Henry Louis Gates wrote an Op-Ed
article that appeared in the New York Times on April 23, 2010,
essentially attempting to re-conceptualize the reparations issue by
implying that history is too complicated to bring about a “just
and lasting agreement on the divisive issue of slavery reparations.”
In my view, Professor Gates was
“dead wrong” and we should begin reviewing the history of
the Reparations Movement by reading and re-reading Dr. Raymond
Winbush’s book on this subject.
In 2003, a book on the African in
America Reparations Movement was released entitled, Should America Pay?: Slavery and the Raging Debate on Reparations edited by Dr. Raymond A. Winbush, the Director
of the Institute for Urban Research at Morgan State University.
In February 2001, Dr. Winbush, who
was formerly the Director of Fisk University’s Race Relations
Institute, sponsored a two-day conference on slavery and reparations
that brought together leading researchers, politicians, historians,
and activists from throughout the country to dialogue on the issue of
Reparations for African people in America.
The conference was so successful
that Dr. Winbush suggested that several of the presenters be included
in a book he was proposing, which would entail several articles
addressing the broad spectrum of the reparations debate in this
country.
Dr. Winbush, who is now a professor
at Morgan State University, has emerged as one of the leading
scholar/activists in this country, and throughout the world, and has
used his considerable skills as a researcher and writer as the editor
of this book, Should America Pay?
What makes this book, perhaps one of
the most significant and comprehensive books published on the issue
of reparations for African people in America is that it thoroughly
covers the broad spectrum of this movement in six sections with more
than twenty articles that address: Part I – History and
Reparations, Part II – Reparations and the Law, Part III –
Voices For and Against Reparations, Part IV – Reparations and
Grassroots Organizing, Part V – Reparations and Intervention,
and Part VI – Historical Documents.
The worldwide African Reparations
Movement has become unified around the fact that the Trans Atlantic
Slave Trade, Slavery, and Colonialism were Crimes Against Humanity.
This unity impacted the United Nations World Conference Against
Racism that was held in Durban, South Africa in August and September
2001, to officially declare in the conference outcome that the Trans
Atlantic Slave Trade and Slavery was a Crime Against Humanity.
The momentum gained by African
people who participated in the United Nations World Conference
Against Racism, particularly the Durban 400, organized by the
December 12th Movement and the National Black United
Front, led to “The Call” for the Millions For
Reparations Mass Rally held in Washington, D. C. on August 17, 2002.
More than fifty thousand African people from thirty-eight states and
sixty-six cities participated in this all day rally, whose theme was
“THEY OWE US.”
In the introduction chapter Dr.
Winbush writes, “As this book goes to press the reparations
movement, historically considered a fringe issue in the American
Black nationalist community, is now firmly established among various
constituencies in the United States as well as in African communities
around the world. Its ascendancy as an important social movement —
I would argue the most important since Civil Rights — is
confirmed by the amount of print space and air time the media devote
to it.”
Winbush continues by observing,
“Though the movement is picking up speed, compensatory measures
for Africans have been elusive because of the entrenchment of white
supremacy in world politics that provided legal sanction for this
crime against humanity.”
Perhaps the most significant aspect
of, Should America Pay? is the framework Dr. Winbush develops
in his introductory chapter for understanding the rise of the
Reparations Movement.
Dr. Winbush explains, “A
convergence of four groups provides a conceptual framework for
understanding the current discussion of reparations: 1) grassroots
organizers, 2) legislators, 3) attorneys, and 4) academics. A similar
convergence of cooperation occurred during the late 1940s and
resulted in what we now call the Civil Rights Movement.”
In this context, Dr. Winbush makes
the analogy that, “Reparations have a similar history.
Grassroots organizations such as the December 12th
Movement (D12), National Coalition of Blacks for Reparations in
America (N`COBRA), and the National Black United Front (NBUF) worked
closely with legislators in the mid-1980s. John Conyers Jr. (D-MI)
for example, and collaborated with the Reparations Coordinating
Committee (RCC), consisting of attorneys such as Willie Gary, Randall
Robinson, and Johnnie Cochran and academics such as Manning Marble
and Ron Walters.”
Dr. Winbush writes, “These
groups conversed long and hard with each other, and as you will see,
these discussions were often heated and difficult. What united them,
however, was a goal of pressing for reparations on a global level for
African people.”
I encourage those of you who are
interested in learning more about the Reparations Movement to
purchase this book. In my judgment, Should America Pay?
will be the definitive textbook on the Reparations Movement with
contributing chapters from Molefi Asanté, John Conyers Jr.,
Deadria C. Farmer-Paellmann, Wade Nobles, Adjoa A. Aiyetoro, Roger
Wareham, and others. And yes, I even have two chapters in this most
outstanding contribution to the continued discussion of the
Reparations Movement in America.
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