard Zinn]. (Click here
to read excerpts from the book). Click here
to contact Mr. Pinkney. |