I
first met Ron Walters in the Fall of 1972, when I joined
the faculty of the History Department of Howard University,
where he served as chairperson of the Political Science
Department, both located in Douglass Hall. For professional
credibility, we both belonged to the established organizations
in our respective fields, but my passions were with the
Association for the Study of African American Life and History
founded by Carter G. Woodson, and his were with the National
Council of Black Political Scientists founded and supported
by himself, and other Black activist academicians from his
field, only a few years earlier.
From
the outset, Ron was a serious scholar, inspiring teacher,
caring advisor, and was obsessed with recruiting the best
young political scientists to his department and developing
the graduate program, particularly doctoral studies. On
that score, he was hugely successful. We became good friends
through Leslie McLemore, Mack Jones, Hanes Walton, Vernon
Gray, Alex Willingham, Charles Henry, and other young Black
political scientists from the Joint Center for Political
Studies who were changing the landscape for research on
Black political participation. We often talked about
the legendary professors who preceded us at Howard. I was
enamored with John Hope Franklin and he with Ralph Bunche,
who founded his department in the 1930�s. When he spoke
about the mission of his department and his vision for the
department, one thing was transparent: academics without
activism had no place in his life, nor a place in the ivory
towers. On this single issue, for the remainder of
his life he never wavered, and there was no one more intense
or determined in that regard.
In
the wake of the Civil Rights and Black Power Movements,
the Great Society of LBJ, and the promises of Affirmative
Action, he defined a life-long course of action committing
himself totally to the causes of social, political and economic
justice, and to organizing, educating and energizing the
base of black political involvement among his students,
friends, colleagues, organizations, and the community ---
first locally and ultimately nationally and internationally.
He actually �sat down� at a segregated Wichita,
Kansas lunch counter in the 1950�s, years before Greensboro,
because his parents were involved in early civil rights
efforts. For the next half century and more, the apple
never fell far from the tree.
One
night in the mid-1980�s, he sat in the audience for Ted
Koppel�s Nightline television program, where a community
forum was being staged on a national black issue. When Ron
approached the microphone with a difficult question for
Koppel, he was politely dismissed with a sugar-coated response
which avoided his question altogether. Ron was incensed,
though characteristically he maintained his professional
composure. But Ron would not sit down or relinquish the
microphone, protesting so strongly with exquisite command
of the language that his question had been purposely avoided,
forcing the network to an abrupt unscheduled commercial
break. During the interim, he was told that his time had
expired. Still, he demanded to be heard. The discomfiture
that he caused was so severe, that it resulted in the format
of the questions from the audience being hastily abandoned
for the remainder of the program.
It
was what was to become his signature � he never retreated
from anything that he deeply believed in, would not compromise
his integrity, and wrote and spoke without fear of retribution.
Over time, he became so prominent that he could not be ignored,
and major newspapers frequently called on him for his opinions
on various political concerns � easily edited and filtered
before publication. The Black press and media adored and
revered Ron Walters because he told the truth in ways understood
by hard-working and often angry average Black people, the
mainstream white press avoided his syndicated column for
precisely the same reasons.
History
will record that some of the most penetrating, cutting-edge
political commentary of the late 20th. and early 21st. centuries
were made by Ron Walters. In his memory and out of respect
for his legacy, the questions he raised which remain with
us because they were never satisfactorily answered, are
those that can no longer be deferred or avoided, and more
importantly, they are those from which we cannot retreat.
We �too� are Americans� - paid in full and demand respect
and dignity - nothing more and not a damn thing less!
We
will also continue to grow larger and stronger, when we
re-read and reconsider Ron Walters, for a long time one
of the tallest and proudest trees in the forest of justice.
He
was the real deal, truly sui generis.
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BlackCommentator.com
Guest Commentator Dr. Al-Tony Gilmore, PhD is Associate
Project Director, NEA Archives, Research Department
and Visiting Scholar, George Washington University.�
Click here
to contact Dr. Gilmore. |