One
of our great esteemed ancestors, Harold Cruse wrote a book, The Crisis of the Negro Intellectual which was published in 1967, at
the height of the Black Power Movement. This insightful book stirred
up a spirited conversation in the African Liberation Movement. That
conversation revolves around the weaknesses of our movement, the
direction of our movement, and inability of some of the leaders and
thinkers of our movement to understand what Brother Cruse calls “The
Great American Ideal.” This problem continues to linger with us
today.
Brother
Cruse spent most of his activist and organizing days in Harlem, New
York from the 1940s until he accepted a professorship at the
University of Michigan and helped develop their Black Studies Program
in 1967. In Harlem, Brother Cruse was an active participant in most
of the major organizing activities that swept through New York for
over twenty years. The Crisis of the Negro Intellectual is a
summation of those experiences as it related to the literature and
history of the African Liberation Movement.
This
year, 2017 marks the fiftieth-year of the publication of The
Crisis of the Negro Intellectual. Its importance to our movement
has still not received the attention it deserves, primarily because
Brother Cruse was so honest in his criticisms of our movement and
many of its well-known leaders. Therefore, the book was blocked in
many circles from receiving the kind of legitimacy its substance
deserved.
However,
a small group of scholar/activists have discussed and debated Brother
Cruse’s ideas during this forty-seven year period and have
organized study groups form time to time that have aided in
understanding the ideas that Cruse presents in his book.
When
we use the term intellectual, we are talking about people who
struggle around ideas - writers, poets, scholars, researchers,
teachers, students, and activists. Intellectuals are people who
grapple with ideas and who function in the cultural, political,
educational, and economic domains of the society. As Dr. Anderson
Thompson always says, “Ideas are weapons of war.”
With
this definition, let us review briefly some of the ideas and concepts
that Brother Cruse presented in The Crisis of the Negro
Intellectual. One of the major points Cruse makes is the African
American intellectuals are pathological in their approach to the
choices available to them. It is Cruse’s observation that they
appear to adopt the values of the dominant group, which he describes
as the white Anglo Saxon Protestant.
It
was in the first chapter of The Crisis of the Negro Intellectual
that Cruse raised this question of the problem of identity of the
African in America people. The question of our identity still remains
a fundamental problem with the African in America Community today.
There is a tendency in the African in America Community to identify
with, emulate, and support other races and ethnic groups at the
expense of our own race.
Cruse
illustrated this in his book when he described the following: “In
1940, as one of my first acts in the pursuit of becoming a more
social being, I joined a YMCA amateur drama group in Harlem. I wanted
to learn about theater so I became a stage technician— meaning
a handyman for all backstage chores. But the first thing about this
drama group that struck me as highly curious was the fact that all
the members were overwhelmingly in favor of doing white plays with
Negro casts.”
Cruse
continued on this point. “I wondered why and very naively
expressed my sentiments about it. The replies that I got clearly
indicated these amateur actors were not very favorable to the play
about Negro life, although they would not plainly say so. Despite the
fact that this question of identity was first presented to me within
the context of the program of a small, insignificant amateur drama
group, its implications ranged far beyond.”
Another
problem Cruse addresses is that the African in America intellectual’s
conceptualization of our condition is not based on the ethnic reality
of America. The American Ideal espouses one set of principles through
the Constitution, but the basis of reality of this society is founded
on ethnic and religious pluralism not individualism, according to
Brother Cruse.
From
the point of view of Brother Cruse, the African in America
intellectual is not accepted by whites and does not identify with
their own racial group. Cruse concludes that the crisis of the
African in America intellectual is an identity crisis and
misunderstanding of the false postulation of the American Ideal.
For
Brother Cruse, the crisis was whether the African in America
intellectual will accept the challenge of being the spokesman or
spokeswoman of the African in America masses in terms of setting
guidelines for our movement and of understanding the issues of our
race, making proper analyses, and proceeding to help build our
movement. This is still the crisis we face today.
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