The
annual King Day celebrations provide a great opportunity to defend
Dr. King's revolutionary legacy against The System's efforts to white
wash and degrade his frontal challenge to its crimes. Dr. Martin
Luther King Jr. was one of the great revolutionaries in U.S. and
world history. He was a leader of the Civil Rights and Black
Liberation Movement, a fierce internationalist, anti-imperialist, and
Pan Africanist, a Black militant, pro-communist socialist, and part
of The Movement that was far to the left of and in opposition to the
Democratic Party.
Since
1980, with the rise of Ronald Reagan and Margaret Thatcher, The Two
Party System, aka U.S. imperialism, has waged a Counter-revolution
against the Great Victories of the Revolutionary Sixties. In that
the revolutionary left won so many of the ideological battles against
U.S. hegemony, The System has understood that a counter-revolution
must include a ferocious battle over the historical record. In the
past 40 years, in particular, it has been profoundly painful to
witness, and very difficult to combat, the lies and slanders against
the historical, and political achievements of the Black and Third
World led movements. This includes an epidemic of recantation
literature written by depressed and disillusioned former radicals
denigrating the great achievements of the U.S. Communist Party,
Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee, Black Panther Party,
Southern Christian Leadership Conference, Nation of Islam, the New
Communist groups such as the League of Revolutionary Struggle, and
the great communist led revolutions in the Soviet Union, China, Cuba,
and Vietnam. It has also included character assassinations, arrests,
and murders of those with the most vivid and irrepressible
revolutionary memories. As just one terrifying reflection of the
impacts of this campaign, I have heard young Black and Latino
organizers, with such militant intentions, repeat without grasping
the sources "this is not your grandfather's civil rights
movement" caricaturing the heroic and historic work of visionary
leaders like Malcolm X and Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.
In
the case of Dr. King, the U.S. government, Democratic Party and Civil
Rights Establishment distort King's life by putting him forth as a
"non-violent" accommodating, dreamer. They attempt to use
him as a counterforce against Malcolm X, Mao Tse-tung, Ho Chi Minh,
Paul Robeson, W.E.B. Du Bois, Fidel Castro, Frederick Douglass,
Fannie Lou Hamer, and the great Third World revolutionaries
throughout history. In truth, Dr. King was one of their colleagues
and comrades and in turn, they all had great appreciation of his
unique and courageous role in History.
In
that there is no such thing as History but only the struggle over
historical interpretation, I, along with many others, want to
reinforce the historical view of Dr. King as a great leader in the
Black Revolutionary Tradition whose work should help shape our
organizing today.
*
Dr. King rejected the myths of U.S. society.
He rejected its Mad Men packaging itself as “the leader of the
free world” to tell it like it is; that the United States is
“the greatest purveyor of violence in the world.”
*
Dr. King saw “the Negro revolution” as part of a Third
World and world revolution. “I
am convinced that if we are to get on the right side of the world
revolution, we as a nation must undergo a radical revolution of
values...For years, I labored with the
idea of reforming the existing institutions of the South, a little
change here, a little change there. Now I feel quite differently. I
think you’ve got to have a radical reconstruction of the entire
society, a revolution of values.”
Dr.
Clayborne Carson, Director
of the Martin Luther King, Jr., Research and Education Institute at
Stanford University, in his King Papers, related the following
story.
Before
leaving Ghana, King welcomed a visit from English clergyman and
anti-colonial activist Michael Scott, during which the two men
compared the freedom struggles in Africa and the United States. King
reportedly expressed admiration for the bus boycott then taking place
in Johannesburg, South Africa, and remarked that there was "no
basic difference between colonialism and racial segregation ... at
bottom both segregation in American and colonialism in Africa were
based on the same thing -- white supremacy and contempt for life."
*
Dr King supported the Black Power movement and saw himself as a
tendency within it. He marched with
Stokley Carmichael and Willie Ricks on the March against Fear in
Mississippi June 1966. While initially taken back by their cries of
Black Power, he soon elaborated his own views as part of the Black
Power continuum. "Now
there is a kind of concrete, real Black power that I believe in ...
certainly if Black power means the amassing of political and economic
power in order to gain our just and legitimate goals, then we all
believe in that.”
*
Dr. King sided with the people of Vietnam including the Vietnamese
Communists against the U.S.
invasion. In his Beyond Vietnam
speech, written by and with his close comrade, Vincent Harding, his
anti-colonial support for the legitimacy of the Vietnamese Communist
cause was clear.
The
Vietnamese people proclaimed their own independence in 1945 after a
combined French and Japanese occupation, and before the Communist
revolution in China. They were led by Ho Chi Minh. Even though they
quoted the American Declaration of Independence in their own document
of freedom, we refused to recognize them. Instead, we decided to
support France in its reconquest of her former colony.
Our
government felt then that the Vietnamese people were not "ready"
for independence, and we again fell victim to the deadly Western
arrogance that has poisoned the international atmosphere for so long.
With that tragic decision we rejected a revolutionary government
seeking self-determination, and a government that had been
established not by China (for whom the Vietnamese have no great love)
but by clearly indigenous forces that included some Communists. For
the peasants this new government meant real land reform, one of the
most important needs in their lives. For nine years following 1945 we
denied the people of Vietnam the right of independence. For nine
years we vigorously supported the French in their abortive effort to
recolonize Vietnam.
*
Dr. King was deeply appreciative of the Black communist traditions of
W.E.B. DuBois and Paul Robeson. He
was well aware of the irony
and significance that Dr. DuBois died, in Ghana, an exile from the
United States and a Communist, on the very day of the March on
Washington for Jobs and Freedom, August 28, 1963.
Dr.
King observed,"
We
cannot talk of Dr. DuBois without recognizing that he was a radical
all of his life. Some people would like to mute the fact that he was
a genius who became a Communist in his later years. It is worth
noting that Abraham Lincoln warmly recognized the support of Karl
Marx during the Civil War and corresponded with him freely. In
contemporary life the English speaking world has no difficulty with
the fact that Sean O'Casey was a literary giant of the twentieth
century and a Communist or that Pablo Neruda is generally considered
the greatest living poet though he also served in the Chilean Senate
as a Communist...Our irrational, obsessive, anti-communism has led us
into too many quagmires to be retained as if it was a model of
scientific thinking
King
did not merely mention the great contributions of Communists from Du
Bois, Casey, Neruda and d Ho Chi Minh; he situated himself in that
tradition not as a member but clearly as a friend and admirer.
Dr.
King's non-violence was aggressive and militant reflected in
non-violent direct action.
Of
course Dr. King had his own unique views inside the civil rights
movement and Black united front. His views on non-violence were real
and deeply held. He also saw non-violence as a tactic to prevent a
massive violent backlash from racist whites. King tried to position
his demonstrations in ways to get the largest amount of white liberal
and international support and to pressure the national Democratic
Party that was tied at the hip to the racist Dixiecrats. His belief
in non-violence deeply held, but was also tied to the theory and
practice of militant, aggressive, Non-Violent Direct Action.
When
I worked with CORE and allied with SNCC In 1964-1965 they were known
as the Black militants, and yet both organizations saw themselves, at
the time, as non-violent. But that did not prevent and in fact
encouraged Black people to march into the registrar of elections in
Southern cities and refuse to leave, Black students to occupy lunch
counters and refusing to leave, Black and white people marching at
the Edmund Pettis Bridge in Selma confronting an army of armed police
and white racists, or Black people in the north marching into elected
officials' offices and occupying them, yelling, chanting, singing,
and confronting. Everyone we challenged in "the white power
structure" saw militant, non-violent direct action as a big
threat and retaliated accordingly. No one at the time praised Dr.
King for his "moderation." They saw angry Black people and
saw Dr. King as a threat, which he certainly was. and saw his
non-violence and "urgency of now" as a political force to
be crushed not co-opted.
Dr.
King fought the Democratic Party of Lyndon Johnson and the Black
Democratic Establishment. When Dr.
King brought his movement to Chicago the Democratic Party Black
establishment refused to support him, sided with the racist Mayor
Daley, and told him to "go down south where you belong."
Many of them refused to join his mass and militant marches for open
housing and an end to police brutality. In response, Dr. King called
out the Black political establishment.
“The
majority of Black political leaders do not ascend to prominence on
the shoulders of mass support ... most are still selected by white
leadership, elevated to position, supplied with resources and
inevitably subjected to white control. The mass of [Blacks] nurtures
a healthy suspicion toward this manufactured leader.”
On
the day honoring his birthday, let's take a deeper look
at his political thought and revolutionary legacy.
Dr.
King understood that the Civil Rights and Black Liberation Movement
was from
the outset a battle against the system itself.
King
understood the intersection of radical reforms and social revolution
and was always working to understand the time, place, conditions and
balance of forces that would shape his rhetoric and tactical plan.
King was one of the greatest and most effective reformers of all and
yet, in confronting the system’s intransigence his own
revolutionary outlook kept evolving. King’s prominence began in
1955, in his leadership of the Montgomery Bus Boycott, the same year
as the murder of Emmett Till and the Bandung Conference of
Non-Aligned Nations–to begin what turned out to be “the
Two Decades of the Sixties” that did not end until the defeat
of the United States in Vietnam in 1975. Despite the U.S. Supreme
Court decision to overturn school segregation in the case of Brown
vs. Board of Education in 1954, Montgomery in 1955, the great
Greensboro sit-ins of 1960, the exciting work of the Student
Non-Violent Coordinating Committee and Congress of Racial Equality
Freedom Rides of 1961 the conditions of Black people in the United
States remained at criminal levels. By 1963 white Democratic Party
terror in the South and Democratic Party racism and brutality in the
ghettos of the North had generated a great deal of militancy,
organizing, and consciousness but little change in the system. At the
great March on Washington in August 1963 King’s Southern
Christian Leadership Conference, SNCC, CORE, NAACP, Urban League, and
A. Phillip Randolph’s Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters took
place amid air of hope–but also great impatience and militancy.
King’s “I Have a Dream” speech (a phrase that was
not in its initial draft) was in fact a revolutionary indictment of
U.S. society.
“One
hundred years later [after the formal abolition of slavery] the Negro
still is not free. One hundred years later, the life of the Negro is
still sadly crippled by the manacles of segregation and the chains of
discrimination. One hundred years later, the Negro lives on a lonely
island of poverty in the midst of a vast ocean of material
prosperity. One hundred years later, the Negro is still languishing
in the corners of American society and finds himself in exile in his
own land. So we have come here today to dramatize a shameful
condition
“In
a sense we’ve come to our nation’s Capital to cash a
check. When the architects of our republic wrote the magnificent
words of the Constitution and the Declaration of Independence, they
were signing a promissory note to which every American was to fall
heir. This note was a promise that all men, yes, black men as well as
white men, would be guaranteed the unalienable rights of life,
liberty, and the pursuit of happiness. It is obvious today that
America has defaulted on this promissory note insofar as her citizens
of color are concerned. Instead of honoring this sacred obligation,
America has given the Negro people a bad check; a check which has
come back marked “insufficient funds.
“But
we refuse to believe that the bank of justice is bankrupt. We refuse
to believe that there are insufficient funds in the great vaults of
opportunity of this nation. So we have come to cash this check–a
check that will give us upon demand the riches of freedom and the
security of justice. We have also come to this hallowed spot to
remind America of the fierce urgency of now. This is no time to
engage in the luxury of cooling off or to take the tranquilizing drug
of gradualism.”
King
is imploring, cajoling, but what his words make clear, threatening
U.S. society and trying to mobilize Black rebellion. When he says
“crippled by the manacles of segregation and the chains of
segregation” he is making it clear that slavery is in fact
still in place. He describes the United States as a society that
offers the Negro bad checks and broken promises, When he says, “We
refuse to believe the bank of justice is bankrupt” this is code
for “we know you are morally bankrupt but Black people are here
to demand, as the Staple Singers demanded, “When will we be
paid for the work we’ve done.”
King’s
formulation of “the fierce urgency of now and the tranquilizing
drug of gradualism” was a frontal assault on the President
Kennedy and the Democrats cry for “patience” in face of
injustice. King countered with the spirit of Freedom Now–the
cry of Black militants in South Africa, South Carolina and the South
Bronx–and supported by a growing number of white supporters of
the civil rights movement. In fact, “Now” was one of the
revolutionary slogans of its time. And President Kennedy and the
whole world were listening.
One
of King’s revolutionary observations– that is still
painfully relevant today–was, “the Negro is still
languishing in the corners of American society and finds himself in
exile in his own land.”
In
1964 I was recruited by organizers of the Student Non-Violent
Coordinating Committee to join “the civil rights revolution.”
By the time I got to CORE in Harlem and the Northeast my mentors were
staying up all night debating what exactly that revolution would look
like. While the struggle focused on democratic rights and full
equality many SNCC and CORE leaders were talking about some form of
Black nation, Black Power, Black militancy, Black separatism–not
as a way of “getting away” from the system but as part of
a plan to challenge it–and for some, overthrow it. Clearly
influenced by Malcolm X but also the African liberation movements
people were talking about a challenge to U.S. capitalism and at least
talking about some type of pro-socialist system. It was not all that
clear or delineated but the concepts of full equality, full
democratic rights, Black rights, self-determination, radical reform
and revolution were far more interrelated than counterposed–and
all of them involved Black people in the leadership of a multi-racial
movement–either through integration or separation. In that
context, I am arguing that Dr. King was a Black revolutionary
nationalist, perhaps of a more moderate nature, but he was a student
of world history and was impacted by the revolutionary ideas of the
times. For Dr. King, as early as 1963, to tell the president of the
United States that Black people in the U.S. are “exiles in
their own land” was clearly a call for some form of both full
equality and Black self-determination and far away from the “more
perfect union” myth that the system was selling–with few
buyers.
King
was a victim of capitalist state violence, surveillance,
psychological, character, and actual assassination.
The
story of J. Edgar Hoover’s campaign to destroy ML King and
force him into a nervous breakdown and suicide is not tangential but
central to King’s revolutionary history–and the
surveillance and police state we live under today. And yet, another
element of the revolutionary history of Dr. King that is being
whitewashed is his actual assassination was by the system itself.
Part of this cover-up is to destroy the memory of the work of Coretta
Scott King in exposing the actual assassination of Dr. King.
In
his “I’ve Been to the Mountain Top” speech the very
night before he was murdered Dr. King was very aware of what he felt
was his possible and imminent assassination.
“Like
anybody, I would like to live – a long life; longevity has its
place. But I’m not concerned about that now. I just want to do
God’s will. And He’s allowed me to go up to the mountain.
And I’ve looked over. And I’ve seen the Promised Land. I
may not get there with you. But I want you to know tonight, that we,
as a people, will get to the Promised Land. So I’m happy,
tonight. I’m not worried about anything. I’m not fearing
any man. Mine eyes have seen the
glory of the coming of the Lord.
“
And
while his words are brave, every time I hear that talk I hear a
mortal man not fully at peace, nor should he have been, with his
mortality–but trying to comfort and reassure Black people that
“we as a people” will find liberation–rather than
asking them to protect him–which he knew they could not.
On
December 8, 1999, (21 years after his death) after the King family
and allies presented 70 witnesses in a civil trial, twelve jurors in
Memphis, Tennessee reached a unanimous verdict after about an hour of
deliberations that Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. was assassinated as a
result of a conspiracy.
In
a press statement held the following day in Atlanta, Mrs. Coretta
Scott King welcomed the verdict.
“There
is abundant evidence of a major high level conspiracy in the
assassination of my husband, Martin Luther King, Jr. And the civil
court’s unanimous verdict has validated our belief. I
wholeheartedly applaud the verdict of the jury and I feel that
justice has been well served in their deliberations. This verdict is
not only a great victory for my family, but also a great victory for
America. It is a great victory for truth itself. It is important to
know that this was a SWIFT verdict, delivered after about an hour of
jury deliberation. The jury was clearly convinced by the extensive
evidence that was presented during the trial that, in addition to Mr.
Jowers, the conspiracy of the Mafia, local, state and federal
government agencies, were deeply involved in the assassination of my
husband. The jury also affirmed overwhelming evidence that identified
someone else, not James Earl Ray, as the shooter, and that Mr. Ray
was set up to take the blame. I want to make it clear that my family
has no interest in retribution. Instead, our sole concern has been
that the full truth of the assassination has been revealed and
adjudicated in a court of law… My husband once said, “The
moral arc of the universe is long, but it bends toward justice.”
To-day, almost 32 years after my husband and the father of my four
children was assassinated, I feel that the jury’s verdict
clearly affirms this principle. With this faith, we can begin the
21st century and the new millennium with a new spirit of hope and
healing.”
Sadly,
the police/surveillance/counter-insurgency state is stronger than
ever–but at least there is growing public challenge to its
hegemony. Understanding the revolutionary story of Dr. King and the
system’s decision to bring him down is essential if we want to
understand and make history in the present.
King
was from the outset a Black militant and revolutionary who advocated
non-violent direct action but saw “the Negro revolution”
as the overriding objective.
While
Dr. King strongly argued for non-violence as both a tactical and
ethical perspective he also supported the right of Black people to
armed self-defense and allied with the advocates of armed
self-defense and even armed struggle in the Black movement.
At
a time of the most rampant and systematic police violence the
system’s armed requirement that Black people are “non-violent”
is intellectually and morally lethal. It flies in the face of the
long-standing tradition of armed self-defense in the Black community
and the urgency to defend that tradition today. Worse, to use Dr.
King against that basic right is the height of cynicism and
historical distortion.
Clay
Carson’s In Struggle : SNCC and the Black Awakening of the 1960s,
helps shed light on this complex relationship. While many young
organizers were critical of Dr. King SNCC’s Stokley Carmichael
explained best their appreciation of his profound impact on the Black
masses.
“People
loved King..I’ve seen people in the South climb over each other
just to say, “I touched him, I touched him.” I’m
even talking about the young…These were the people we were
working with and I had to follow in his footsteps when I went in
there. The people didn’t know what was SNCC. They just said,
“You one of Dr. King’s men?” “Yes, Ma’am
I am.”
Carson
explains the pivotal role of “militant and self-reliant local
black residents who owned weapons and were willing to defend
themselves when attacked. Black rallies in the county were often
protected by armed guards sometimes affiliated with the
Louisiana-based Deacons for Defense and Justice”
Many
SNCC organizers, disagreeing with King’s focus on non-violence,
explained, “We are not King or SCLC. They don’t do the
work the kind of work that we do nor do they live in the areas we
live in. They don’t drive the highways at night”…Carmichael
recalled that the discussion ended when he asked those carrying
weapons to place them on the table. Nearly all the black organizers
working in the Deep South were armed.
But
again the system wants to act like the battle between King and SNCC
and the Black militants was a morality play or an ideological war.
But it wasn’t. It was an intellectual, strategic, and yes,
ethical struggle among equals and King was both open minded and
introspective about the limits of his non-violent advocacy–and
as such, people had respect for his own principles and rationale.
In
1965, James Farmer, the director of CORE, a truly dedicated pacifist,
told a group of us at a mass meeting, “I am completely
non-violent but I want to thank our brothers from the Deacons for
Defense (who were both standing guard and yes, getting a standing
ovation from the organizers) whose arms allow me to be non-violent.”
My read of history is King felt similarly.
And
even more importantly, King well understood that his “non-violence”
could be used by the system as a justification for state violence and
of course the system’s need to destroy the Black united front.
In his speech, “Beyond Vietnam” on April 4, 1967 King
addressed frontally his most principled conversations with the angry
youth of the urban ghettos. He stated,
“As
I have walked among the desperate, rejected, and angry young men, I
have told them that Molotov cocktails and rifles would not solve
their problem. I have tried to offer my deepest compassion while
maintaining my conviction that social change comes most meaningfully
through non-violent action. But they asked, and rightfully so, “What
about Vietnam?”..Their questions hit home and I knew I could
never again raise my voice against the violence of the oppressed in
the ghettos without having first spoken clearly to the greatest
purveyor of violence in the world today: my own government.”
Note
that King does not try to raise a moral critique of those who would
use Molotov cocktails and rifles in response to the economic and
armed violence of the state. And by making clear he considered its
advocates “the oppressed” he supported the morality, if
not the tactics, of their cause. Instead, he simply argued that he
did not feel it would “solve their problem” and even then
qualified his own advocacy of non-violence to make the case that
“social change comes most
meaningfully” but not
exclusively from non-violence. He admitted it was a legitimate
debate.
Martin
Luther King Jr., SNCC, CORE, and Malcolm X represented at the time
the “left” of the Black united front and worked to find
strategic and tactical unity with the NAACP and Urban League–which
made the March on Washington, the Civil Rights Bill, and the Voting
Rights Bill possible. While King had many contradictions with the
young Black militants he understood them and they him as strategic
allies against a system of white supremacist capitalism.
SNCC,
Malcolm X, Muhammad Ali, and M.L. King were on the frontlines of the
movement against the U.S. war of aggression in Vietnam.
While
SNCC and Malcolm were among the first to speak out frontally against
the war as early as 1965, by April 1967 both King and Muhammad Ali
took enormous risks to frontally challenge the war on moral grounds
and to argue that Black people in particular had no interest in
supporting the war.
In
his monumental Beyond Vietnam
speech. Dr. King argued in support of Vietnamese self-determination
and rejected the view that the U.S. had any legitimate interests in
Vietnam.
Reading
primary documents is essential for the revolutionary
historian/strategist/tactician and organizer. In reading and
re-reading Beyond Vietnam
I still hang on its every word.
*
King called out U.S. war crimes
against the Vietnamese people making
the analogy that the United States feared the most–comparisons
with Nazi Germany. He asked, what do the Vietnamese people “think
when we test our latest weapons on them just as the Germans tested
out new medicine and new tortures in the concentration camps of
Europe.”
*
King praised the integrity and
legitimacy of the National Liberation Front of Vietnam including the
communists who he argued were the legitimate political leaders of the
Vietnamese people’s struggle.
“They
were led by Ho Chi Minh” and were creating “a
revolutionary government seeking self-determination.” He
describes Ho as saved only by “his sense of humor and irony…
when he hears the most powerful nation in the world speaking of
aggression as it drops thousands bombs on a nation eight thousand
miles from its shores.” (Communists with a sense of humor and
irony–perhaps the most revolutionary insight of all.)
*King
focused on demand development. In the end movements are unified by
ideas, people, organizations and demands. He called on the U.S.
government
*
End all bombing in North and South Vietnam
*
Declare a unilateral cease fire
*
Curtail the U.S. build up in Thailand and Laos
*
Recognize the role of The National Liberation Front in any future
Vietnam government
*
Remove all foreign–that is, U.S. troops from Vietnam
*
Make reparations for the damage
This
was tantamount to calling for immediate U.S. withdrawal from Vietnam.
It recognized the victory of the National Liberation Front and argued
for what would later become a critical component of Black people’s
demands against the U.S. government — “reparations.”
The
story of the system’s attacks on Dr. King once he spoke out
against the war in Vietnam and his courage in the face of this
assault is another chapter of Dr. King’s revolutionary
contribution to U.S. and world history. One important version of that
story is Tavis Smiley’s documentary, Death
of a King: Dr. Martin Luther King’s Final Year.
Dr.
King brought a powerful and frontal indictment of the system of white
supremacist, racist, capitalism. He appreciated the ideas of others
and worked to build a Black and multi-racial united front against
what he called “racism, poverty, and militarism.” He was
willing to confront “the cowardice” inside his own bosom
and modeled how all of us have to put our bodies, souls and lives on
the line. He rejected gradualism and demanded “Freedom Now.”
He advocated non-violence but defended the right of those who
disagreed with him to armed self-defense. He rejected
U.S. chauvinism, called for a militant internationalism, and
challenged the U.S. Empire at home and abroad. He was independent of
and yes, willing to challenge and confront the Democratic Party. He
was and is a great contributor to the endless struggle for human and
planetary liberation.
It
is time to celebrate the Revolutionary King on the anniversary of his
birthday. We thank Stevie Wonder, who spoke for all of us, when he
wrote,
I
just never understood
How
a man who died for good
Could
not have a day that would
Be
set aside for his recognition Because it should never be
Just
because some cannot see
The
dream as clear as he
that
they should make it become an illusion
And
we all know everything
That
he stood for time will bring
For
in peace our hearts will sing
Thanks
to Martin Luther King
Happy
birthday to you
Happy
birthday to you
Happy
birthday
Happy
birthday to you
Happy
birthday to you
Happy
birthday. Happy birthday to you!
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