The issue of reparations for African people throughout
the world has become a widely discussed topic that is manifesting
itself into a variety of action plans and strategies. Some of
which surfaced in the various reparations lawsuits filed over
the last several years.
In my travels around the country, the issue of reparations appears
to have penetrated the spirit and interest of African people
in America in all walks of life. For those of us who have been
organizing and advocating reparations, since the 1960s, for African
people in America, specifically, and for African people throughout
the world, the question becomes what does this current phase
of the Reparations Movement mean for the just cause of the redemption
and salvation of African people?
When we talk about reparations we are talking
about the damages, compensation, and redress of those wrongs,
so that the countries and people that suffered will enjoy full
freedom to continue their own development on more equal terms. When
we discuss reparations for African people in the United States
we are talking about “slave labor, humanity, culture,
legacies, names, language that were taken outside of the law
and natural process by forceful demand of white captive slaveowners.”
In
this regard, the current phase of the Reparations Movement
for African people in America is connected to the leadership
of Sister Callie House who founded “The National Ex–Slave Mutual
Relief Bounty and Pension Association” in the 1890s. According
to the research of Mary Berry, Sister House organized a Black
mass movement demanding reparations during the period of the
1890s to 1915. Berry reveals that, “working through meetings,
literature, and traveling agents, the organization successfully
developed membership across the South as well as…Oklahoma, Kansas,
Indiana, Ohio, and New York.” Further,
Berry’s research reveals The Association’s 25 cents
annual membership fee and the ten–cent monthly dues, along with
$2.50 charged local affiliates for a Charter, augmented by an
occasional extraordinary levy of five–cents to defray special
expenses, provided the funds for this mass–based movement’s work.
The objective was to organize a demand throughout the Black nation
which would force the United States to provide the needed and
well deserved pensions they sought for the aging persons formerly
held in slavery, their surviving spouses, care–givers, and heirs.”
In the recently published book, Eight Women Leaders of the
Reparations Movement U. S. A., by Linda Allen Eustace and
Dr. Imari Obadele, “The movement’s successful organizing, coupled
with the ubiquitous white supremacist values of whites generally
and especially United States officials, which disposed them
in those days, as today, to attempt to defeat any significant
self help efforts among Black people resulted in a ten year
postal investigation.” Eustace
and Obadele point out, “after finding no evidence of
federal violations, U. S. officials indicted Ms. House and a
number of other members, at Nashville for fraud, for using the
mail to distribute one of the Association’s carefully drawn leaflets.
She was found guilty and sentenced to a year and a day in the
federal prison at Jefferson City.”
Although this phase of the Reparations Movement was not successful,
the spirit and organizing work carried on through the Garvey
Movement and again resurfaced through the leadership of the Honorable
Elijah Muhammad and Malcolm X in the 1960s making the reparations
demand through Muhammad Speaks. The Nation of Islam under
the leadership of the Honorable Louis Farrakhan remains an advocate
of the reparations demand. The Republic of New Africa made a
reparations demand in 1968, demanding payment of $400 billion
in slavery damages. In
this context, James Forman, Director of International Affairs
of the Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee, interrupted
church service at New York’s Riverside Church to deliver his “Black
Manifesto” demanding $500 million in reparations from white synagogues
and churches. The National Coalition of Blacks for Reparations in America
(N`COBRA) was organized in 1987 following in the tradition of
Sister Callie House. Since 1988, N`COBRA has developed a number
of strategies designed to gain reparations for African people
in America and also help advance international efforts to win
reparations.
Since 1989, Congressman John Conyers has introduced legislation
calling for the U. S. government to hold a probing study of reparations.
This legislation is currently receiving wide support, primarily,
due to the work of N`COBRA, other reparations organizations,
and activists. Since the late 1980s, the December 12th Movement, the Uhuru
Movement, The Lost and Found Nation of Islam, the Republic of
New Africa, and the National Black United Front have been some
examples of organizations that continue to organize around the
demand for reparations.
The
Tulsa Race Riot Commission, under the leadership of Representative
Donn Ross, Attorney Deadria Farmer–Paellmann’s research on insurance
companies that held slave policies in the 1850s added to the
reparations discussion over the last several years. This research
exposing the involvement of these corporations in the slave trade
and slavery led to the filing of major reparations corporate
lawsuits. The major lawsuit is now under appeal in the 7th Circuit
Court.
Finally,
Alderman Dorothy Tillman’s Chicago City Council legislation
initiative ahs had a great impact and has aided in the current
interest African people in America now have on reparations. The
following publications; Randall Robinson’s book, The Debt, Dr.
Raymond Winbush’s Should America Pay?, and Dr. Mary Frances
Berry’s book, My Face Is Black Is True, have all helped
provide fuel to the reparations discussion. What this current mass phase of the Reparations Movement means,
is that African people have not lost our memory of the historical
atrocities inflicted on us, and that we will never forget what
has happened to us and continues today. The demand for reparations
must be intensified through serious organization and activism
not matter how many white and Black people are opposed. Contrary
to some, we must never forget what happened to us and how it
continues to impact us today. REPARATIONS
NOW! BlackCommentator.com columnist Conrad
W. Worrill, PhD, is the National Chairman of the National Black
United Front (NBUF). Click
here to contact Dr. Worrill. |