The Black mega-preacher T.D. Jakes is perturbed,
feeling let down by President Bush, by Bush's father,
the former President, and former President Bill Clinton.
Bishop Jakes and other clergy had been promised that
$20 million in privately-raised Katrina aid would
be distributed through their faith-based institutions.
George W. Bush himself chose Jakes as a co-chairman
of the group that would distribute the money, part
of $110 million raised by Bush's father and Bill Clinton.
That was right after the hurricane hit. Now, six months
later, these Black preachers haven't gotten a dime.
Bishop Jakes, who flirts endlessly with the Republicans,
says he is annoyed, frustrated, and angry - his way
of saying, "Show me the money!"
To put this situation in context, we must go back
in history, to over a century ago, when Booker T.
Washington made his famous compromise with white and
corporate power. Washington infuriated Blacks who
were trying to resist the growth of Jim Crow and lynch
law rule. Rather than fight for the political rights
of Black people, Booker T. promised to drop Black
political demands - that is, demands for democracy
in the South. In return, Booker T. and his minions
would become the beneficiaries of corporate philanthropy,
which they could distribute as they saw fit, to Blacks
who were willing to cease demanding their democratic
rights. Booker T. Washington's deal with the devil
promised to elevate Blacks economically, if they would
stop agitating for social and political equality.
However, there was a problem, as Harvard University's
Dr. Martin Kilson brilliantly pointed out in the March
2 issue of The Black Commentator. Booker T. Washington's
compromising model could only work if the corporate
millionaires he cultivated were sincere about uplifting
millions of Black people out of poverty. And they
were not. The rich whites he allied himself with were
glad to fund Booker T. Washington's Tuskegee political
machine, and to elevate him to the status of national
Black political leader. But they had no intention
of freeing Black people as a group from grinding poverty.
Booker T's rich white friends reneged on the deal,
and as a result, there arose a more militant Black
activism that demanded full citizenship. This is the
model that carried us to the 1950s and '60s Civil
Rights Movement - and which should have buried Booker
T.-type compromises once and for all.
But George Bush's crowd has attempted to resurrect
the Booker T. model, with the assistance of preachers
like T.D. Jakes. And, like his rich white predecessors,
Bush will also renege on his commitments to those
Blacks who are so happy to kiss up to him. T.D. Jakes
has not gotten his $20 million Katrina check, because
the corporate rulers have no intention of allowing
Blacks from New Orleans to regroup and return. That
will only happen as a result of the most intense political
confrontation with the powers-that-be - a struggle
that T.D. Jakes and his ilk, like Booker T. Washington,
will never undertake. For Radio BC, I'm Glen Ford.