I
first met Manning Marable 12 years ago this month. At the
time I was a news producer for Democracy Now! in
New York, and was covering a conference Dr. Marable held
at Columbia University
on racial bias in the criminal justice system. The
conference covered issues of great interest to me, including
police brutality, the role of race in criminal sentencing,
felon disenfranchisement and the death penalty.
I
had the pleasure of chatting with Dr. Marable, and what
struck me more than anything else was his affability. He
was accessible and approachable, a characteristic you don’t
always find in academic folks. Some scholars and their scholarship
are distant, hidden, and unable to maintain their relevance
in the everyday world. Manning Marable did not have that
problem. His scholarship was about the world, our world.
He cared about the black experience, about injustice and
class inequality, about Malcolm X. Dr. Marable was the consummate
scholar activist. His work centered on the people’s struggles.
No movement can advance without its teachers, those who
educate the masses on the lessons of history - should the
masses choose to learn what these learned minds have to
share.
America has lost a great man in Manning
Marable, as have Black America and the progressive community
as a whole. But moreover, the Black Commentator editorial
board has lost a dear family member. He is the second scholar-activist
luminary to leave our pages in a matter of months, as Dr.
Ronald Walters passed in September 2010. It was a unique
honor to have such a brilliant mind as a part of the BC
extended family, a critical thinker who had one eye on the
past and the other on social change for today and tomorrow.
And
just as Malcolm died days before the release of his autobiography,
so too did Manning die only days before
the release of what may very well be his magnum opus, Malcolm X: A Life of Reinvention. I cannot wait to dig into this book, as I’m sure he set the record straight,
with his last gift to those whose lives were influenced
by Brother Minister. But certainly, the body of work that
Manning Marable leaves us - even as the man has left us
physically - is a spirit which will endure and sustain us
for generations to come.
Click here
to send a message of condolence to the Marable family.
BlackCommentator.com Executive Editor, David
A. Love, JD is a journalist and human rights advocate based
in Philadelphia, is a graduate of Harvard College and the University of Pennsylvania
Law School. and a contributor to The Huffington
Post, the Grio, The Progressive
Media Project, McClatchy-Tribune News Service,
In These
Times and Philadelphia
Independent Media Center. He also blogs at davidalove.com, NewsOne, Daily Kos, and Open Salon. Click here to contact Mr. Love.
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