Note:
Twenty years ago this month, 2,000 people of African descent converged
on Chicago for the founding of the Black Radical Congress (BRC). The
woefully under-estimated attendance goal of 500 by conference
organizers was a testament that there was an enthusiastic interest in a
national organization of the Black Left. Conversely, the demise of the
BRC in 2008--a decade later--was an affirmation that the Black
Liberation Movement (BLM) still had some transformative work to do if
there was to be a viable, comparable organization. The two of us put
together “Sixteen Lessons” in 2015 to ignite the challenge to the BLM
to take a deeper look into a more thorough BRC summation and to engage
in a national discussion on what kind of organization is needed to
address the current issues facing our movement. BlackCommenator.com has
re-published those lessons below. We encourage your feedback. A webinar
is being planned to get such as conversation started.
No
one said it would be easy
Preface:
“…Where is the BRC when we need it?” We
have heard this question over the years from Black activists from one
side of the USA to another, but it was during the April 26-29, 2012
conference to commemorate the life and work of the late Dr. Manning
Marable that it really hit home. Manning had been one of the
“original five”, that is, the five individuals who
started working in late 1995/early 1996 to gather the forces that
would eventually form the Black Radical Congress. Along with Marable
were Dr. Leith Mullings, Dr. Barbara Ransby, Dr. Abdul Alkalimat, and
Bill Fletcher, Jr.
What
was striking during the April 2012 conference were the number of
people who spoke favorably about the BRC and about the importance of
drawing out the lessons—positive and negative—from the
experience of building that organization. People also wanted to
better understand the reasons for its decline and ultimate end.
In
any historical experience those who have participated, not to mention
those who subsequently observed, will draw various conclusions. This
is just as true with the experience of the BRC. The purpose of this
essay is to advance a discussion rather than to answer all of the
questions that emerge from a study of the BRC. It is certainly our
hope that someone will ultimately write a book about the BRC, but for
now, and particularly in light of the many struggles in which so many
younger Black activists (and other progressive activists) are
engaged, it is important to identify lessons learned to help us all
think through what steps need to be taken to build a cohesive, viable
Black Left.
The
following are sixteen lessons. They are not necessarily the most
important and this list is not aimed at being all-inclusive. These
are, however, lessons that have stuck with us and which we are
interested in sharing, hopefully in order to encourage deeper
examination and reflection. We wish to quickly add that these lessons
are not all, necessarily, lessons that we alone drew. Many activists
who were associated with the BRC reflected on the experience over the
years and there were many informal exchanges about the lessons
learned. There have also been a number of articles written on the
experience of the BRC. We have identified several lessons, some from
various discussions and others that were simply our own, that we
believe are worth considering. We realize that those who were
involved in the organization had varying roles and interpretations of
this experience. We all have different pieces of the elephant even if
was the same elephant.
We look forward to your feedback.
-
Bill Fletcher, Jr. and Jamala Rogers
******
Background:
There have been many efforts over the years to unite the Black Left,
i.e., forces that are anti-imperialist, generally anti-capitalist,
against various forms of oppression, including but not limited to
white supremacist national oppression. Frequently such efforts have
been led by a specific organization or a particular tendency, not
necessarily being inclusive. In the 1980s, for instance, the National
Black United Front and the National Black Independent Political Party
both served as efforts to organize segments of the Left and
progressive segments of Black America. To varying degrees they made
important contributions such as in the fight against police brutality
and electoral mobilizations. Over time, however, their bases
narrowed. NBUF continues to exist, but NBIPP after several years of
attempting to establish an identity drifted into oblivion (though
many activists within it, such as Manning Marable, continued to do
great work).
The
origins of the BRC can be found in two sets of discussions that took
place in 1995. In Manchester, Britain, at a commemoration of the
anniversary of the 5th Pan African Congress, several
people including Barbara Ransby, Manning Marable and Abdul Alkalimat
began discussing the need for some level of organization of the Black
Left. Separately, in the aftermath of the Million Man March Bill put
in a call to Marable (who was at the time a good friend, and over
time became like a brother to him) and expressed his dismay that the
Nation of Islam had proven to be such a successful and dominant
force. He suggested to Marable that we needed to hold a “summit”
of the Black Left in order to move discussions regarding the actual
situation and what needed to be done. [Note: “Summit” is
emphasized here because the original objective was not
the creation of a new organization; that would emerge through the
process of building for the summit.] Marable agreed and we began
discussing the building of a core for such a project. In the course
of that discussion he mentioned the Manchester meeting and as a
result the importance of including Ransby and Alkalimat. Mullings, an
independent leftist and scholar, was a close collaborator of
Marable’s and they had recently married. Thus, the original
five came together and through myriad of conference calls, exchanges
of faxes and later email this original five gelled into a core which
ultimately convened a meeting at the end of February 1997 in Chicago
of what came to be known as the “continuations committee,”
i.e., a flexible body of individuals from around the country who were
committed to building the summit. It was at that first meeting of the
National Continuations Committee that it was suggested that while we
should build for a major conference of the Black Left, we should
ultimately aim to create an organization. At that moment the “Black
Radical Congress” was christened, so to speak, as the name of
this project. The rationale for the name was itself quite
interesting:
“Black”:
As opposed to African American, we wanted to make sure that people
of African origin were all welcomed and this not be seen as strictly
a project of those who lineage was tied to North America. We also
felt that “Black” was a political coloring and that who
was “black” would be a matter of self-identification. As
we would half-jokingly say, “…we are not going to do
DNA tests to ascertain whether someone is actually African…”
There is a long history of this approach in the Black Left which
included Asians, Native Americans and Latinos being openly accepted
into Black formations.
“Radical”:
Originally we had spoken of a “Black Left” formation but
some objected that many younger activists would not necessarily be
clear as to what “Left” meant and that we should have a
name that would attract and speak to those who were
anti-imperialists and anti-capitalists. It was also important that
the BRC represent various tendencies within the Black Left and, as
such, not be monopolized by one group or tendency. This became a
balancing act which we shall discuss below.
“Congress”:
This term spoke to the nature of the founding gathering plus the
sort of formation that we wanted to project. It was raised that what
we wanted to do was to build something that resembled, in important
respects, the Congress movement from South Africa (such as the
African National Congress and the Pan Africanist Congress of
Azania). “Congress” spoke to this formation as being a
united front of the Black Left rather than a formation driven by one
ideological orientation. “Congress” also held a special
place in African American history with several organizations
containing that word in their name.
We also had a critical task: we
needed a unity statement, i.e., a document that explained who was in
the room in starting the BRC process and why them (as opposed to some
others). Creating this document was not as difficult as many would
have expected but it was controversial. The document included
explicit language not only against racism and sexism, but also
against homophobia. The BRC, in other words, from its beginning,
welcomed all and we would not tolerate prejudices and aggression
against segments of the movement. This declaration meant that there
were a number of individuals within the Black Left—broadly
defined—who while might otherwise seem logical to be associated
with the BRC, would not fit in. Some of them later went on to resent
their exclusion from the founding efforts.
With the generous assistance of one
attendee at the first continuations committee meeting, we were able
to have the funds to get moving. We had several objectives that
included: (1)designing and preparing for a founding gathering to be
held in Chicago, Juneteenth weekend 1998, (2)holding continuations
committee meetings around the country to build momentum, (3)the
creation of a Black Freedom Agenda as a permanent document that
offered what this spectrum of organizations and individuals believed
were some of the key demands flowing from our segment of the Black
Freedom Movement.
Over the subsequent months a great
deal of work went into the building of the BRC. “Diplomatic”
visits were conducted with various leaders in the Black Left to win
their support for this project. We were explicitly looking for
signatories to a “Call” for the Juneteenth gathering. At
a minimum we were looking for endorsements but we were especially
looking to include a broad range of voices on the Black Left. Local
meetings started to take place either with someone from the
continuations committee or when the continuations committee came to
town itself.
As each week passed the BRC gained
momentum. Money came in, to a great extent through the work of
Marable, to help to fund the founding congress. At the same time
differences began to emerge as the BRC broadened. Combinations of
political differences and personality differences frequently got in
the way. These all had to be mediated. There were grudges and
differences that sometimes went back decades. In other cases there
were ideological differences between some forces, such as between
some nationalists and some non-nationalist Marxists. There were
struggles between feminists and those less sensitive to the issues of
feminism. There were also regional differences.
One
challenge, to be discussed below, that became important almost
immediately involved the relationship of individuals to organizations
in the building of the BRC. In other words, there were individuals
from organizations that had committed to help to build the BRC who
were represented in the leadership of the BRC, such as from the New
Afrikan People’s Organization, the Communist Party, Freedom
Road Socialist Organization, the Committee of Correspondence for
Democracy and Socialism, and some looser networks. At the same time,
you had individuals who, structurally, represented no one but
themselves. This created a tension that had a major impact on the
development of the BRC.
In
the weeks leading up to the Juneteenth gathering attention grew on
this project, including in the mainstream media. The leadership core
of the BRC had no idea as to how many people to expect. Some expected
about 500, whereas 1000 was about the highest number anticipated by
most of the core. As it turned out we were all wrong: at any one time
there were approximately 2000 people in attendance and close to 3000
people attended at least part of the founding congress. The extent of
this turnout overwhelmed the organizers, including at certain
moments, our ability to register the participants. The atmosphere was
electric. Virtually every trend on the Black Left was represented at
the gathering and, for the most part, interacted cordially.
Additionally there were individuals from outside of the USA in
attendance, which actually led to a brief, though quite interesting
discussion regarding whether the BRC needed to be an international
organization rather than just internationalist in its
orientation.
The
participants were asked whether they wanted to form a national
organization and, on the final day, the BRC as a standing
organization, representing a united front of the Black Left, was
called into existence. It was at that point, after the participants
voted to form the BRC, and after the closing ceremonies when members
of the continuation committee were hugging each other with pride that
it dawned on all of us: now the real work begins.
The
BRC took off and probably reached its height in 2001. The 11
September 2001 terrorist attacks forced a reorientation on the BRC,
however, which accompanied by specific organizational and political
difficulties, put the organization into a slow decline. A major
dispute in 2003 over the question of accepting funds from a
foundation plus a decision by the national coordinating committee to
sign onto a statement condemning the repression of dissent in
Zimbabwe led to a fragmentation within the BRC. Though the
organization continued on for several years it was never fully able
to recover. In 2008 some people who had been associated with the BRC
plus some other Black leftists formed a separate formation two months
prior to the BRC’s planned St. Louis-based national conference.
It was not long after that that it became clear that the BRC could no
longer function despite the fact that individuals continued to join
it until the very end.
The
BRC represented the potential of bringing together a diverse set of
activists to concentrate on united action. The fact that it was so
welcoming is what made it especially attractive to many younger and
unaffiliated activists. Yet the construction and sustaining of the
BRC became a major project that many of its founders had not
anticipated.
It
is with this in mind that we move to examine lessons learned.
******
(1)You
always need a core and a core needs a vision: Simply
put, the BRC would never have gotten off the ground had it not been
for its core. The original five spent more than a year in discussions
working to frame the project. They took it upon themselves to reach
out to other organizations and individuals who might have an interest
in the project. And they did this on no budget, i.e., everyone had to
find time and money themselves in order to work on this project.
The
experience of building the BRC taught a critical lesson on the nature
of any organization. Rather than conceptualizing an organization as a
pyramid, with the leadership on top and increasing layers beneath it
until you reach the rank & file, it is more useful to
conceptualize an organization as a series of concentric circles.
Think of it like this:
In
the center there is the “core.” The core is not a
ranking of control. It speaks to the relationship of an individual
to the project. So, people in the core are generally the ones who
are leading the project and have dedicated significant time to the
project. The objective, in any healthy organization, is to always
expand the core through growth (i.e., including new people with new
ideas).
Around
the core there is a second layer. These are committed activists and
leaders in their own right. They have agreed to the project and to
build it. They may not yet be leading the project but they have
decided to devote significant time to the project.
There
is then a third layer. This includes people who have signed onto the
project and may attend certain meetings; they make financial
contributions occasionally; and are supportive of the effort. In
general these are the folks who often think of themselves as “…point
me in the right direction…” sorts of people who want to
do the right thing.
A
fourth layer is those who may have signed on and are generally
supportive but are virtually or actually inactive.
A
fifth layer is those who are not involved but are interested and may
be supportive.
Beyond
this layer the rippling weakens as individuals know less and less
about the project.
The
key in organization building is to increase the size of the core and
increase the size of each subsequent layer by involving more and more
people in the life of the project, or in this case, the BRC.
The
original five, in the case of the BRC, could very well have called a
conference on their own, much in the way that certain academic
conferences are organized. Had we done this the BRC would, at best,
only have been a gathering, and probably one with limited impact. The
theory of building the BRC was focused on the construction of the
National Continuations Committee and its rotating meetings. In
the lead up to the Juneteenth gathering, the National Continuations
Committee (NCC) would hold meetings in various cities. There was
always a core of the NCC who remained relatively intact. By rotating
from city to city, however, we found a way to increase participation
and thereby build ownership in this project. This was critical since
the aim, as noted earlier, was not to simply hold a conference but to
actually build an organization.
Thus,
the core of the BRC was only initially the original five. In a fairly
short amount of time the core expanded as the NCC was built. After
the founding conference, in fact, several of the original five
dropped back from active participation for a variety of reasons and a
new core emerged.
The
original five had a vision but what was interesting was that the
vision was able to shift and evolve as the core itself grew. The
original idea was for a summit. Our ambitions were quite limited, for
better or for worse. In light of the discussions at the first NCC
meeting the ambitions shifted. The vision grew into the notion of a
united front of the Black Left. This vision necessitated the creation
of a unity statement in order to guarantee that the core—in
that case the NCC—did not degenerate into a clique. There had
to be legitimate reasons for the NCC to be who was in it otherwise
the effort would have been, correctly, criticized as factional and
unprincipled.
One
of the major difficulties, which we shall address below, is to
establish what is the “mandate” for a core. This became a
hot-button issue later in the life of the BRC.
(2)The
BRC was broad and welcoming: From the beginning
anti-sectarianism was the dominant paradigm. This did not mean that
everyone got along. It meant, however, that there were not
ideological tests in order to get into the BRC. If one agreed with
the Freedom Agenda (a programmatic/vision document ratified in April
1999) and the Unity Statement, one could join the BRC; simple as
that.
This
may sound Pollyannaish, however, and with good reason. There were
problems that did emerge within the organization. The critical
question, however, in the face of problems was the attitude of the
national leadership. Let us explain this.
The
BRC was structured on the basis of local organizing committees.
Someone joining the BRC and wanting to be an active member could join
a local organizing committee. There were, additionally, organizations
that affiliated with the BRC, e.g., Black Workers for Justice; the
Organization for Black Struggle. [Note: When an organization
affiliated, it meant that its members automatically became BRC
members.] Local organizing committees, like any organization,
developed their own cultures to a great extent depending on the local
leadership and dynamics. One form of sectarianism that developed was
based on age. Many ‘baby boomers’, wanting to continue to
play a dominant role in the movement, were not necessarily prepared
to share space with younger activists. They shaped the local
organizing committees according to their interests. Along with this
was a tendency by some BRCers to ‘cadre-fy’ their local
organizing committees, i.e., to begin to treat the local organizing
committees as if they were miniature cadre organizations with the
requisite demands. This made it all the more difficult for newer
activists to enter the BRC and feel that this was their organization.
These
problems did not represent the dominant aspect of the ‘personality’
of the BRC. All things considered it was easy for activists to join,
perhaps too easy. What became a challenge was ascertaining what level
of commitment to expect and require of individual BRC members. As
such, it was not uncommon for individuals to join the BRC;
participate irregularly; and then vanish. Ironically, they might
still think of themselves as BRC members but they were not
necessarily acting to build the organization.
As
frustrating as this situation was for all of us who were part of the
larger core of the BRC it should not have come as a surprise. It was
also not something that could be altered by attempting to turn the
BRC into a cadre organization. There already were cadre and
semi-cadre Left organizations that were helping to build the BRC
as a mass united front organization. Trying to turn the BRC into
something else was objectively sectarian and was destructive.
What
could we have done? The first thing has to do with expectations. When
you have an organization that has a low bar in terms of membership
requirements you cannot get disappointed when you find that your
membership is rotating in and out. What we, in the BRC, were not
especially good at was finding different levels of participation for
members. Activism was, to a great extent, determined by one’s
attendance at meetings. If one did not have the sort of life where it
was necessarily possible to attend regular meetings one could quickly
find one’s self on the outside looking in, not due to a purge
or expulsion but because activity was largely determined by what took
place at meetings.
To
sustain an organization like the BRC we needed to find varying levels
of participation, and quite possibly varying levels of membership. We
needed to ask recruits what they were interested in doing and see to
it that it was possible for them to do the work. That might have
meant that they did mailings; perhaps they wrote for a newsletter; or
maybe they would help with fundraising. Or, maybe all they did was
join and contribute financially.
The
other piece of this, which we shall discuss a bit later in this
essay, is that we had to be open to operating the organization in
different, if not unorthodox ways. Younger activists who joined the
BRC were not necessarily interested in working in an organization
that used methods from the 1970s, or where discussions that took
place made reference to debates from the 1960s or 1970s. They,
especially, did not want to hear those infamous words: “…that’s
not the way that we do things…”, words that are
guaranteed to chase away any number of younger activists.
Thus,
while the BRC was generally welcoming and not filled with sectarian
exchanges, there were elements of the culture that were objectively
sectarian and increasingly narrowed the base of the organization
rather than expanding its reach.
(3)We
had to have lines of demarcation and they had consequences:
All organizations have parameters that they establish whereby there
are fundamental agreements and levels of acceptable exchange. In
radical circles these are often called “lines of demarcation,”
i.e., views that differentiate one group from another. Such lines are
not always principled and the Left has years of experience with
drawing lines that are self-serving, anachronistic and/or completely
idealist (and we do not mean idealistic
either.).
The
BRC established certain lines of demarcation that were essential and
brought with them real world consequences. One was that we were a
formation on the Left, therefore, we were self-described “radicals”.
We shall discuss that more below but one implication was that the BRC
was not equivalent to the 1980s Rainbow Coalition which, as
progressive as it was, could not have been described as
anti-imperialist and certainly not anti-capitalist. (This did not make
the BRC better or worse than other organizations. It just made it
different. The Rainbow Coalition, for instance, existed for different
reasons and had an entirely different history. There is plenty of room
for various sorts of organizational forms.)
A
second line which was of critical importance was on Lesbians, Gays,
Bisexuals, Transgender and Queers. The Black Left had a complicated
if not contradictory relationship with the LGBTQ movement and with
issues relative to homosexuality. Many baby-boomer Black leftists and
progressives, even when they had a strong stand against male
supremacy, could find themselves ambivalent towards, if not on the
wrong side of LGBTQ issues and rights. For this reason when the BRC
National Continuations Committee established, as part of our unity
statement, a strong stand against homophobia and heterosexism, there
were some on the Black Left who yelled that we were being
“sectarian.” The argument was that this should not have
been a line of demarcation.
The
BRC took its stand, unapologetically, against intolerance and
oppression. It was a consistent stand. It was a recognition that
entire segments of Black America have had to operate underground, not
only in the face of white supremacist national oppression, but also
in the face of male supremacy, patriarchy and heterosexism. The BRC
was not going to be complicit in such sexual repression.
In
most cases the attacks on the BRC for its stand on homophobia and
heterosexism were ‘subterranean’ rather than open and
above-board. While it meant that some forces were excluded from our
ranks, it never inhibited the growth of the BRC. The 2000-3000 people
who attended the Juneteenth founding conference knew, well in advance
of that weekend, that the BRC took the stand that it did because it
was contained right there in the BRC’s Unity Statement.
(4)Building
a conference is very different than building an organization:
Building a national conference is hard work, but building an
organization is even harder. Many of the individuals who were key to
the success of the Juneteenth 1998 conference were experienced at
putting together conferences. Significant proportions of them were
based within academia and understood the dynamics of conferences,
including the keys to successful panels, fundraising and planning.
There was an immense amount of stress and energy that went into the
success of Juneteenth 1998, and certainly by the time that it was
over, many people were burned out and needed some down-time.
Yet
there was a larger question that the BRC confronted, quite literally
immediately after the end of the Juneteenth conference: who would be
there to build the organization? This was not a simple question and
it was not answered at once or consistently. Beginning almost as soon
as the conference was completed there was drop-off. That was not
unexpected in the sense that people will attend conferences but not
necessarily really want to join or build an organization. What
was more unsettling, however, was the drop-off of some of the core.
Different reasons were offered, often revolving around the same
notion: individuals had put their lives on hold while they were
building for the conference but now felt that they must ‘return’
to their respective worlds.
That
was the stated reason and in many cases it was the truth. At the same
time what became apparent, certainly over the first year of the BRC’s
life, was that building an organization necessitated a different
approach and temperament, not to mention skill set, than building
towards a conference. This is to take nothing away from anyone who
left. Rather it is an acknowledgement that we were overly optimistic
in assuming that those who worked to build for the successful
conference would necessarily stick with the organization once it was
formed.
In
building an organization there are various tasks and approaches that
are very different from a conference, including:
Continual
fundraising.
Managing
staff (if you have any).
Designing
projects to keep the organization focused.
Resolving
internal differences that might have been put on hold.
Ascertaining
how to grow the organization.
Training
new leaders.
Keeping
the organization in the eye of the public and relevant.
Relationship
building.
And
in doing this there is no certainty as to success.
There
were two particular problems we encountered worth noting: (1)the
after-glow of the Juneteenth conference, and (2)the reality is that
an organization is bigger than a friendship circle. Let’s look
at these separately.
The
overwhelming success of the Juneteenth Conference meant that the
expectations of what would immediately follow were way beyond the
capacity of the organization to fulfill. As one former core member
said to Bill some years later “…after the Juneteenth
conference we should have embarked on one campaign
rather than have spent so much time on infrastructure.” He
asked this person, which of the many proposed campaigns we
could have taken on around which we would have had sufficient unity
to proceed? They looked at Bill and shook their head in
acknowledgement of the problem.
Despite
the energy that existed in Chicago on Juneteenth 1998, there was no
unity on what the next steps were. In fact, the expanded core,
including but not limited to the NCC, had to summarize the conference
and figure out next steps. Among those was what should be the focus
(or foci). When the BRC did not immediately jump into action—though
some local organizing committees actually did immediately get to
work—this was seen by some as a sign of weakness in the
project. So, in that sense the BRC was in a race against its own
success, i.e., trying to outmatch what it had accomplished in its
birth. Think of the image of a new-born who can play the piano. What
else can one expect as it ages? Perhaps inventing faster than light
travel by the age of two?
The
second challenge for many people who were involved with the formation
of the BRC was the recognition that what had been brought into being
was far bigger and more diverse than what they were normally familiar
with, and perhaps comfortable with. Building the conference did not
necessarily involve breaking out of one’s comfort zone, except
for parts of the core. You had to build locally for the conference,
raise some funds, and then get on the road to the conference. At the
conference you could ‘hang’ with those you wanted and
ignore those you wished to ignore.
The
moment that you have to build an organization, the table shifts a
bit. You cannot build the organization around your friendship circle
unless you want to create a clique. You have to go broader. You have
to make compromises with people you might have for years ignored. You
have to interact with people with who you seriously disagree—and
may have disagreed with for years! And there is no end to it.
Contrary to a conference or election campaign where there is a
clearly defined end point, in building an organization and/or a
movement, there is usually not a specific endpoint except and insofar
as the organization or movement achieves success with their major
priorities.
The
BRC, by its very nature, meant that nationalists, non-nationalist
Marxists, feminists, faith-based activists, not to mention academics
and non-academics and individuals from different regions had to
interact, and specifically cooperate in order to succeed. The good
news is that for most of the BRC’s existence it was able to
carry out that balancing act. Unfortunately, in the early stages of
the BRC’s existence, however, we lost some good people who
seemed to have decided that this was more than they had signed for.
When
people left they were rarely direct regarding their motivations. This
does not mean that they were lying or that there was mal intent. In
some cases we are not convinced that some of our colleagues were
entirely sure as to the reasons that they left. Leaving might have
taken place in stages or it might have taken place suddenly. In
either case, over the course of the first year of the formal
existence of the BRC there were many new people who stepped forward
who may or may not have been in the first NCC but had, nevertheless,
come to play a leading role in the organization.
There
is, perhaps, one other issue that is appropriate to discuss in this
section. The leadership of the BRC, by which we mean the National
Continuations Committee (later the National Council) had a
significant representation from academia. The implications of this
were complicated and mixed. As noted above, for some, building a
conference was all that they were ready to do. But the deeper problem
was that academia brings with it timelines and demands specific to
that career. There is teaching, writing, etc., that come with the
job. This placed an immense amount of pressure on some key leaders
and led some to drop away at moments that were not very helpful for
the rest of the organization.
The
other aspect to this, however, is that there are discussions that
often take place in academia that are very different than
those that take place at the grassroots or even among non-academic
organizers or activists. This, in no way, is a put down of academics.
What it is to say is that in having a significant number of academics
in leadership it could tend to skew internal discussions in a
way that did not necessarily make sense for segments of the rank and
file membership.
(5)This
could not run on magic; the challenge of resources:
One of the most difficult challenges for any organization is that of
resources. Resources include, but are not limited, to money. In the
case of the BRC, we were constantly in search of new resources and we
had a special concern when it came to money.
At
the first continuations committee meeting in Chicago in 1997 one
individual made a commitment of several thousand dollars in order to
get the BRC off the ground. What was striking about this commitment
was that it was from someone who had not been part of the original
five and was someone who had had issues with several of the other
invitees to the continuations committee founding. Nevertheless, at a
key moment in the discussion he made a pledge [which he followed
through on] which, in many ways, signified the real birth of this
effort.
From
the moment that the contribution was made at the continuations
committee, the BRC project grew and with it, funds started coming in
but not on their own. Several NCC members made very generous
contributions to the project. This was accompanied by a very active
fundraising effort that included approaching various foundations.
In
part due to the stature and renown of many of the people associated
with the continuations committee, the BRC quickly gained an important
level of credibility. When the “Call” to the Congress was
issued and it had so many endorsers representing much of the
left-wing of the Black Freedom Movement, the BRC became, for many
people including many funders, compelling.
As
a result of excellent fundraising and the incredible numbers of
people in attendance, we were able to come out of the Congress with
money in the bank. But, as everyone knows, money will not sit there
permanently. The BRC had to position itself to obtain funds. This
resulted in an important challenge that many coalition-type
organizations face: how do you raise funds without competing
with your constituent organizations and/or allies? This was not a
challenge that we had prior to the Juneteenth conference since the
funds raised at that point were aimed at making the conference
successful. After the BRC was formed, however, this became a
challenge. We shall discuss some of this below when talking about the
nature of the BRC, but with regard to fundraising, the approach to
the funders had to become far more nuanced so that the mission of the
BRC did not appear to be, nor in fact operate as, a competitor
organization. The institutional funders were difficult to convince
even when they appeared sympathetic to the mission of the BRC.
Subsequent to one meeting with several funders we were told that
while the funders were impressed, they were not entirely sure how the
work of the BRC would not replicate that of some existing
organizations (including some that were constituent members of the
BRC).
Two
years into the life of the BRC the matter of fundraising hit a
critical controversy. We were informed that we had a very good chance
of getting $200,000 over two years from a foundation. Many of us were
elated. With that money—which by the standards of most
non-profits is not exactly rolling in dough but was nevertheless
significant—we would have been in a position to really start to
staff up. Instead the BRC, at a point of near breakthrough in the
political world of Black America, embarked on a major internal
struggle that ultimately shaped its future. Though the struggle was
put on hold, it would reemerge three years later and contribute to
the demise of the organization.
What
was the nature of the struggle? It revolved around whether it was
appropriate for a Black radical formation to accept funds from a
mainstream foundation. The struggle broke down something like this:
In
favor: We needed the funds; the sort of money that we were talking
about could help to position the BRC better than we were; there we
no strings attached that interfered with our mission or principles;
receiving such funds would help to convince other funders (both
institutions and individuals) that we were worth the ‘investment.’
Opposed:
Mainstream foundations aim to co-opt the organizations that they
fund; the organization could become dependent on foundations; this
particular foundation played a negative role in the 1960s; it would
not look right.
The
debate was to a great extent mystifying. Here we were with few
resources and there was a debate over what this particular foundation
had done thirty years previously without the critics having any sense
as to what was currently being funded by this same foundation.
Additionally, the opponents paid little attention to what steps the
BRC would need to take in the real world to raise funds. Some critics
had never paid membership dues in the BRC, an act that reflected both
on their fiscal and political commitments.
The
nature of the debate, though presented by the critics as being about
alleged principle, demonstrated the extent to which philosophical
idealism (Meaning that ideas were not rooted in any sort of material
reality but were free-floating. Sort of along the lines of “…I wish,
therefore it will be…” or, to borrow from the words of the comedian
George Wallace, “…that’s the way I see it, and that’s the way it ought
to be…”) had become a major current in the BRC. Rather than examining real
world options for how to build the BRC, the debate focused on
abstractions or, to present the case of the critics in its most
favorable terms, focused on historical references from 25-35 years
past. It is critical to appreciate that the debate never even touched
on the question of what the terms of the grant would be. For many of
the critics that was irrelevant. What was relevant was whether a
Black radical formation could take such funding at all.
The
debate paralyzed the BRC at precisely the moment that the
organization needed momentum. No agreement could be reached in 2000
so the decision was postponed. Three years later the opportunity
arose again and the same debate reignited. This time a majority of
the leadership voted in favor of the accepting funds. Some members of
the minority chose this issue and another political issue as reasons
to abandon the BRC.
Needless
to say, the funds from the foundation did not co-opt the BRC, but
then again, it was less than clear whether facts were really at stake
in this debate.
It
would be wrong to leave the matter of funding at the debate regarding
foundation money. The deeper problem was that the BRC never
internalized the centrality of fundraising and the need to integrate
fundraising into the work of the organization. By and large
fundraising was seen as a very specific task to be taken up by
grant-writers or development personnel. It was the moment in the
agenda where everyone groaned and looked at how polished their shoes
were. It was a discussion on the agendas of the National Council (the
successor structure to the NCC) that everyone was pleased to have
ended.
An
interesting contrast in an approach towards fundraising could be seen
in the movement to support Eritrean independence from Ethiopia (a
struggle that lasted from the early 1960s through the early 1990s).
In the USA, first the Eritreans for Liberation in North America and
later the Association of Eritrean Students of North America and the
Association of Eritrean Women of North America did a remarkable job
of integrating fundraising into every activity that they conducted.
Whether there was an educational program or cultural activity, the
Eritrean activists ensured that fundraising was part of the work.
Reading materials were sold along with ornaments and clothing.
Additionally, outreach was conducted to businesspeople who might be
favorably disposed towards supporting the work of these
organizations.
By
contrast the BRC, but also many other formations on the Left in the
USA, pay little attention to this work. The BRC made only limited
outreach to businesspeople, and while certain written material would
be sold at events and there was the periodic fundraiser, this work
was rarely professional in character. This demonstrated the
philosophical idealism referenced earlier. Regardless of whether the
BRC would receive any foundation funds, the reality is that a
formation like the BRC could and should never assume that it could
indefinitely (or for any extended period) depend on foundation money.
Alternative funding streams needed to be explored and with the
exception of a suggestion or two thrown out at meetings, it was not
approached with the same vigor and creativity that our organizing
work was addressed. In fact, the lack of attention to fundraising was
once illustrated by a comment offered by a National Council member
who, in the course of a discussion on fundraising, suggested that the
fact that National Council members paid their own way to National
Council meetings represented their financial contribution to the BRC.
As far as this NC member was, apparently, concerned, that settled the
matter.
(6)Youth
and the misreading of the history of SNCC: One of
the saddest chapters in the history of the BRC was the immediate
aftermath of the successful Juneteenth conference and the implosion
of the BRC Youth Caucus.
Although
the BRC process was initiated largely by baby-boomers, it quickly
gained traction among younger activists, particularly
“20-somethings”. The youth were largely college students
and those just out of college. Some were in graduate school while
others were relatively new community-based or labor union activists.
They played a major role in building for the Juneteenth conference,
including in the preparation of major documents and conference
design.
Almost
immediately there was a generational conflict. Though the BRC
recognized the need for what came to be called “intergenerational
dialogue” (including opening the Juneteenth conference with an
intergenerational plenary panel), there was a significant tendency on
the part of the baby-boomers to dominate the process. Sometimes that
dominance was reflected in what was referenced earlier in this paper,
i.e., a chasing out of younger people by insisting on following modes
of operation inherited from the 1960s and 1970s. But it could be
uncovered in far more subtle forms, whether in who spoke with whom;
historical reference points; forms of organizing; or cultural
activities. In either case, generational tension is inevitable; the
question is how it should be handled.
Younger
BRC members caucused. The result was that at the founding conference
there were, in essence, two conferences. There was the main
conference and there was a parallel youth conference. Within the BRC
Youth Caucus there developed a view that BRC Youth needed to split
off from the national BRC much like the Student Non-Violent
Coordinating Committee (SNCC) developed independently of the Southern
Christian Leadership Conference. The argument that was made by some
on Juneteenth weekend, was that the youth needed their own
organization.
In
addition to intergeneration tensions, there also existed tensions
among the youth. These included the same tensions that exist among
“old heads” –ideological, political, class and
personality differences. Some of us “old heads” were
being consulted during the youth sessions by young people who were
struggling to navigate the choppy organizational waters with limited
skills and experience. It appeared that a minority of aggressive
(sometimes intimidating ) and vocal forces dominated the discussion
and thereby the direction the group would ultimately take. There were
such bad feelings that accompanied the Youth Caucus that some people
suggested that it had been disrupted by agent-provocateurs While this
is certainly possible—given the historical experience of police
infiltration and disruption of the Black Freedom Movement—the
two of us are more inclined to believe that there was a dogmatism and
binary approach to discussions (i.e., with us/against us) that often
unfolds in debates among younger activists.
The
proposal to set up a separate formation, which was one of the major
flashpoints in the internal debate within the Youth Caucus, brought
with it important problems. These problems included: SCLC had
actually been in existence for a few short years prior to the
emergence of SNCC. In other words, there was something of a
track-record, both positively and negatively.
SNCC
defined a purpose. It was not formed simply in opposition to an
organization of older activists. But it was also a more secular
organization than SCLC, attracting people of different faiths as
well as atheists.
The
developing BRC Youth Caucus had a poorly defined vision. Instead
much of the time at the Juneteenth conference was focused on
structure rather than purpose and program.
The
BRC was forming at a point not when the Black Freedom Movement was
rising and energized, but rather at a point when it had been on the
defensive for quite some time. This meant that the BRC was
institutionally weak and was in little position to assist a separate
organization.
It
was unclear why the youth activists did not position themselves to
take over the BRC, and we mean that in the best sense of the term.
The
result of the reported circular discussions at the Caucus and the
overemphasis on structure resulted in an alienation of many younger
members from the BRC. Thus, and quite ironically, while most of the
participants who attended the BRC founding conference walked away
very energized, many of the younger activists simply walked away, in
some cases never to return. For reasons still unclear to date, the
vibrant and engaging BRC Youth Listserve was dismantled.
The
BRC continued to include the participation of activists in their 20s
and 30s, but what was missing was the critical mass that we were on
the verge of having Juneteenth 1998. As time went on the generational
issues became more pronounced as younger activists tended to feel
that they were more visitors to the BRC than equal and respected
activists.
It
is not entirely clear how much of this was preventable but there are
important lessons to draw from this:
There
are behaviors that are generational that must be acknowledged and,
when alienating, addressed directly. This does not simply refer to
the activities of older activists; it can include behaviors of
younger activists as well.
It
is not acceptable, as freedom fighters, to simply walk away when a
situation becomes problematic. This was part of what made the youth
implosion so tragic. Yes, there was a difficult situation at the
Chicago conference and it was one that only the youth could address.
Despite the problems within the Youth Caucus, these were matters
that needed to be worked out.
There
is a tendency for older activists to want one more grasp at the
‘ring’. Put differently, older activists are often
unwilling to share the limelight with younger activists but instead
tend to want to treat the younger activists as kids. This is
tremendously alienating. In the BRC this took the form of some of
the older activists not creating sufficient space for younger
activists to grow and lead. Activists in their 20s and 30s are not
kids but many baby-boomers treated them as just that.
(7)The
challenge of a central focus: Having formed an
organization by acclamation on Juneteenth weekend 1998, the National
Continuations Committee (soon to be the National Council) was
confronted with two major problems: (1)what sort of structure made
sense for the BRC, and (2)what could and should the BRC do?
The
structure we shall discuss below. With regard to what the BRC should
do, that became a major quandary. There were pressures in different
directions, e.g., economic justice and labor; political prisoners;
incarceration; education; international solidarity (and relating to
the rest of the African World); and reparations. Each direction had
its own ‘partisans’ who made very convincing arguments as
to why the BRC should do what they were advocating. In effect this
led to stalemate.
The
challenge was not an academic one of choosing from column A or column
B. There were different things at stake, including whether and how
the BRC could become a major force in the Black Freedom Movement and
develop a real-world base. There were also questions regarding our
not repeating the work of existing organizations or, worse, eclipsing
existing formations. And perhaps one of the greatest fears was that
should we choose one specific focus, the partisans of the other foci
would either drop away from the BRC or lessen their commitment to the
formation.
The
BRC did not succeed in creating a means to work through strategic
priorities. Instead the partisans of the different proposals advanced
their views. None of it was put into a broader context examining
things like (a)what was the moment we were in, (b)what would a
formation like the BRC actually be capable of doing, and
particularly, where could we make a difference, (c)were some of the
proposed areas of work being addressed elsewhere, thereby needing
support but not focus by the BRC, (d)what would it mean for the BRC
to support existing work compared with making it a priority.
In
effect the National Continuations Committee/National Council punted.
In our own minds we saw it as a matter of principled compromise and,
essentially, it was, but it was a compromise that brought with it
several consequences. We established four areas of work:
education/not incarceration; reparations; economic justice;
international as the work of the organization. To this was added the
incorporation of the “Hands Off Assata Shakur" (Assata Shakur, former
Black Panther Party member, who went into exile in Cuba after escaping
police custody. She has been hounded and hunted by reactionary forces
ever since.) campaign, which was an already existing effort, in effect creating
five areas of work.
The
theory behind the four/five areas of work is that each would have a
workteam of volunteers from the NC and the membership who would work
up a plan of operations for that specific area. Each workteam would
have a coordinator or chair responsible to keep the workteam moving.
The National Council would, in theory, coordinate the overall work
and mobilize to support the direction of the specific workteams.
It
did not quite work out that way. Despite the enthusiasm that was
usually engendered at NC meetings, following the NC meetings the
operations of the workteams were inconsistent. Part of this was
reflective of an organization that depended on volunteers, i.e.,
individuals having diverse responsibilities and, in this case, the
BRC was only one of them. It was, additionally, not just a matter of
capacity but also what the level of organizing skills that members
had to carry out their respective tasks. Therefore, the chairs of the
workteams along with team members did not always follow through,
irrespective of intentions. What we needed was some level of staff
support, and by and large we did not have it. In the absence of that,
we needed disciplined cadre who were truly making the BRC their major
political work and could, therefore, be counted upon to keep the
organization in motion.
A
second problem could probably be described as strategic. The
workteams operated as independent projects, sometimes doing
exceptional work, but not quite the equivalent of a “commission”
of an organization that develops policy, but implementation is left
to the national leadership. In our case, the workteams were supposed
to develop policy and implementation.
A
third, related, problem was linkage. The four areas of work were just
that, four areas. They were not linked together except and insofar as
they were all aspects of the fight for Black Freedom.
There
were efforts to address these problems. In 2000/2001 the BRC engaged
in the “Charleston 5” Defense Campaign and played a
significant role in building community support. (The campaign was
aimed at freeing five members of Local 1422 of the International
Longshoremen’s Union (ILA) who had been set up by the state and accused
of conspiracy to incite to riot and inciting to riot. The national
AFL-CIO, along with the South Carolina AFL-CIO and Local 1422, ILA took
the lead in initiating a national defense campaign (actually
international). The BRC joined into this effort. Local 1422 was/is
overwhelmingly black and the attack on the local represented a combined
racial/class attack plus stepped up repression. The defense campaign
proved to be a success and the state’s case largely collapsed,
resulting in the defendants getting off with the equivalent of a
reprimand.) In the lead up to the United Nations World Conference Against Racism
held in Durban, South Africa (September 2001), BRC leaders were very
central in preparatory work for the Non-Governmental Conference (NGO)
as well as in various activities at the conference itself. In the
aftermath of the 11 September 2001 terrorist attacks, the BRC—in
addition to vehemently condemning the attacks—shifted gears to
attempt to respond to the drift towards war and domestic repression.
So, it was not as if the organization was sitting on its hands. That
said, it was still trapped in its lack of a directional consensus.
Recognizing
this directional quandary, the BRC made efforts at uniting around a
focus. The experience had complicated results. First, there was an
effort to create a strategic plan, but we did it incorrectly. Second,
we ultimately united around a central campaign “Education/Not
Incarceration” which we hoped to utilize to unite the
organization. Let’s look at these separately.
Within
two years of the founding of the BRC it became clear that we needed a
more coherent plan for our work. As the first unpaid national
organizer for the BRC Bill took a certain sort of initiative but it
was not helpful, regardless of intent. In the context of trying to
develop proposals to take to funders on the work of the BRC it
occurred to Bill that we could use much of what we were writing and
put that together in the form of a planning document around which to
unite the National Council. This planning document would—in
draft form—be circulated to the National Council and then
discussed at a NC meeting with the intent of moving toward adoption.
What a bad idea!
The
draft plan was discussed at a NC meeting and passed. It then died,
for all intents and purposes. The reason was simple, at least in
hindsight. It was not the plan of the NC; it was Bill’s
plan. There was no ownership. There was no discussion within the
NC that could lead to collective conclusions. Rather, people
responded to what Bill came up with and, while generally agreeing
with it, could not ‘see themselves’ in the plan. As a
result it amounted to nothing.
The
second effort was more successful but ran into its own set of
challenges. Through good, protracted discussion the National Council
united on the notion that “education/not incarceration”
needed to be the thrust of our work. This would involve challenging
the prison-industrial complex as well as moving the demand for the
need for greater resources into building quality education.
“Education/Not
Incarceration” was an excellent slogan but it was not precisely
a campaign demand. It was more of an agitational slogan. Therefore,
the good news was that BRC local organizing committees were able to
take it up and implement it as they saw fit. The bad news is that it
did not result in the sort of organizational cohesion we were hoping
to gain. This may have reflected the contradiction between our
efforts at building a focus, on the one hand, with the demands on the
ground that already engaged BRC members and affiliates, on the other
hand. Thus, the campaign may have seemed as if it was additional work
rather than either (1)something responding to an immediate and
perceived crisis and/or need, or (2)a project that flowed from an in
depth analysis of the needs of the moment.
In
the aftermath of the 11 September 2001 terrorist attacks we
confronted an aspect of this contradiction. With the move towards the
Right in the USA, there was pressure within the BRC to respond to
this fundamental change in circumstances with a united campaign
against war and repression. Nevertheless there was stiff resistance
from some sections of the organization who felt that we should stick
with “education/not incarceration” regardless of the
change in national circumstances and that it was somehow frivolous to
alter course. The National Council decided, correctly, that 9/11 had
reshaped the landscape and that the BRC needed to step forward. Yet
even here, though the BRC took initiatives to mobilize against war
and repression it failed to follow through and, in some cases, was
outflanked. A case in point was the formation, in Washington, DC, of
“Black Voices for Peace,” under the leadership of the
late environmental justice activist Damu Smith (Formed after 9/11 and the invasion of Afghanistan.).
The irony of BVfP could not be any starker: many of the key
individuals in helping to bring BVFP into existence were BRC members!
For whatever reason it did not occur to them to utilize the BRC as
the means of building a Black anti-war formation. Instead, something
new was called into existence which, during its life, never
affiliated with the BRC though it had many members in common.
What
conclusions can be drawn about this matter of focus? Any coalitional
organization faces the same dilemma, and it simply cannot be avoided.
United fronts or coalitions come together with multiple agendas.
While they may be brought together by a specific crisis or challenge,
those agendas hover in the background like apparitions. They are
never dropped but they can be addressed.
What
the BRC needed in the immediate aftermath of the Juneteenth 1998
conference was an examination of the state of Black America; an
assessment of the capability(-ies) of the components of the BRC; and
the ascertaining of where the BRC, as the BRC, could make a
difference. This is more than a formality. Instead, it needed to be a
careful examination and discussion. Having such a discussion would
have been complicated by the fact that there was, from the very
beginning of the BRC, pressure on it to “act,” therefore
discussions regarding doing anything that appeared to be less than
“action” would have been attacked in some quarters.
Nevertheless, the rush to “do something” undermined our
ability to more carefully determine the best sort of contribution a
group such as the BRC could make.
(8)Gender:
The BRC had a remarkable female leadership. Compared with so many
other organizations, certainly in the Black Freedom Movement, the BRC
was very diverse, gender wise. Beginning with the original five and
then with the creation of the National Continuations Committee and
later the National Council, women made up much of the BRC’s
leadership. The second (and last) National Organizer—the
position that served as a combination of national chairperson and
quasi-director of organization—was a woman. Women were not
in the background in the growth and development of the BRC.
The
composition of the BRC was not accidental. It was the result of two
important factors: one, who was at the table at the beginning, and,
two, active outreach.
`
It is all too common that organizations are started without any real
attention as to who is sitting at the table. Organizations can start,
to put it another way, on the basis of ‘comfort,’ in this
case, who is comfortable with whom. While there is always some
legitimacy to such an impulse and one never wants to have an enemy at
the table, ‘comfort’ is one of those odd terms that can
often refer to cliquishness and bias.
From
the beginning the BRC was not conceptualized as a male-only or
male-mainly project. The women who were involved were not tokens or
appendages to other men but in every case came with their own base(s)
and legitimacy. This was critical in shaping the BRC. From the very
beginning attention was paid to gender balance in terms of both
composition as well as in meeting dynamics. That said, we had our
fair share of struggles against patriarchal behaviors throughout the
BRC’s existence.
The
second factor was active outreach. Again, with the construction of
the National Continuations Committee on into the Juneteenth
conference and the composition of panels and speakers, the leadership
paid attention to reaching out to individual women and networks of
women to ensure participation. The results were impressive, not only
in terms of turnout but as well who turned out and participated. In
some cases women activists who had felt excluded by male-centered
Black Freedom Movement activities found a safe space for both men and
women.
While
there was much to be proud of, there were at least two important
challenges: (1)who defined feminism?, (2)was the BRC positioned to be
an organization that represented the interests of women?
From
the very beginning of the work towards the Juneteenth conference and
following from that, a subtle tension revealed itself within the
ranks of the BRC. It revolved around how one defined “feminism”
and who was empowered (among women) to define who was feminist. This
may sound convoluted but the roots to the tension go back to the
1970s and the revitalized women’s movement. With the rise of
this movement and the mass articulation of the term “feminist”
a debate ensued within the left-wing of the Black Freedom Movement
(and spread beyond that) as to how Black women activists who were
vigorously engaged in the struggle against both white supremacy and
male supremacy would self-define. Some accepted the designation of
“feminist” as at least part of their self-description.
Others rejected that term and used other terms, such as “womanists”,
usually to distinguish their own brand of gender justice from what
was frequently perceived as a white women’s movement. And still
others used no specific designation, while at the same time being
very active in fighting for gender justice. (There is no intent
here to characterize the intentions of those in any of these
tendencies. In some cases those who openly used the term “feminist”
were identified with academia, adding a class dimension or complication
to this situation. Some who used the term “womanist” or may not have
used any specific identification, perceived “feminist” as referencing
the largely white dominated women’s movement. That said, all of these
tendencies were represented in the BRC and they were equally committed
to advancing the BRC project. The differences among them, however, were
of significance.).
The
BRC had each of these tendencies from the very beginning. Some women
in the camp of self-described feminists took the position that they
were the ones who could best lead and analyze the struggle against
male supremacy/patriarchy. This put them at odds with other women who
held that irrespective of whether they were self-described feminists,
that their own practice and analysis positioned them to be
co-articulators with other feminists.
This
dispute was rarely made public but it was, nevertheless, very real.
It was also never resolved, at least in a productive manner. Each
side had often unspoken views of those from the other side. While
there was a feminist caucus within the BRC, this caucus did not serve
to surface or resolve these contradictions. The result, or at least
one result of this was that some women pulled back from active
involvement with the BRC and, at the same time, discussions started
about the need for the formation of a Black women’s
organization that had the politics of the BRC but would be
independent. It was never clear, in the course of said discussions,
whether such an organization would represent a split from the BRC or
a formation that was complementary. In either case, a
multi-racial/multi-national network of women did come together in the
early 2000s which included, but was not restricted to, Black women
(and among them, several active and former BRC members).
This
contradiction has surfaced in other Black organizations and it has
surfaced enough that it is the sort of matter that needs to be
addressed quite openly. As we saw in the case of the BRC, the failure
to deal with it directly led to unease within the BRC that resulted
in mutual alienation. Actual political differences among these
different tendencies were fairly minimal or, at the least, had little
to do with whether one was a self-described feminist or not.
Nevertheless, resentments built up over time.
The
second challenge had to do with whether the BRC was positioned to
represent the interests of women. This may be poorly worded but one
way to explain it is by analogy. Karen Nussbaum, a leading staff
person in the AFL-CIO and the founder of the organization “9-to-5”
(the organization of women office workers), has made the provocative
yet pointed comment that the AFL-CIO, the largest union federation in
the USA, is the largest organization of women workers in the USA. At
the same time, the AFL-CIO never positions itself as such an
organization or movement.
The
BRC had an impressive leadership of women at all levels as well as
may women activists. Yet, and this may lie at the roots of some of
the concerns and criticisms raised by BRC feminists, it was not an
organization that located itself at the heart of the struggle for
gender justice. This does not mean, by any stretch of the
imagination, that that BRC took a pass on opposing male supremacy and
fighting patriarchy. It was more complicated than that. To some
extent the problem revolved around the matter of base. To what
extent, for instance, was the BRC committed to building a deep base
among Black working women? The use of the word “committed”
is problematic because it comes off as moralistic. The point is that
none of the BRC’s major work was targeted explicitly at issues
that had a disproportionate impact on Black women. Certainly an
argument—and a good one—can be raised that the four areas
(or five if one includes Hands Off Assata!) all had an implication
vis a vis Black women, but that is almost beside the point. There are
issues that are of particular concern to Black women and could,
conceivably, have served as a means to not only attract more Black
women but for more left-leaning Black women to see in the BRC a
champion of their concerns. This goes way beyond whether the BRC
discussed patriarchy but instead moves into the world of practical
program, whether with regard to fights around gender discrimination,
supporting domestic workers, reproductive rights, or a myriad of
other issues. The suggestion here is not that of separating off
“women’s issues” into a special category but more
of the need we had to center the BRC within the actual and day to day
fights against male supremacy and for gender justice.
The
other aspect of the gender issue was LGBTQ. As mentioned earlier, the
BRC—from its beginning—took a principled stand against
homophobia and heterosexism. While it would be an exaggeration to say
that the BRC was active in the LGBTQ movement, it can be said that
the BRC spoke out on issues relative to homophobia and heterosexism.
Additionally, it did not tolerate the existence of either within its
ranks. The net result of this was to make the BRC a safe space for
Black LGBTQ activists.
As
mentioned earlier, the BRC faced criticism, mostly indirect, for its
stand with the LGBTQ movements from those who held that opposition to
homophobia and heterosexism was too high a threshold for the
left-wing of the Black Freedom Movement. We did not budge from our
position. Certainly there were BRC members who were personally
uncomfortable with either LGBTQ individuals or the entire matter, but
such a bias was not considered a legitimate one for discussion or
expression within our ranks.
(9)The
importance of being internationalists: Frequently
African American activist formations are placed in a box that is
called “domestic issues.” The way that that “box”
works is that Black activists are, at least according to mainstream
white America, restricted from discussing or engaging in anything
other than domestic issues (and within domestic issues, usually only
about race). For this reason people like W.E.B. Dubois, Paul Robeson,
Malcolm X and Martin Luther King were chastised, if not demonized,
for daring to speak out on matters such as imperialism, colonialism
and war.
The
conception of the BRC from its inception was “black
internationalist” in several senses. It saw the African
American struggle in the USA as integrally connected to struggles of
people of the African World and other oppressed groups domestically
and globally. Second, the BRC defined itself as “black,”
as noted earlier, making it an organization that while focused
largely on struggles within the USA among African Americans, was
nevertheless an organization that could and would include individuals
from other parts of the African World and/or those who self-described
as “black”. Third, the BRC saw itself as engaging in
international work, including but not limited to matters of
solidarity.
At
the Juneteenth founding an important controversy arose that helped to
define the identity and focus of the BRC. There were participants
from outside of the USA who were in unity with the objectives of the
BRC. Some of them not only wanted to join but wanted to establish BRC
chapters in other countries. Through discussion it was agreed that
this would not be the direction of the BRC. The decision reflected
many concerns not the least of which was the lack of actual capacity
to center a global organization. But there were other concerns. There
has been a history in the USA, including within the Black Freedom
Movement, of attempting to center international organizations from
within the USA. This has sometimes led to problems of chauvinism in
not paying attention to the actual conditions in other countries.
Instead it was agreed that should the participants wish to return to
their homelands and start their own BRC we would welcome the
opportunity to build a relationship based on mutual respect and
independence rather than those organizations being chapters of a
US-based organization.
The
BRC’s internationalist work—at least outside of work to
support other people of color within the USA—broke down into
two main arenas: (1)statements and positions taken on international
events (and/or US foreign policy), (2)the specific work in connection
with the UN World Conference Against Racism (UNWCAR).
The
BRC National Council established a coordinating committee which met,
via conference call on a regular basis. It was to the coordinating
committee that the task of responding to various events was sent. In
some cases the International Workteam would prepare statements,
either to be issued by the coordinating committee or in its own name.
In general, the coordinating committee was asked, to issue statements
regarding world events. It was through one such statement that a
major crisis unfolded, a crisis that contributed to the decline of
the BRC. More about that later.
Activity
centered in the International workgroup included the UNWCAR. So as to
clear up misunderstandings, this was focused on the Non-Governmental
Organization conference that paralleled (and was supposed to inform)
the official United Nations conference. (This clarification is
offered due to a strange criticism offered of Manning Marable’s book on
Malcolm X, Malcolm X: A Life of Reinvention.
The criticism was offered by Abdul Alkalimat, one of the original five
in the BRC, who claimed that Marable was entirely off base in
suggesting that Malcolm X would have been excited by the UNWCAR.
Alkalimat went on to say that Malcolm would never have been interested
in any forum that was a dialogue with imperialists. It is unclear
whether Alkalimat read Marable’s book too quickly or was overly anxious
to criticize Marable, but in either case he blundered in this
criticism. Marable was speaking about the NGO Conference that took
place in Durban at the same time as the official conference. Thousands
of people attended the NGO conference, representing a myriad of nations
and social movements. The BRC was well represented, including but not
limited to Marable, Mullings, and International workgroup coordinator
Humberto Brown, International Workgroup members Jean Bond and Horace
Campbell, as well as BRC coordinating committee member Ashaki
Binta.).
Members of the International workgroup attended preparatory meetings
for the UNWCAR and were active participants. They additionally helped
to build for the conference in the USA, writing about its potential
significance and why the involvement of Black America could be of
such importance.
Had
it not been for the 11 September 2001 terrorist attacks it is quite
possible that the UNWCAR would have had a more lasting
significance. (The horrendous attacks took place as many of the
delegates were returning home. In fact, some delegates had to prolong
their stay in South Africa as a result of the impact of the terrorist
attacks on air travel.). The BRC International workgroup, and through it much of the rest of
the BRC, appreciated this potential significance.
In
general the international statements by the BRC coordinating
committee were not internally (to the BRC) controversial. A test of
this was found in the immediate aftermath of the 11 September 2001
terrorist attacks.
The
BRC, like every other anti-imperialist organization in the USA, was
confronted with what for some people was a major challenge. Should
and how the BRC speak out on the terrorist attacks and, if so, what
should it say? In a statement that has withstood the test of time,
the BRC, without any qualification, condemned the terrorist attacks.
It made no excuses for the attackers. At the same time the BRC
coordinating committee addressed the question of US foreign policy
and the reasons that people around the world often stood in fear and
anger vis a vis the USA.
The
BRC statement on the 11 September 2001 attacks was important on many
different levels. Among other things the BRC statement distinguished
the BRC from knee-jerk anti-imperialists who believe that any enemy
of US imperialism is automatically a friend of progressive forces. It
was also an important statement because it was risky. In the
aftermath of the terrorist attacks anyone raising questions regarding
US foreign policy was either treated with suspicion and/or condemned
as being unpatriotic and otherwise dangerous. Despite this, the BRC
refused to be silenced.
In
2003, however, the BRC encountered what many people, including the
two of us, failed to expect in response to one such statement.
Approached by the US-based non-profit advocacy group Africa Action,
the BRC, along with TransAfrica Forum and some other groups and
individuals signed onto a statement critical of Zimbabwean President
Robert Mugabe for the repression of dissent that was underway, and
particularly the brutality of said repression. The statement called
upon President Mugabe to step away from this repression.
In
section #11 below we shall explore this problem a bit more, but here
it should be noted that despite the fact that the coordinating
committee unanimously agreed to sign onto the statement there was
major pushback from within the ranks of the BRC. As a result of this
controversy, and following the 2003 conference of the BRC, there was
the departure of some BRC members who were disenchanted by the
position taken. That people would walk away was a shock to many of
the remaining BRC members.
(10)The
implications of being an organization of both organizations and
individuals: The BRC, from the beginning, was
confronted with a challenge that we never directly addressed, though
proved integral to the entire manner in which the BRC grew,
functioned and ultimately declined. Specifically, what sort of united
front of the Black Left were we?
As
noted earlier, the BRC was actually conceptualized by five
individuals. Several of those individuals, but not all, had
affiliations, including the Committees of Correspondence for
Democracy and Socialism; Communist Labor Party (which evolved into
the League of Revolutionaries for a New America); and the Freedom
Road Socialist Organization. More importantly, the BRC was not a
project of those organizations (though it later became a project that
involved those organizations). In time, as the project got under way,
individuals from other organizations, and many individuals either
affiliated with loose networks or unaffiliated entirely, were
incorporated as partners. Organizations such as the New Afrikan
People’s Organization and the Communist Party came to be
present in the life and work of the BRC, playing significant and
positive roles.
The
conception of the BRC focused largely on the participation of
individuals. At the same time we developed a theory of “multiple
points of entry,” meaning that individuals and organizations
could participate in the life of the BRC through multiple means.
Let’s explain this a bit.
The
BRC had local organizing committees through which individuals could
participate. There were also organizational affiliations, as
mentioned earlier. There were campaigns that were carried out by
working groups, through which individuals and organizations could
participate (particularly if there was no local organizing committee
in their area). Despite all of this, there was not a discussion
concerning whether organizations should have a special role. The BRC
was not, for instance, run by a council of organizations and there
was no special weight to any organization that was somehow involved
in the BRC, except those that explicitly affiliated as organizations,
e.g., the Black Workers for Justice (with automatic membership in the
BRC for its members). (A contrasting example would be networks
like the Grassroots Global Justice or the Right to the City Alliance
which are alliances of organizations. Individuals cannot join these
alliances as individuals but must, in effect, join a participating
organization.).
Although
we did not realize it at the time, we had walked into a labyrinth.
While individuals worked to build the BRC, it was the case that a set
of organizations had devoted an immense amount of time building for
the Juneteenth conference, and in some cases, building the BRC
afterwards. Yet, these organizations did not have a special role in
leading the BRC, though in virtually every case, individuals from
those organizations found themselves on either local or national
leading bodies.
The
implications of this problem began to set in not long after the
founding conference. Some organizations had focused much of their
work on building for the Juneteenth conference. Following that
conference they were then faced with the question as to whether they
would continue doing such work and, if so, what would be the
implications for their other work. A second question to emerge was
about decision-making. Would a local organizing committee of
unaffiliated individuals have the same voice and role as an
organization in the work and life of the BRC?
The
result of our failure to address this problem directly was
illustrated in the departure of or minimized role of some of the
organizations that had been key in getting the BRC off the ground.
Though no one gave voice to this concern, it was obvious that these
organizations had to balance the question of the work of their
respective organization vs. building the BRC. And, further, if they
did not have a special role in the direction of the BRC—despite
their activity in building it—did it make sense to continue?
The
BRC erred in not addressing the scale and scope of this dilemma. It
is not as if there was a tried and true answer, but there were
options, each of which carried with it various consequences. Let’s
use an example. The organizations that helped to get the BRC off the
ground, e.g., NAPO, FRSO, CP, CCDS, LRNA, could have been given a
special leadership role in the BRC. The model from El Salvador of the
Faribundo Marti National Liberation Front (FMLN), or the networks
mentioned in the footnote, would not have worked, however, where you
had organizations that came together to constitute the front and
individuals had to join one of those organizations. Such a model, at
least vis a vis the BRC, would not have succeeded largely because the
BRC, from its inception, represented a mass call to activists on the
left-wing of the Black Freedom Movement. But it might have been
possible that those organizations would have had weighted votes on
the National Council given what they were putting into the BRC. There
was the additional question of organizational affiliates such as the
previously mentioned Black Workers for Justice and the Organization
for Black Struggle that would have also needed to have consideration
given to a specific leadership role.
By
ignoring the role of special, cadre and semi-cadre organizations, in
the life and leadership of the BRC, we found ourselves building an
organization of individuals in a setting, as we earlier noted, where
there was a wide spectrum of involvement and dedication. What
organizations like NAPO, the CP, CCDS, FRSO and LRNA brought to the
table were dedicated members who devoted an immense amount of time to
building of the BRC. They did this because their respective
organizations believed that this political project was of importance
and encouraged this level of activism. While there were certainly
many unaffiliated individuals who were involved in building the BRC
and who were dedicated, the work of the cadre from these various
organizations was disproportionate to the size of their
organizations. (We are talking about relatively small
organizations. There was nothing comparable to, for example, the role
of the Communist Party in the 1930s in the building of the National
Negro Congress.).
For
the various organizations that were involved, at one point or
another, in the building of the BRC there was the fundamental
question of the relationship of building the BRC to the building of
their own organizations. In each case there were those who argued
that building the BRC hurt the ability of these individual
organizations to grow. In some cases it was argued that work in the
BRC should only take place if it could help these individual
organizations to grow. What was fascinating is that most of the
organizations that participated in the building of the BRC did so in
a very principled manner despite the fact that it did not necessarily
lead to the growth of their own organizations. At a certain juncture,
however, that relationship needed to become a bit more symbiotic in
order to make it sustainable. If organizations are working entirely
through a united front then they can often lose their reason to
exist.
(11)The
challenge of building a united front organization:
Many people outside of the Left think of the Left as near monolithic.
They will offer expressions such as “…the Left does
this…” or “…you know the Left…”
as if they are talking about a consolidated tendency, if not an
organization. Yet the Left is very diverse, and this is no less true
of the Black Left. There are various shades of nationalists;
Marxists; feminists; anarchists; green leftists; Pan Africanists; and
so on. And, to make it even more interesting, there are mixtures and
overlaps of each of these categories.
It
is important to keep in mind that the original conception of the BRC
was not as an organization but as an event or process leading to an
event: a summit of the Black Left. It was understood from the
beginning that there would be different tendencies represented at a
summit and, once we decided that we needed to go beyond a summit, it
was understood—at least theoretically—that an
organization that emerged from the Juneteenth conference would be
extremely diverse and, objectively, a united front formation.
There
were many implications to being a united front formation. One of the
most important concerned the level of unity. As opposed to a cadre
organization, or for that matter any sort of ideologically
consolidated organization, a united front organization would need to
have a level of agreement that was lower than that of a consolidated
organization. This does not mean that a united front organization
would be loose or amorphous, but it would mean that it would be both
easy to join and have a spectrum of views on questions that would not
be the case if it was a consolidated organization with a specific
world view and/or clearly defined purpose.
A
second challenge in building a united front organization concerns how
groups working within
a united front organization should
operate in a principled manner. There are many negative examples of
groups attempting to use a united front organization in order to
grow, analogous to leaches. Yet in the BRC, as noted above, that,
by-and-large, did not happen. (There is a funny anecdote here. An
internal document from an organization known for sectarianism was
revealed around the time of the formation of the BRC. It indicated that
it did not appear as if there were great prospects for them to pick off
BRC members for their own growth. The representatives of this
organization disappeared in embarrassment from the ranks of the BRC. In
case you are curious, it was not one of the organizations mentioned in
this document.). The problem is that when a group is publicly represented in a united
front organization how does it present its politics in a way that
does not come off as sectarian or factional?
The
best answer we have been able to come up with, regarding this last
question, revolves around a combination of work-style and the public
existence of a group operating within a united front organization. In
the case of the BRC, the major groups that worked to build it did
just that: worked to build it. They deployed individuals to carry out
various tasks and did not make their particular point of view the
end-all and be-all. As a result, they gained a great deal of respect,
in general, sometimes even from individuals and groups that had
previously shared disagreements with them. Given the legacy of
anti-communism, there was often skepticism about the intentions of
explicitly Marxist organizations even though such organizations were
not actually shunned within the BRC. In either case, the Marxist
organizations—be they nationalist or non-nationalist—worked
very hard overall to build the BRC.
The
other piece to this puzzle, as mentioned, concerns visibility. It
helped to have accessible public representatives of the groups that
were working to build the BRC. This is to say that it was important
for individuals in the BRC who were unaffiliated with any
organization, to have a chance to meet with and discuss various
issues with these groups and to understand that these organizations
were not somehow alien.
The
fundamental challenge in building a united front organization,
however, concerns the question of the “mandate” created
by the components or participants in the united front organization.
To put it another way, there are parameters in all organizations but
particularly in united front organizations the parameters can be
restrictive and uncomfortable. Those parameters define the unity of
the group and, while they can be challenged up to a point, they must
nevertheless be recognized and respected.
In
general the leadership of the BRC understood its mandate(s) and the
parameters within which it could operate. This meant that there
certainly was debate on a host of issues, but it was debate that
could only go but so far. The leadership could, therefore, lead
within those parameters. In the case of the statement in response to
the 11 September 2001 terrorist attacks, the coordinating committee
pushed the limits of the mandate a bit but not enough to cause any
problems. The majority of the BRC believed that the statement
represented the unity of our project.
In
early 2003, however, a very different situation evolved and one from
which important lessons must be drawn. Zimbabwe’s President
Robert Mugabe was carrying out intense repression against domestic
opponents. The forms of repression varied but included jailing,
torture and rape. The US-based non-profit advocacy group, Africa
Action, initiated a sign-on letter to be sent to President Mugabe
protesting this repression and calling upon him to ensure a cessation
of such activities. The then executive director of Africa Action
approached several organizations and individuals to gain their
support and signatures on this letter of protest. Among those
approached were TransAfrica Forum (another non-profit advocacy group
most frequently associated with leading the anti-apartheid support
struggle in the USA) and the BRC. (At the time Bill Fletcher was
the president of TransAfrica Forum and a member of the BRC’s
Coordinating Committee. Though TransAfrica Forum signed onto the letter
to Mugabe, his role in this situation was to convey to the BRC the
request on behalf of the Executive Director of Africa Action.).
The
BRC Coordinating Committee unanimously agreed that it should endorse
this letter. There was not one voice raised in opposition, though one
member raised the possibility that there might be pushback. In either
case, there was a thorough discussion of the situation in Zimbabwe
and the letter. The Coordinating Committee concluded that the BRC
needed to go on record in opposition to the repression underway.
(Because of mis-information that was spread at the time it is
critically important to be clear about the nature of the letter. The
letter was criticizing the repression that President Mugabe and his
supporters were conducting against his opponents in the political realm
and within the social movements. The letter was NOT criticizing the
land seizures, though among the signatories there were different
analyses as to the ACTUAL nature of the land seizures and,
specifically, who was benefiting and who was not. In the struggle that
unfolded in the USA in the aftermath of the publication of the letter,
many Mugabe supporters in the USA claimed that Africa Action,
TransAfrica Forum and the BRC Coordinating Committee were allegedly
defending the white farmers who had been expropriated. There is no
factual foundation for this argument, and the sole purpose of that line
of argument was to attempt to discredit any discussion as to what was
actually going on in Zimbabwe at that time.).
The
response was like a maelstrom. There was immediate pushback and the
tenor of the ensuing debate became more and more toxic. There were
two main arguments against the statement: (1)that there should have
been a debate within the BRC as a whole prior to the issuing of the
statement, and (2)that the statement was wrong.
The
response of the Coordinating Committee was largely defensive. Outside
of our national conferences there actually had not been a generalized
debate on any issue prior to the Coordinating Committee issuing a
statement. In fact, as noted earlier, the Coordinating Committee was
regularly asked to issue statements. As a result it was the position
of the Coordinating Committee that it was their responsibility to
speak out as the main leadership body of the formation. On the
substance of the issue, the Coordinating Committee reaffirmed its
position.
On
the basic facts the Coordinating Committee was correct. At the
same time it failed to recognize that it had actually erred. The
error was not in the realm of formality but rather at the level of
not having a better sense of the tensions and contradictions within
the BRC. The Coordinating Committee did not take sufficiently
seriously the extent of the pro-Mugabe sentiment within the formation
and that the Coordinating Committee, in signing onto a critical
letter, was overreaching. While we contend that the letter, in
substance, was correct and has been vindicated by later actions by
President Mugabe, that is, actually, irrelevant. When one is in a
united front body one has to always get a sense as to the parameters.
This means that a united front organization may not necessarily take
the same position that an individual member or organizational member
would take on any given issue because the level of unity within a
united front organization is, by definition, different and lower.
The
“Mugabe letter incident” tore at the BRC and resulted in
the defection of important members. That people left over this letter
rather than registering their strong disagreements was, itself,
significant, which is to say that the drawing of a line in the sand
over this letter of protest to President Mugabe in light of the vast
areas of agreement within the BRC was indicative of an internal
sectarianism, not to mention a narrowness of purpose.
Yet
the responsibility lay primarily with the Coordinating Committee. The
CC needed to have tested the ground before issuing the statement. It
needed to have, at least, floated the statement to someone whose
views on the matter differed from the CC. Backed into a corner the CC
lined up supporters for its position and the situation went from bad
to worse. By the summer 2003 conference of the BRC, an organization
already in decline, suffered from a level of demoralization and
tension. The defections started and the center could not hold. While
the BRC would continue through 2010, it ceased to be the rallying
point for the various tendencies as it once had been.
The
critical issue here is that the leadership of the BRC had to navigate
in very stormy seas. It had to, at all times, pay attention to the
actual mandate that it had to lead. To the extent to which the
leadership was perceived as fair, willing to listen, open-minded and
non-sectarian, it was able to gain an important level of credibility.
When the actions of the leadership or a portion of the leadership
could be portrayed as trying to push their own agenda—even if
this was factually not the case—the credibility was weakened,
thereby contributing to defections and factionalism. (Therefore,
it would have been one thing for a leader of the BRC, offering their
own opinion or the opinion of an organization in which they operated,
to have voiced a view on Mugabe. But in speaking FOR the BRC, the
problem that emerged quickly was that the unity was simply not there.).
Yet
here is the other part of this overall equation. The mandate or
parameters are never fixed in stone. They can shift over time, and
usually do. But they can unravel even under the best of circumstances
when external factors change. In other words, when the circumstances
that led to the coming together of the various forces in a united
front changes, the front can weaken or strengthen, depending on the
nature of the changes. Using an example outside of the BRC, in the
build-up to the US invasion of Iraq, coalitions assembled, such as
United For Peace & Justice (UFPJ). UFPJ was a massive coalition
of various groups that opposed the pending invasion. Yet, when the
invasion took place and was successful, this created a major
challenge for UFPJ. Could UFPJ stay together? What should happen in
light of the successful US invasion? It was at that juncture that
UFPJ faced a crisis of direction that included some groups drifting
away to get back to their regular work while many of the constituents
wanting UFPJ to take on various issues in addition to Iraq. The
immediacy of the invasion had kept UFPJ focused; the aftermath led to
a very different situation.
To
a great extent that situation faced the BRC as well, and not just due
to Mugabe letter incident. As unifying as was the Juneteenth
conference, it did not lead to an obvious central focus; neither did
it result in a sense of an obvious common project, as mentioned
earlier.
(12)Was
there a role for faith?: One of the great failings
of the BRC as a project was its inability to unite, on scale, with
faith-based initiatives, projects, etc. While there were
religiously-inspired activists who participated in the BRC, including
at the founding Juneteenth conference, the reality is that they were
not central. Despite that, the enthusiasm of the Juneteenth
conference led one faith-based leader who participated to committing
to building a religious component to the BRC. The National
Continuations Committee was thrilled in hearing that news.
Unfortunately, it never happened.
Many
secular Leftists think of faith-based leftists only as an
afterthought. That was essentially the case in the BRC. In the
construction of the National Continuations Committee insufficient
time went into developing ties with that sector. Despite the fact
that we had Cornel West as an early signatory to the call to the
Juneteenth conference, it was more the Cornel as the left-wing public
intellectual rather than approaching Cornel with his religious cap
on, so to speak.
Though
there was a religious presence at the Juneteenth conference, which
contributed to the commitment to the building of a religious
component to the BRC, nothing took off. There are different
explanations. These include: (1)the lack of a core, (2)absent from
our strategy, (3)a different world.
There
was an insufficient core of faith-based black radicals involved with
or in orbit around the BRC in order for this work to gain traction.
This does not mean that there was no involvement. But it means that
faith-based activists may have chosen to participate in the BRC in
different ways but not as a self-identified grouping. In contrast,
and by way of example, there were organized feminist and labor
caucuses that saw as their role both outreach as well as influencing
the politics and dynamics of the BRC.
There
was an absence from the BRC strategy of outreach to faith-based
groups and religious institutions. This does not mean that there were
not tactical overtures. Whether through demonstrations or for other
events, there was outreach to participate in what the BRC was
already planning on doing. What was not done, however, was to
ensure the inclusion of religious activists in the creation of
overall strategy as well as specific plans. Given this, the outreach
would appear to be either last-minute or an afterthought rather than
representative of an effort to build a very broad front.
This
takes us into the question of a ‘different world.’ The
failure of the BRC to be inclusive of religious activists was not
about “intent” in the sense of any suggestion that the
majority of the BRC wanted to exclude or ignore religious activists.
Rather, it was more representative of this not being on the radar
screen. It was not even a matter of a group of atheists ignoring
religious activists, since the BRC was made up of activists from
different religious and spiritual traditions as well as those who are
atheists or hold to no defined spiritual belief system. It was more
reflective of our political and strategic failure to appreciate the
importance of the religious community, including among leftists, and
the need to see within the religious community comrades who are also
in struggle not only for Black freedom, but against regressive
tendencies in their respective religious communities.
Our
failure to make the consistent connection with the religious
community in the left-wing of the Black Freedom Movement cost us
deeply in terms of limitations on expansion and base-building. There
were other approaches that we could have taken had we been more
sensitive to this question. An interesting example, which emerged at
roughly the same time as the BRC, was a network called “Ministers
Against Global Injustice” (MAGI). Initiated by Global Trade
Watch in the midst of the debate around the backward “Africa
Growth and Opportunity Act”, MAGI was a national network of
progressive Black ministers who spoke out against AGOA and, in
effect, regressive trade agreements. This formation, which in time
drifted out of existence, was precisely the sort of formation that
the BRC needed as an affiliate. MAGI involved ministers who were
prepared to speak out on a global issue while at the same time
connecting that with domestic issues. MAGI was a potentially
strategic initiative and contrasted with the on-again/off-again
relationship that frequently transpires between many secular
activists (and organizations) and the progressive faith-based
movements.
The
BRC could have, additionally, taken a bold step into another aspect
of the religious community. In the aftermath of 9/11 anti-Muslim
discrimination, demonization and violence spread across the USA like
wild-fire. Though the BRC spoke out against Islamophobia, this could
have been a key moment to link with progressive Muslim activists and
provide a base of support against the assaults that were being
experienced. Unfortunately, while the BRC did speak out and was a
voice against the generally repressive climate that existed after
9/11, there was no coherent outreach to the Muslim community to build
appropriate alliances and, where feasible, encourage affiliation with
the BRC.
(13)What
about class? It is fair to say that the bulk of the
BRC was committed to the idea that the BRC needed to be grounded
among Black working class people. At the same time, for most of the
BRC that notion was something of an abstraction. What did it mean,
concretely, to ground the BRC within the Black working class? Would
the BRC be an organization that was a voice of the Black working
class?
Part
of the problem with the framing of the issue of “class”
in the BRC was that it was done as if “class” was a
constituency group along the lines of any other. In addition, “class”
was often interpreted as being the same thing as labor. Thus, the
idea that the BRC needed to pay special attention to the working
class (the majority of Black America) was not necessarily greeted
enthusiastically within the entire organization. Influenced by
degrees of post-modernism, some argued that a focus on the Black
working class was “pre-figurative” or presumed an
importance for the Black working class that was not justified.
The
problem of identifying class and labor resulted in the notion that
there needed to be a special “labor” section of the BRC
just as there had been one in the National Black United Front twenty
years earlier. Yet having a caucus or committee focused on labor was
not the same thing as rooting the BRC in the Black working class. The
labor movement is a particular social movement, possessing its own
set of dynamics. The notion of class is about power relations in
society and the cultures that flow from them.
Differences
on the matter of class arose in various ways. The first was a matter
of base. While there certainly was a consensus, as noted earlier, in
terms of grounding the BRC in the Black working class, the
implications of such an understanding were not grasped. There was
little attention to what that meant in terms of recruitment; the
manner in which meetings were held; or the struggles in which the BRC
was engaged. Thus, while the BRC certainly attracted Black working
class activists, it cannot be said that the BRC was an expression of
the Black working class. It was a “friend” to the Black
working class, possessing a radicalism that supported the Black
working class, but the organization itself was not one that Black
workers would recognize as being one of their own.
The
experience of the BRC when it came to class contrasted with that of
the National Negro Congress, the Black united front organization from
the 1930s and early 1940s, that was deeply rooted in the major
working class struggles of their time. What was interesting about the
NNC was that, formed as a result of discussions that started in 1935,
the movement was aimed at addressing the disproportionate impact of
the Great Depression on Black America and the unevenness on the part
of the federal government in responding. But what emerged was an
organization that also recognized the strategic implication of the
rise of a new labor union movement led by the Congress of Industrial
Organization (CIO) and what that meant for the Black working class in
particular, and Black America in general. The NNC’s leadership
saw in the rise of the CIO a tremendous opportunity for Black workers
and, therefore, decided to play a role in influencing the growth of
the CIO.
In
the case of the BRC there was no similarity. There was no agreement
that working class struggles held a particular importance. To
some extent such struggles were collapsed into the generic notion of
“community struggles.” Economic justice struggles,
including those on the job but also in the communities, did not rise
in importance. Just the same, the Labor Caucus was renamed the
Working Class Caucus to reflect the desire to broaden its scope
beyond just union organizing.
There
was an interesting moment that was illustrative of the problem that
we faced. In 2000 the BRC was approached about a struggle that was
unfolding in Charleston, South Carolina. Five dockworkers, members of
Local 1422 of the International Longshoremen’s Association had
been arrested on the pretext of conspiracy to incite to riot and
inciting to riot. This action was the result of a police provocation
at a demonstration by the dockworkers against a non-union stevedore
company. Of the five dockworkers, four were Black and the campaign of
vilification against them represented an attack on both the Black
community and labor.
The
national AFL-CIO began a campaign to defend and gain an acquittal for
these workers. The BRC got involved. As the BRC became more involved
an argument ensued over whether, what came to be known as the
“Charleston 5 Defense Campaign”, should become a major
focus of the work of the BRC. Specifically this meant should the BRC
concentrate resources on this defense effort.
The
response within the BRC was initially anemic. Within the leadership
there were those who held that a focus on the Charleston 5 was not
relevant to the rest of the BRC. The Charleston 5 case, in other
words, was treated as a constituency campaign rather than a campaign
that held any strategic importance. Yet the C-5 campaign offered
tremendous opportunities, including (1)a manner in which to speak
with the community about systemic repression, (2)the possibilities of
building a very broad campaign connecting the BRC with a wider
spectrum of views and groups within Black America, (3)a way of basing
the BRC within a segment of the Black working class, (4)a means of
potentially influencing the labor union movement.
Ultimately,
and for a very brief moment, there was a coordinated effort by the
BRC around the C-5 campaign but that unraveled in the immediate
aftermath of 11 September 2001 terrorist attacks.
Yet
the deeper problem, going way beyond the C-5 campaign reflected the
adoption of campaigns and initiatives that did not necessarily flow
out of the experiences and demands of the Black working class. That
does not mean that these projects were either bad or good. What it
means is that to base the BRC within the Black working class we would
have had to have had a clearer sense of those demands and struggles.
We may have found that those demands were not necessarily what the
BRC members or leaders perceived to have been priorities.
(14)What’s
in a name? The implications of our choice:
The
name never became a major point of debate, though what did transpire
was a series of discussions as to whether the name was appropriate,
attractive, etc. One concern raised repeatedly, largely outside of
the BRC, was whether the name should have been something like the
“Black Progressive Congress”, i.e., that the term
“radical” might scare away many potential members and
supporters. This point of view was not treated seriously until the
aftermath of the 9/11 attacks. More about this below.
Part
of what was implicitly at stake was the BRC carving out space to be
known and understood to be a pole of the political Left of the Black
Freedom Movement. In other words, the BRC was not an outpost of some
existing party or formation that was outside of Black America, but
was a formation indigenous to Black America and welcoming those
committed to Black freedom
In
general, the choice seems to have been a correct one. The situation,
however, became somewhat complicated in the aftermath of 9/11. After
the terrorist attacks the political Right and the mainstream media
used terms such as “radical”, “fanatic”, and
“terrorist” often interchangeably. This resulted in a
situation where those on the political Left using the term “radical”
often became a bit uneasy and having the name “Black Radical
Congress” emblazoned on websites, flyers, etc., raised
questions as to whether we would receive unwanted attention, so to
speak.
There
never was a suggestion to change the name. Despite concerns about
scrutiny, the BRC stood on the basis of the credibility of its
members and its platform. While there were those on the political
Right who attempted to demonize the BRC (and continue to this day,
despite the demise of the BRC) it did not seem to succeed in scaring
away potential friends and allies
(15)Cyber-organizing:
The circumstances surrounding the Arab democratic
uprisings/revolutions that began in December 2010 in Tunisia has led
to a growing fascination with electronic organizing. Interestingly,
the BRC was, in many respects, at the cutting edge of this work in
its founding and early years.
When
efforts got underway to form the BRC and organize towards the
Juneteenth conference, the world of electronic communications was
undergoing dramatic changes. In 1995/1996 e-mail, for instance, was
only just becoming popular. Fax machines were being used much more
frequently than they currently are. Pagers were the rage and cell
phones were beginning to spread in usage. The Web was becoming
increasingly popular as a method for advertising and education.
One
of the early steps, once the National Continuations Committee was
formed, was the creation of a Website. In fact, the Website became a
major instrument for organizing the Juneteenth conference. Along with
email communications, the Web took the BRC to all parts of the USA
and, indeed, the world.
Within
three months of the formation of the BRC, however, there was a major
problem that nearly derailed the communications work of the BRC. The
principal individual responsible for the Website abandoned the BRC
(due to a very strange political disagreement) and froze the site. It
took months to regain control of the site, but eventually that took
place.
In
this document we have generally stayed away from naming names of
people who were involved—outside of the original five—but
in the case of what came to be known as “cyber-organizing”
it is important to make note of two individuals: Charles “Cappy”
Pinderhughes and Art McGee. Working together they helped, in
different ways, to place the BRC at the head of the line when it came
to electronic organizing. Art, particularly, as the operations person
with regard to our electronic organizing set up various mechanisms
for components of the BRC to communicate and debate. A series of
listserves were put together that allowed caucuses and committees to
engage in planning and conduct exchanges. Ultimately the BRC won an
award for its website and electronic organizing.
What
the BRC appreciated, and admittedly many people had to be dragged
kicking and screaming, was that organizing was a multi-pronged
effort. Most of us were used to face-to-face organizing. Electronics
offered us a whole new world. It also brought with it certain
dangers.
As
many of us have seen over the years, electronics does not substitute
for face-to-face organizing; it supplements it. Yet electronic
organizing can be seductive. In reaching hundreds, if not thousands
of people, one can tend towards downplaying the interpersonal
organizing and relationship building that is essential to be
successful.
The
cyber-organizing—as we referenced it—was initiated and
sustained by volunteers. The dedication of the individuals, from the
beginning, was exemplary. Yet there were problems. One, when you
depend on volunteers it is often difficult to enforce accountability.
In other words, you are dependent on someone(s) who you are not
paying, therefore, that individual (or individuals) has to figure out
when they can do the work of the organization on their own time. Two,
as a result the organization can become uneasy about raising
criticisms of anything that it does not like or appreciate from that
volunteer for fear of losing them. This can lead to misunderstandings
and unspoken disagreements. Third, the personality of whoever is in
charge of cyber-organizing is critical. It is always important to
keep in mind that there are varying levels of understandings of
electronic media and some people are just not comfortable with it.
Those in charge of cyber-organizing have to be immensely sensitive to
that reality.
The
BRC was unable to sustain its amazing cyber-organizing presence. When
we were able to obtain some minimal funding we had the very difficult
choice of funding a national organizer or the cyber-organizer. There
was insufficient money for both. The National Council decided that it
was essential that we have a national organizer to oversee the entire
organization and work to build it. The volunteers who had been
working on the project were not able to continue to devote the time
to the project particularly in light of their own needs for paid
employment, school and other affairs.
Did
the BRC make the right choice? The choice that it made to hire a
national organizer was probably the only choice that it could have
made. As important as was the cyber-organizing, if there was no one
to work with the affiliates or local organizing committees or to stay
on top of the National Council, the organization would have quickly
disintegrated. Yet the absence of a cyber-organizer demonstrated that
in the 21st century, electronic organizing is not a luxury
but a necessity. There is a popular expectation that an organization
can be reached electronically, and for that matter, with little
difficulty. It is also the popular expectation that new content will
appear on Websites on a regular basis. It is not clear that the BRC
recognized, as a whole, how central the cyber-organizing was and
needed to be. With the loss of our key cyber-organizers and a
reliance on web contractors for specific aspects of our work, the
electronic presence of the BRC became increasingly mediocre.
A
final point about cyber-organizing. What we learned from our
experience is that cyber-organizing is far more than maintaining a
website. It is thinking about building an organization or movement
using electronic tools. Therefore, the introduction of the listserves
for the various caucuses and workteams was not a technocratic matter
but a recognition that building the BRC necessitated regular and
quick interaction between and among those engaged in specific work.
This was a very valuable contribution to this project.
(16)Organizations
are easy to form and easy to dissolve, but they are hard to sustain:
It all started off as a call to a meeting. The idea was that there
were many Black leftists, whether in organizations or operating as
individuals, but they were passing each other like ships in the
night. So, the basic notion of a summit was to convene in order to
ascertain what everyone was doing and whether there was a basis for
cooperation.
This
impulse for a meeting quickly evolved into a demand for an
organization and on Juneteenth weekend 1998 there was a mass demand
to form the Black Radical Congress. That was easy. More than ten
years later, a badly weakened BRC was unofficially dissolved when it
was clear that there was an insufficient core in order to sustain it.
That was sad, but relatively easy (with the exception of paying off
certain debts that had been accumulated).
It
was the in-between that was so difficult. Building and sustaining an
organization takes an immense amount of work and, as we earlier
mentioned, it was not clear how many of those who embarked on the
original journey were really prepared to undertake that process. The
following represent some summary points on this matter that begin to
draw together the overall lessons learned from this experience. Let’s
look at this in a bit more detail.
First,
it is far from clear that the implications of forming an organization
were entirely apparent, not just to the 2000+ people in attendance in
Chicago, but as well to the core. In addition to the problem of
building a formation that was both an organization of organizations
and an organization of individuals, there was the very real question
of who was going to put in the work. In this era of non-profit
activism (some call it NGO-ism) the notion of volunteer
activism has weakened. Particularly among activists under the age of
50, there is a large-scale expectation that if you are active in an
organization that you will get paid. Or, an extension of this is that
one can be a member of an organization without doing much except,
perhaps, engaging in email activism.
The
BRC started off with limited funds and there was no way that it could
field a staff. That meant that, with the exception of certain
administrative work, the running of the organization was done on the
basis of volunteers. One implication, and something that the two of
us take very personally, is that this means that those in leadership
cannot afford to have multiple “distractions”, i.e., they
need to be able to focus their time and attention on the work of
leading and sustaining the organization and not have a zillion other
responsibilities. (For Bill this is an especially important point
in that he served as the volunteer national organizer for several years
yet had, during that time, a myriad of other responsibilities and
political commitments, along with a day job.).
There
were other implications in the formation of the BRC. The immediate
question in Chicago was whether everyone in attendance at the
conference would automatically become members? The National
Continuations Committee decided against that approach and later did a
membership drive. Part of our thinking was that we were unclear what
the implications would be of assuming that everyone at the conference
was to be a member. Would that mean that everyone automatically had a
vote on who the leadership was? Did it mean that everyone in
attendance agreed with the unity statement? We were uncertain and as
a result we held back.
A
second feature of sustaining an organization: resolving internal
tensions. Any organization will have internal disputes. It is the
nature of organizations. For that reason there need to be mechanisms
for resolving internal disputes. The BRC had, in effect, two
mechanisms: (a)go to the National Council, (b)go to the National
Organizer. Some of the disputes were often quite serious. In one city
the local organizing committee simply could not function. Attempts at
addressing the tensions failed. We ultimately set up two local
organizing committees in the same city. That step was probably the
correct one but it was the result of a mediation session that
ultimately failed to resolve the internal disagreements. Was there
another way to handle this? We were not sure.
Years
after the demise of the BRC, a former National Council member
suggested that we needed the equivalent of a trial board in order to
address disputes. S/he noted that too many people went to the
National Organizer (first, Bill and later Jamala) and that this was
not a good way to handle such disputes. It placed far too much
pressure on one individual when we had to expect that there would
regularly be disputes that needed to be resolved.
Third,
sustaining an organization necessitates a core or cadre of activists.
To return to an earlier point, we often assume that such a core will
be paid activists for the organization. But what happens when you do
not have paid activists? This is where the challenge of the role of
organizations that had helped to build the BRC comes in. In order to
sustain the BRC over the long-haul there needed to be a commitment of
resources (including personnel) from the organizations that had made
a commitment to build it. That commitment might have been one or two
people who would work to build the BRC. The discipline that is
normally associated with mature, grounded left organizations is
invaluable, as history shows time and again. Relying on individual
volunteers was insufficient, no matter how devoted to the BRC they
happened to be.
Fourth,
there was a challenge that we encountered in the BRC that shook many
of the veteran members; a challenge referenced earlier in this paper:
the walk-away phenomenon.
We
first encountered this walk-away phenomenon on a significant scale
after the Juneteenth conference in the wake of the Youth Caucus
debacle. What was strange for many activists is that by “movement”
standards, the disputes that took place within the Youth Caucus were
not monumental. Certainly there was anger and there was bad feeling,
but the contradictions that unfolded were over the course of a
weekend rather than over the course of a longer period. Even if one
assumes that the dispute had been building for a while, it was not
something that played itself out destructively—at least
visibly—in the lead up to the Juneteenth conference.
There
were other manifestations of the walk-away phenomenon. Without any
struggle or search for alternatives, individuals would simply decide
that they were going to leave. While one comes to expect that in any
organization at the rank and file level, it is very unsettling when
it takes place within the leadership. And that is precisely what
unfolded. In rare occasions an individual would indicate that they
were going to step down from a leadership role after the next
organizational congress/conference. More frequently, individuals
would simply announce that they were leaving and that was that.
Although this more often took place among younger activists, it was a
phenomenon that played out at all levels.
It
is difficult to ascertain what was underway with the walk-way
phenomenon. There was, apparently, something in the work and culture
of the BRC that individuals felt that they could do conduct
themselves in such a way and there would be no consequences. This
phenomenon had an impact on the work itself, but also on the morale.
When key leaders disappeared, many of the members were only left to
speculate on what was unfolding. When entire components of the
organization walked away, however, as in the case of the Youth
Caucus, it was devastating and called into question the ability of
the organization to go the long-haul.
Finally,
at what point should individuals leave an organization? To return to
the disputes surrounding accepting foundation funds or the Mugabe
letter, the question that hovers around all of this is the “breaking
point.” In other words, at what point are the differences so
great that unity is no longer viable. In the case of the BRC, members
answered this as individuals at different times, but what was
confounding was the nature of the disputes compared with the actual
agreement that existed in the organization as a whole. In other
words, how does one balance out a particular difference(s) vs. the
level of agreement one has with the purpose and work of an
organization? Unless framed like this it is very easy for any dispute
to become a “splitting” issue rather than an issue around
which there are serious differences.
Moving
Forward: Individuals continued to join the BRC until the
moment that it ceased to exist, in some ways reaffirming a point that
many of us felt viscerally: if the BRC had not been called into
existence, it would have been formed in either case. There was a
perceived need for the BRC, and, literally, hundreds, if not
thousands of people felt it. As we traveled the country, we ran
across many activists who proudly considered themselves BRC members
regardless of their involvement.
Yet
this begs a question: is there a need for a BRC-type formation as we
go forward in the second decade of the 21st century? The
answer is not obvious. The BRC came together at a particular moment
as a result of a growing frustration within the Black Left as to its
inability to exist as a visible pole representing an alternative
direction for Black America. Certainly such a pole is necessary, but
does that mean an organization like the BRC?
A
visible, active left-wing formation is very much needed in Black
America. A formation that has a grassroots membership rather than
just a non-profit staff; a formation that is militant, if not
audacious, challenging racial capitalism and imperialism; an
organization that is internationalist in its framework and actions;
and a formation that is broad and welcoming.
That
said, a mass left-wing Black formation must be prepared to engage
with mainstream Black organizations, struggle in environments that
are not necessarily radical or left but where masses of people exist
and operate. This means that such a left-wing formation cannot be
purist by any stretch of the imagination. It must be pragmatic while
not being pragmatist, accessing whatever resources that it needs in
order to sustain itself as long as the strings that are attached are
not unprincipled or undermining.
The
BRC reached a certain precipice around 1999/2000. We could all feel
it. Segments of the political world of Black America could not ignore
us, not to mention other segments of the broader Left and progressive
world. The formation of the BRC ignited interest among other
oppressed nationalities/people of color, resulting in similar
formations being established among Asians and Latinos such as the
Asian Left Forum and the New Raza Left. It even inspired an effort
within a section of the left-wing of the labor movement to congeal.
While these formations did not last, the example of the BRC had
proven to resonate far beyond Black America.
Within
the BRC we were not entirely sure what to do with this influence or
with our impact. In that sense the initial debate over whether to
accept foundation funding was actually not so much about foundation
money, but more about whether the BRC would operate beyond remaining
on the margins of politics. To borrow from Rosa Luxemburg, would the
BRC engage in revolutionary realpolitik?
In
our context “revolutionary realpolitik” is a political
practice that moves a Left agenda but does so with an aim of both
fighting for power; building alliances; and taking account of the
actual conditions rather than engaging in philosophical idealism. It
is the direct opposite of practicing pure-ism. It is not an approach
taken by so many leftists whereby they engage in the ‘flying of
a flag’, asserting their views rather than engaging in a battle
for the hearts and minds of millions and the battle for progress.
Thus,
a united front organization of Black leftists is needed now more than
ever but only if it can be successful in learning the lessons from
prior efforts, including but not limited to the BRC. The BRC was a
magnificent contribution to a history of organized Black resistance
to white supremacist national oppression and imperialism. It was
another stone in the road of Black radicalism. And it was an
experience upon which freedom fighters in the USA should build as we
go forward to challenge global capitalism, racism, sexism,
heterosexism, other forms of oppression and environmental
devastation.
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