[In revolutionary and loving memory and recognition
of the esteemed Aimé Césaire]
To be sure, one can sometimes achieve just
about anything in the United States of America, as long as one is willing
to sell out the principles of justice and truth. Nevertheless,
the U.S. Empire is in decay and crumbling. Yet, even
as this occurs, the utter ruthlessness, subterfuge, and hypocrisy
of the Empire is rapidly increasing.
In the historical and contemporary context
of the ongoing liberation struggles of Black, Red, and Brown
peoples, and the ahistorical and political unconsciousness
of some in this regard - especially in the U.S. - a politically conscious
Black American friend Keith Baker uses the expression: “Absent
the badge of honor.” In this context, the “badge of honor”
which is “absent” is a critical and fundamental
historical understanding of the nature of the Black liberation
struggle drawn from direct involvement in said struggle.
However,
as Baker elaborated, “The badge of honor is that which is
inculcated emotionally in each of us as to who
we are.
It goes far beyond mere intellectual understanding
or even direct involvement [re our social, economic,
and political struggle].” This “badge of honor” goes
to the very core of our being as to who and what
we are. Thus, the lack of an experiential
component having been emotionally inculcated, coupled with
huge doses of incessant U.S. systemic disinformation and misinformation,
deliberately serves to stifle peoples’ understanding themselves/ourselves
and of the dialectical and ongoing historical connectedness
of, for example, the Black liberation struggle in this nation
- and how this struggle is linked to those of other oppressed
peoples both inside and outside the U.S.
Being “absent the badge of honor” ensures that
young and old alike succumb to such dangerous, misleading,
and ridiculous rhetorical notions such as one individual or
group of individuals being the supposed leaders of a so-called
“Joshua Generation.” The Black liberation struggle
in “America,” is ongoing, protracted,
and dialectical. Its leadership is collective in form
and purpose and it is, though under constant systemic assault
by the Empire, far from dead.
Those
who are “absent the badge of honor” fail to recognize that
no single generation owns the liberation struggle,
but that this struggle is a continuum whereupon every
bit of suffering and knowledge is amassed, honored and
studied in-depth with a view to honing and intensifying
the current and next phases of our ongoing liberation struggle.
Those who are “absent the badge of honor” are willing to serve
as the gate keeper/s for the maintenance of the empire’s
decaying system; while others who are “absent the badge of
honor” are continually hoodwinked by the media disinformation
and misinformation of this empire’s capitalist systemic terrorism
machine against the poor.
Black, Brown, and Red peoples, in harmony with
all who are opposed to the empire’s systemic social,
economic, and political terrorism against the poor, have the
uncompromising duty urgently and creatively to find the ways
and means to expose this filthy system. This is not merely
a choice - it is our duty as humans.
There have been and continue to be many examples
of women and men, who though ignored and/or vilified by this
system’s media, are serving as beacons of hope for our ongoing
struggles. These people are the real giants of humanity,
though like us, they are only mortal.
Just this month we lost from the physical
world one such giant of humanity, in the person of Aimé
Césaire. Yes, Aimé Césaire: writer, poet, teacher, and anti-colonial
activist from Martinique. Among the millions
that Césaire inspired was none other than the renowned Frantz
Fanon, to whom he was a mentor. Césaire
stayed strong in the struggle and was also a key endorser
of the International Tribunal on Katrina, in New Orleans.
I humbly also count myself as among the millions
whom Césaire’s works inspired. As a former member of the Black
Panther Party, I remember having had intense discussions with
other party comrades regarding the writings of, among others,
brother Aimé Césaire. To the family members of brother Aimé
Césaire, the members of his political family, and the
Parti Progressiste Martiniquais I extend my deepest condolences
and respect. Those
who are politically conscious in the United States, know for a certainty that Aimé
Césaire’s legacy stands eternally shoulder to shoulder with
other women and men freedom fighters including Harriet Tubman,
W. E. B. Du Bois, Malcolm X, Kwame Nkrumah, Amilcar Cabral,
Paul Robeson, Huey P. Newton and so many others in this ongoing
struggle. Césaire’s sterling example has taught us incredibly
valuable lessons, and reminded me, that we can all
be giants in humanity’s struggle for justice and equality.
Brother Césaire, your writings and actions
have inspired Black people, and humans of all colors and ethnicities
throughout the world. You demonstrated the strength and resilience
of an idea. You shall be missed, but never forgotten.
As the imprisoned American Indian Movement
(AIM) activist, Leonard Peltier, put it in his recent April
18, 2008, statement of solidarity to and with Mumia Abu-Jamal,
“…Given the choice of lying down to die or standing up to
live, we chose to live. Standing up and living is our only
crime in this, the land of the free and home of the brave.
Our dream is still alive, and as hunger striker Bobby
Sands once said, you can lock up the dreamer but you cannot
place chains around an idea…”
The “badge of honor” in this, our ongoing struggle,
is not an award. It is a symbol and beacon of what has been
done before us and of the enormously urgent tasks that are
ahead, as we struggle to keep it real. Onward then….
There is much to do.
BlackCommentator.com
Editorial Board
member, Larry Pinkney, is a veteran of the Black Panther Party,
the former Minister of Interior of the Republic of New Africa,
a former political prisoner and the only American to have
successfully self-authored his civil/political rights case
to the United Nations under the International Covenant on
Civil and Political Rights. In connection
with his political organizing activities in opposition to
voter suppression, etc., Pinkney was interviewed in 1988 on
the nationally televised PBS NewsHour, formerly known as The MacNeil/Lehrer NewsHour. For more about Larry Pinkney see the book, Saying
No to Power: Autobiography of a 20th Century Activist and
Thinker, by William Mandel [Introduction by Howard Zinn]. (Click
here to read excerpts from the book) Click
here to contact Mr. Pinkney.