I
had a déjà vu moment last week while watching Los Angeles Clippers
owner, Donald Sterling, receive the Los Angeles NAACP Chapter’s
Life Achievement Award. Watching Sterling try to find the words
of why he merited the award was like watching George Wallace try
to convince black voters that he had changed from his segregationist
ways in the 1972 Presidential election. It just wasn’t selling,
given he’d been sued for discriminating against black renters in
his many Westside high-rises over the past few years, and then sued
by his longest black employee, superstar legend, Elgin Baylor, in
the past year for running his basketball team like a plantation
(again for race discrimination). So when the Los Angeles NAACP announced
they were honoring Sterling, a collective “oh boy” shot through
the community. This was a controversial pick if there ever was one.
Some might even call it, “crazy.”
Now I’m not saying that Donald Sterling is a racist, but he certainly
seems to have his share of problems with black people. Maybe it’s
just coincidental, that all these black people are suing him for
race discrimination
- but that would be a problem for me to give the chapter’s highest
honor while all this stuff is still going on. At the end of the
day (night), all that can be said was that he gives kids tickets
to basketball games (how else would you get them to a Clipper game?).
It was enough to choke on your chicken. And then he left the award
sitting on the table while he left for the hotel bar. Yep. But this
still might not have been the branch’s craziest pick.
This whole awards fiasco with the L.A. NAACP took me back, way back,
to 1987 and Century Plaza where this same chapter gave this same
controversial award to singer Frank Sinatra right after he was the
only major entertainer to play Sun City, a South African resort,
during apartheid. The choice to honor Sinatra hit like a bombshell.
It divided chapter members, officers (I was first Vice President
at the time-and I opposed the award), and most importantly, the
community that was firmly in the midst of an anti-apartheid movement.
Clearly, the choice of Sinatra was about a financially cash strapped
branch and the need for Sinatra to get some cover from the bad press
he had gotten globally. He needed some black people and the branch
needed some money. It was a marriage made in hell. Even the national
organization issued a statement that branches make their own award
selection (read that as: We don’t have anything to do this and don’t
agree with it). If they agreed with it, it would have been no need
to make the statement. They had to make one because protesters were
threatening to boycott the NAACP and its sponsors. Imagine the “boycotter”
being boycotted. Those were crazy days. Sinatra raised the branch
$400,000 and got some press to deflect the other press he was getting-mainly
about the branch members and community being divided over him receiving
the award. And he stayed the whole dinner. But it tore the branch
up forever. I became President the following year but the Sinatra
planners in the branch sought revenge, and blew up the branch in
the process. The branch has never recovered.
Fast forward twenty years later, when Donald Sterling’s “race issues”
first came to light over refusing to rent to black tenants. Once
the lawsuit hit in the national press, the “un-Donald” was looking
for some black friends. Sterling couldn’t get no press so he started
buying his own press, space in the L.A. Times, running ads
showing black occupants in his buildings. Then he started inviting
black leaders to parties-taking pictures of them and putting them
in the paper around his picture. Insulting but they put themselves
in that position. Some demanded he stop, and he did. Then he started
having his own award banquets, honoring-you guessed it - himself.
It really took megalomania to another level. But finally, Sterling
got someone to “bite the cookie.” It was the toothless Los Angeles
NAACP. I heard they really needed the money, and with this being
there 100th anniversary and all, may have been a little anxious.
The community was going to support them (once an NAACPer, always
an NAACPer) regardless of who the honoree was for their 100th year
(the branch’s 95th year). I just hope Sterling didn’t get them for
cheap. But I know he got ‘em. And thus, déjà vu all over again (as
Yogi Berra once said).
I hate to talk about my old branch like that, but the truth is the truth.
No longer a leader, but a worthy coalition player, the branch did
take a role in getting UCLA to admit more African American freshmen.
And they did honor UCLA’s Chancellor for doing so last week. But
did they get Donald Sterling to rent to more African Americans?
You would think that information was readily available…but it wasn’t.
Did he settle with Elgin Baylor? Baylor is my all-time favorite
of the pre-1980 Lakers and the Lakers first star, but the Lakers
never hired him in the organization after his playing days. The
Clippers did, for marketing and branding reasons. Baylor presided
over twenty years of the worst basketball you ever wanted to watch
largely because, with Sterling looking over his shoulder, he didn’t
control purse strings. So he drafted college star after college
star, who walked away superstars when they became free agents because
wouldn’t re-up. Baylor deserved a better landing then he got. He
would’ve been a great lifetime achievement honoree. Sterling dumping
Elgin Baylor was like the Dodgers trading Jackie Robinson to San
Francisco Giants, it was cruel and unnecessary. Baylor deserved
(and still deserves) a victory lap in Los Angeles. Instead, the
NAACP gave Donald Sterling a victory lap. And he left the cup on
the table.
Boy, that NAACP Life Achievement Award is a tricky one to gauge. You
never know just who earned it, deserved it or straight out bought
it. One thing’s for sure… It’s still crazy (controversial) after
all these years.
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. |