As I brace myself for yet another
routine Black history month, I can’t help but wonder what it would be like to
be a part of a serious democratic discussion and debate about the
state of Black America today in its correct historical context. It’s
all well and good to celebrate history, but the point is to understand
it and build a better world by standing on the shoulders of those
that came before us. After several decades of participating in
Black history month celebrations I have concluded that I should
share my view on how to study our glorious history of struggle
to realize our humanity as a part of world humanity. What can we expect from official and semi-official
circles for this month? First and foremost the historians will
try to prove
that we had people in our history who were “equal to whites” – the “first
Black this”, the “first Black that” – which proves only one thing;
the historians believe these individuals were the exception when
in fact they were the rule. We have had millions more in our past
that could and did excel. The historians miss the point: there
never was a question in the minds of our ancestors about their
equality. Even the racist exploiters and oppressors in their vast
majority didn’t believe we were inferior. That is why they fought
so violently to beat us down and keep us down. We should refuse
to try and prove our equality to anyone least of all ourselves.
These historians will present us as long-suffering
victims. They will walk us through the slave ships, chains, death
and destruction
visited on millions of our people for centuries. We will be bombarded
with images of church bombings, white racist riots, police brutality
and frame-ups. Once again the point is lost on them. Our history
is not that of victims but of fighters. We have always resisted
attempts to be turned into victims. We fought back with whatever
tools and weapons we had available to us, as Malcolm X said, “by
any means necessary”. We fought against racist violence here at
home and we laid down our lives in this country’s wars in the mistaken
believe it would bring democracy and justice at home. We fought
with dignity and valor, we distinguished ourselves as heroic figures
by the thousands, only to have great white American heroes betray
us. Teddy “big stick” Roosevelt stood up before the entire country
and lied about our contributions after Black soldiers saved his
butt in Cuba and the Philippines. Our ancestors didn’t conduct
themselves as suffering victims. They correctly acted to resist
and stand up to their tormentors in this country.
Above all, the historians will advance the
pied-piper view of the history of the Civil Rights Movement.
We are told that 400
years of brutal exploitation and oppression came tumbling down
when Martin Luther King had a dream and marched throughout the
South. With all due respect to MLK, who inspired me to become political,
he didn’t create the Civil Rights Movement, the Civil Rights Movement
created him. In fact, the one individual who could be mentioned
in this vein is ignored by the historians: a man name E. D. Nixon,
the president of the Montgomery NAACP and the president of a sleeping
car porters local union. Rosa Parks, his part time secretary, learned
her Black pride from this old veteran of the labor and Civil Rights
Movement. He convinced her to fight, he organized preachers to
meet at Dr. King’s church, and proposed the bus boycott.
Above all Nixon formulated a plan of action that drew in thousands
and led to the total destruction of the Jim Crow system.
The bus boycott was a fundamental departure
from the tactics of the fight for Black rights utilized from
the defeat of Radical
Reconstruction up until the boycott. The shift was away from trying
to convince white society that we were worthy of first class citizenship.
We simply asserted our humanity; we took our equality and refused
to surrender it for 381 days. And we won. This victory was not
the result of the genius of Dr. King or Mr. Nixon. It exploded
from the bottom up. It was the result of the accumulation of 80
years of experiences from the Civil War to World War II. The formula
was classic, the accumulation of quantitative experiences exploding
into qualitative change in expectations and actions. We took matters
into our own hands and we stopped appealing to our oppressors sense
of humanity – we finally realized they had none.
The image of the thousands of Black maids,
laborers, farmers and farm workers should be burned into our
memory. They stood up, fought
and won. This invisible mass of humanity woke up, flexed their
muscles and made history. They are the heroes we should be celebrating
during Black history month. The fact is, that same potential power
exists today. It’s a simple matter of tapping into it and utilizing
it to change the deplorable conditions the majority of our people
face in life today.
The historians will present the massive influx of former civil
rights leaders into the electoral arena, primarily the Democratic
Party, as a logical outcome of the victory of the movement. Nothing
is further from the truth. Obviously winning the right to vote
and running for office was a key component of the victory. The
central lesson of the victory was the fact that we had organized,
mobilized and overthrown Jim Crow without the right to vote or
even the pretense of equality under the law. At that point in our
history we stood at the threshold of making the greatest advances
since our kidnapping and enslavement in this country.
The Civil Rights Movement had a beginning,
middle and an end. It was over by 1968 the day after Dr. King’s
assassination when the entire country burned. The challenge facing
the victorious
leaders of the Civil Rights Movement was to stand on the shoulders
of the Civil Rights Movement and build a social movement using
the same methods of struggle that got us that far. Such a movement
would have advanced a social program beginning with a plan similar
to the Marshal plan that rebuilt Europe and Japan after World War
II. We should have demanded a publics works program to build schools,
housing, and hospitals, which would have amounted to a reconstruction
of the Black community. I call it reparations with teeth.
As Malcolm X was so fond of pointing out,
the goal of segregation was not to deny us rights, the denial
of rights was a tool that
allowed the market system to exploit us more, pay us less, condemn
us to inferior housing and education, higher unemployment, sub-standard
medical care, if we had any at all. These are social-economic problems
that demand social and economic solutions.
Many historians are incapable of explaining
why the conditions of life for the vast majority of people who
are Black in this country
have deteriorated since the victory of the Civil Rights Movement.
The challenge we face today is the same challenge we have faced
since 1968. Objective conditions cry out for a social movement.
Serious fighters for Black rights today have a responsibility and
obligation to stand up and tell the truth no matter how painful
it may be. By doing so we will find the young fighters of today
who are more than capable of bridging the gap between the past
and the present with an eye toward a future of struggle and progress.
It is this that we should celebrate during and after this Black
history month.
James Warren
has been active in the Black and Labor movement for over
35 years. He is currently
resident in Manhattan, New
York where he is writing a personal history of his experiences
in the movement. He can be contacted at [email protected]. |