The Fourth
of July is a date that historically brings about much confliction
in the African American community. Never one to miss a great
party, black people spend considerable money on bar-b-ques
and fireworks. And you see as many American flags hanging
on the porches of black homes as any other. Why? Because as
Langston Hughes once said, “We too are America.” We sing America;
we work America and we love America - even when America hasn’t
always loved us. The African in America built America, and
then became America as the social construct was left with
no choice but to include Africa in America’s melting pot.
Ever
since slavery was abolish in 1865, black people have had to
demonstrate their love of country beyond any reasonable expectation,
despite a continuing racial animus toward them. Black people
have fought in every war, from the Revolutionary War to the
Iraqi War, despite America’s exclusionary politics of Slavery,
Segregation and Colorblindness. Black soldiers suffered the
greater indignities of false promises of freedom, separation
from their own ranks, treatment worse than prisoners of war
and constant assaults on their humanity. From Fort Pillow
(where Black Union Soldiers were captured and executed) to
Port Chicago (where black WWII soldiers were court marshaled
after a mass mutiny in the aftermath of an explosion that
killed 202 black ammunition loaders), from Tuskegee (where
they never lost a fighter) to Viet Nam (where they were disproportionately
frontline fighters), there has been no greater demonstration
of love of country than that of the African American. So what
is patriotism really about? What does it mean to be a patriot?
And who determines another’s patriotism is sufficient, particularly
in the current applications of Barack Obama’s run for President
of the United States.
“Love
of country,” the primary definition of Patriotism, has always
served as a subterfuge for the subversion of criticism about
what America is, what America is not and what America could
be. To criticize America is a public right, but doing so is
perverted into somehow making one less patriotic. When you
don’t love what America is, and say so, you somehow don’t
love America. When you call out the imperfections in America
that really exacerbate our cultural and social differences,
you somehow don’t stand for America - if you don’t stand for
what America (right or wrong) stands for. And when you challenge
America (and Americans) to be better, to do better, to want
better - you somehow don’t appreciate “how good things are”
because you live in America. It’s become a discourse in relativism
where “a bad life” here is rationalized in the context of
it, at least, not being as bad as where some communist regime
or third world developing nation might be. White people are
considered “Patriots” no matter how bad they might have been
- “they loved their country.”
Black people’s
patriotism is always suspect, no matter how good they are
or how dedicated they may be. Recent examples of this affirm
this inconsistency. On this past fourth of July, former North
Carolina Senator, Jesse Helms died. Jesse Helms, unlike former
Alabama Governor, George Wallace, or former South Carolina
Senator, Strom Thurman, died an unrepentant segregationist.
Yet former North Carolina GOP Rep, Bill Robey called him a
“patriot” in the mold of other great “giants” that died on
the fourth of July (Thomas Jefferson and John Adams). On
the other hand, the Republican Party has now sought to challenge
Barack Obama’s patriotism. So dominate is the discussion that
it was the cover story of last week’s Time magazine
and has put Obama (and his flag pin) of the cover of this
month’s Rolling Stone magazine. It started with the
claim that Barack didn’t say the Pledge of Allegiance at a
public event, and then it rolled over to him not wearing a
flag pin, and continued with him not putting his hand over
his heart. Then, of course, there is the whisper campaign
about Obama being a Muslim and they use his last name being
to close to “Osama” (Bin Laden) and his middle name, Hussein,
as validation that this man can’t possibly be patriotic enough
to be President of the United States. What would they have
him do? Change his name to a good ole’ American name, like
Barack Johnson, or Patrick Henry Obama? And while he seems
to have the flag pin thing arrested, Barack Obama could put
both hands over his heart and somebody, SOMEBODY, would say,
“Well, he didn’t have them high enough?” It’s like a jungle
sometimes; it makes me wonder how we keep from going under.
But
Barack hasn’t gone under. In fact, he has sustained, and maintained,
that America can be better if it is willing to change. Just
as black America has sustained over the notion, throughout
the past 400 years, that America is not what it was but is
not what it could be. Even when we say things are getting
better, our patriotism is called into question. Michelle Obama’s
“really proud” comment is a case in point. She never said
she wasn’t proud of her country. She said she was “really”
proud of her country. In the black community, we call that
“Mo Better,” meaning more proud than we’d previously been
able to acknowledge. Because
black America doesn’t have many opportunities to brag on the
greatness of America, this was a significant moment, but it
was twisted and spinned in a way that deflected her love of
country, and was accentuated in the context of a critique,
when it wasn’t meant to be a critique. That’s how discussions
around patriotism land. Many have taken offense at any critique
of John McCain’s service record, but patriotism can’t be solely
based on serving our country because most of the members of
his party, who voted for the war, didn’t serve a day - hiding
behind deferments and exemptions. Are they less Patriotic
for not going into the military, or serving their country?
You rarely hear that criticism. The confliction around patriotism
is real. Such confliction is the greatest black leader of
all-time, Frederick Douglass, refused to speak on July 4th
in 1852. He spoke on July 5th instead because he knew patriotism
in America was a shell game, and like any game of three card
Mollie, black America was always tricked into picking the
wrong card. The
Constitution of the United States was rarely under the card
we turned over and we are always doped into saying we love
America even when America didn’t love us. It’s the same today.
Barack must say he loves America, flaws and all, to change
it. Anything less, and he will never be seen as patriotic
enough to lead the country. What a deal…
Until we really
understand what Patriotism means, we will never really know
what patriotism is all about - beyond defending “the American
way of life.” For African Americans, that’s a SCARY thought
because it means business as usual - in a twisted, kinda’
“patriotic” way.
BlackCommentator.com Columnist, Dr. Anthony Asadullah Samad, is a national columnist, managing
director of the Urban Issues Forum and author of Saving The Race: Empowerment Through Wisdom.
His Website is AnthonySamad.com.
Click here
to contact Dr. Samad.