A
story is impelled by the necessity to reveal: the aim
of the story is revelation, which means that a story can
have nothing to hide.
-
James Baldwin, The Devil Finds Work
You
must certainly put him to death. You hand must be the
first in putting him to death and the hands of all the
people.
-
Deuteronomy 13.9, New International Version
I
believe the Chicago Cubs will win the World Series—one
day—and I hope this event occurs before the end of
my life. This is a belief and a hope. Some may laugh,
but there are others who pray, with fervor, for this event
to happen. I share this belief with some Chicagoans, particularly
those not die-hard followers of the other town’s team, but
I do not pray for a Cub pennant.
As
much as I hope to see the Cubs win the World Series, I do
not share in the belief that God, one day, mindful of the
long-suffering Cubs and their fans, will intervene, and
the Cubs will do it, finally—when it is their time,
established already in the Father’s divine plan.
What
is not saturated with the replication of the Father motif?
If we aren’t watching you, the Father has eyes on you, the
faithful. It is a “softer,” “kinder,” Big Brother (that
is, if you do not find yourself under interrogation or in
one of his prisons) with an assortment of “intelligence”
operatives monitoring the most miniscule of activities.
It
is the same imagination—human imagination—at odds with what
it knows and what it does not know and finds difficult to
comprehend human existence. The Old Book’s solution absolves
humankind from submitting to comprehension; it provided
Western would-be rulers with an already written narrative
intent on effecting regime change in the name of divine
retribution.
Western
“civilization” perfected the “Reign of Terror” on behalf
of an ideology or religious set of doctrines and dogma.
In the making of the U.S. Empire, terror played an instrumental
role in indoctrinating indigenous and enslaved African populations
with fear of the Father that becomes self-perpetuating over
time. Surely good people abound to warn of the hell to pay
if the masses of faithful, subdued in a church within a
church, should attempt to stage their own emancipation from
the watchful eyes of the Father.
On
this date, in this year, they tell us, chains have been
removed—by the Father…
We
have been brought over the river and beyond the wildness,
arriving, by divine intervention, into the land of milk
and honey.
Black
civic, political, and academic leaders greet each other,
spending several minutes recounting each others past
work in the movement, the “Old Movement,” the only
movement, the one that began on a certain date and ended,
if the truth be told, on April 4, 1968. Many were the accomplishments
of the old movement, remembered by faithful on the
occasional celebration of Black life—past tense.
We
all welcome the use of the technology available to research
our days in slavery or our crossing of the Atlantic. I
have listened to these interviews. With abandonment, Black
scholar and white television anchor or radio host talk about
racism—in those days. These are the brief and occasional
moments in the U.S. when a Black is permitted to speak freely
about racism. He or she is free to mention white supremacy.
Free to tell those stories of brutality, of the suffering
of Blacks, of the death of Blacks. Free to name the racist
slaveholder, sheriff, judge. Dead.
America
hears about bygone days and shakes its collective head in
empathy with those Blacks. Also dead.
These
are events have finite dates. In these moments when America
is listening, its collective resentfulness and its power
to act on its resentfulness is held at bay. More are less
threatened by what remains in the past.
When you reach 50, someone told me years ago, you
will have paid your dues. I am past my fiftieth year and each year, each month,
each day since I am reminded by my fellow white baby boomers
that to speak is tantamount to a death wish—ever so subtle,
of course. Subtle is a muzzle. We are like children,
again, forbidden to speak to and among adults about grown
up things.
Black
life in the present tense does not interest America.
Black life was slavery, was Jim Crow and the Civil Rights
Era. The COINTELPRO Era of the 1970s resides on lists of
forbidden taboos.
America
cannot remember Black people after April 4, 1968.
Willing
and unwilling martyrs gave primacy to justice and to equalitarianism
rather than more religious or ideological mass production
of “the chosen few.” Black American cannot recall Dr. King’s
secular denouncement of the Vietnam War or his outrage
when America turned its back on the poor and working class
or his questioning of how white American went about implementing
its “integration” policies. Instead, Black Americans greedily
consumed those pre-selected bits of the martyred Reverent
of “integration” and wrapped them around the Black population
like a shawl. Thank you Father for these bits of freedom!
(Terror never fails to work its magic). In this covering,
Black Americans believe themselves still in possession of
America’s moral conscience. But we have lost this
possession of moral conscience, too, long ago, along with
everything else, yet we seem to be the last to know it.
But
illusions are useful to some most of the time.
When
the one side of the One Party in the U.S. holds a convention
and calls it the Democratic Convention, it cannot proceed
without a Black choir—a Black Baptist choir—and a few rousing
minutes of gospel music before the representatives of Big
Brother resume the business of establishing an agenda for
the nation. These conventions generally open and close
with the Father’s representative Black minister who recites
a prayer—reminding all of that higher power to which we
owe our foremost allegiance. The Father that begets Big
Brother is indistinguishable.
Why
would the Democrats in the One Party wish Black Americans
emancipation from doctrine or dogma?
Profitable
financially and professionally, religion has delivered many
Black Americans to the Promised Land where quite often,
the idea of a collective moral conscience sits at bay alongside
white resentfulness. White Baby Boomers and the Black clergy
in the U.S. have for 40 years functioned (even if sometimes
independently) as stop-gaps to Black thought, resulting
in the arrested development of Black Americans. The prohibition
on any meaningful discussion of racism in the U.S. functions—like
any attempt to question religious dogma or political doctrines—to
remind Black Americans of the earthly and divine terror
that awaits the body or soul that transgresses Father/Big
Brother.
So
patience…patience…
An
Eddie Long “controversy” is trouble only in that
it threatened to gnaw away at the illusion. Ratzinger in
Rome shuffled child molesters about the world, but the abused
children coming forward, broke the spell. Otherwise, we
are told and have been since the late 70s and early 80s
in the Black Community that the divine entity loves the
wealthy. God blesses the wealthy and wants Black people,
too, to be rich.
Johnny-come-lately!
But Black Americans have arrived as adapt mimes of the dogma/doctrine
of Father/Big Brother. This is natural progression here
in the U.S. We can wage war, too, and can do it “better.”
Once
every two or four years, the Democratic Party calls on the
Black church to save them. Round up the faithful troops.
And faithful the troops do come running—expecting change.
Luckily for the Democrats, Blacks do not change except a
good many of them expect to be as rich as the politicians
running before the next election.
That
Father/Big Brother has operated for a long time in Western
thought. He wanted investors in Black bodies to successfully
navigate business between the West coast of Africa to the
colonies and the Caribbean with the blessing of the Papacy.
That Father/Big Brother wanted slaveholders to be wealthy
and successful growers of cotton and tobacco. That Father/Big
Brother was the entity of the Puritans whose massacre of
the indigenous population opened a way through the wilderness
for His “chosen” people. It is the same Father/Big Brother
who dictated to Americans the doctrine of Manifest Destiny
and spoke to them about “savages” in need of “democracy”
in the Philippines, in Latin America, in Asia. This Father/Big
Brother is on Wall Street among the bankers and in every
corporate office building. This Father/Big Brother inspires
NGOs and humanitarian organizations similar to those in
Haiti where, after nine months, the majority of Haitians
still live (maybe, if they are “blessed”) under a tent.
It is the same Father/Big Brother introduced to the enslaved
African in the West…
…And
it goes on and on and on. Drones fall on women and children
daily; trillions are allocated for weaponry by the One Party
system under the divine’s watchful eye, and Black Americans,
with one voice, now, Malcolm, say, we Master, are
doing one heck of a job in annihilating the enemy. Some
still wonder why they are “catching hell” at home!
In
the Caribbean, the peoples once told themselves this myth:
a group of Ibo, on departing the ship that landed them far
from home, looked around in the distance and saw the already
captive workers who looked like them. They looked back at
the slaveholders and businessmen who came to greet the ship.
The Ibo looked at the expanse of water. Suddenly, they started
walking toward the water. They kept walking. Presumably,
they have returned home. In the U.S., Black Americans are
borrowers of other people’s myths. Chained to those motifs
of divine retribution, they wait for the divine entity to
execute rescue procedures and fly them safety from Earth
to Heaven. Hopefully, the divine will not pass over them
again.
In
the meantime, a little wealth, a little lottery playing,
a little casino gambling will not hurt.
BlackCommentator.com Editorial Board member, Lenore Jean Daniels, PhD, has a Doctorate
in Modern American Literature/Cultural Theory. Click here to contact Dr. Daniels. |