Note:
In 1976, at the age of 26, Manning Marable began
the syndicated public affairs series “Along The Color Line”,
focusing on political issues and public events that had
special significance to African Americans and to other people
of color internationally. It was inspired by the
great tradition for political event columns written by W.
E. B. Du Bois nearly a century ago. For more than 25 years, the column was distributed
regularly free-of-charge to over 400 newspapers worldwide.
Medical problems forced the temporary halt to the distribution
of “Along The Color Line”, but on January 18, 2007 in Issue
213 - BC and Dr. Marable announced the return of the “Along
The Color Line” public affairs series. The series remained
absolutely without charge to all black-owned, black-oriented,
and independent/progressive publications and internet websites
for distribution worldwide. Reproduction was completely
free for any one column, or all of them, that were published
on BlackCommentator.com so long as credit was given to Dr.
Marable and BlackCommentator.com.
This commentary by Bill Fletcher Jr. is presented
under the “Along The Color Line” banner as
a remembrance of Manning
Marable.
-0-
Every
so often there is someone you get to know and you just have
this deep sense that you will be on the same road with them
for the duration. And when death joins you on that road
no matter how prepared you think that you are, it always
feels as if someone hit you with their fist in your stomach.
Not only is there a degree of shock but your breath is taken
away and, at least for a moment, it is difficult to stand
tall. And then you realize that you have to proceed on
that same road, but without them.
I have written many commentaries commemorating the life
and work of various heroes and heroines of the movements
for social justice. This, however, is the most difficult,
and not because I have little to say. Rather, this commentary
concerns someone who was a very close friend and colleague,
someone for whom I had the greatest respect, and someone
who never held his brilliance over my head as a weapon of
any kind.
There will be many tributes to Manning Marable. They will
tell you, as they should, of the exceptional work that he
produced. The mere fact that his passing made the front
page of the April 2nd New
York Times says so much about the scope of the
work and significance of someone who was an unapologetic
Black leftist.
Manning was an incredible mentor to so many people. He
was successful at this because he was such a good listener.
He was someone who probably could have gotten away with
speaking AT people largely because of the extent of his
scholarship and eloquence. But that simply was not Manning.
He was someone who was always seeking to learn new information
and new analyses. As such he was one of those rare academics
who fully appreciated activists and activism, not as a subject
to study as if in a laboratory, but in order to encourage
and support them and from who he sought to learn.
I will always appreciate Manning for his work in helping
to build and lead the Black Radical Congress. He and I
were two out of an initial core of five people who started
the ball rolling that led to the highly successful founding
of the Black Radical Congress in June 1998 with 3000 people
in attendance. Manning remained part of the leadership
until 2001 when he stepped down due to both concerns regarding
his health as well as his commitment to move work forward
on his biography of Malcolm X. In working together in the
BRC I always felt that I had a partner in Manning, someone
who was never afraid to express his differences, but was
constructive and encouraging.
I will additionally appreciate Manning for his marriage
to Leith Mullings. Leith, a professor at the City University
of New York, was also part of the core in the building of
the BRC and is a noted anthropologist. Their relationship
was truly a partnership in which both learned from one another,
respected one another, and deeply loved one another. Watching
the two of them often felt like watching two college students
just beginning a romance, though they had been together
for quite some time. It was not just that they were in
love and had such a great partnership, but that they saw
no inconsistency between their devotion to social justice
and their devotion to one another.
Manning will also be remembered for his optimism. His battle
against sarcoidosis spanned two decades. Manning never
gave up. When he told me that he decided to have a lung
transplant he indicated that the doctors gave him two years
without a transplant and ten to fifteen with one. He knew
the risks and he accepted them while at the same time being
very realistic that while the odds were on his side with
a transplant, there was always the chance that he would
end up at death’s door. But it was that optimism, not only
about his own battle with illness but about the struggle
for social justice that made such a difference. No, he
was not Pollyannaish but he placed all of the challenges
that the oppressed faced within a broader context. He was
not going to let anyone be demobilized by the obstacles
in our way.
There were some on the left who felt that he was not left
enough and too mainstream. Manning dismissed such criticisms
because he was interested in reaching out to regular, grassroots
people who were not already within the circles of the Left.
He was relentless in this task and as a result became one
of the most well-known left-wing scholar/activists on the
US scene.
There are many other things that can and will be said about
the work and life of Manning. I will end by simply noting
how much he will be missed. His generosity on so many levels
and his support for so many people made him a very unique
individual. It is a cliché to note that he cannot be replaced,
but the fact of the matter is that he cannot. What we can
do, however, is emulate the rigor of his work and thinking.
That would serve as the ultimate tribute to our fallen brother.
The last book
written by Manning Marable, Malcolm
X: A Life of Reinvention, was published
April 4, 2011, three days after his death.
Click here
to send a message of condolence to the Marable family.
BlackCommentator.com Editorial Board member,
Bill Fletcher, Jr., is a Senior Scholar with the Institute for Policy Studies, the immediate past
president of
TransAfrica Forum and co-author of Solidarity
Divided: The Crisis in Organized Labor and a New Path toward
Social Justice(University of California Press), which examines
the crisis of organized labor in the USA. Click here to contact Mr. Fletcher.
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