The Black Commentator: An independent weekly internet magazine dedicated to the movement for economic justice, social justice and peace - Providing commentary, analysis and investigations on issues affecting African Americans and the African world. www.BlackCommentator.com
 
Apr 7, 2011 - Issue 421
 
 

Manning Marable: Our Great Scholar-Activist
By Kristen Clarke
BlackCommentator.com Guest Commentator

 

 

“Instead of leadership from above, democracy from below.”

- Dr. Manning Marable

The nation lost an intellectual giant with the passing of Dr. Manning Marable on Friday of last week – a scholar-activist whose voluminous books, papers and op-ed columns comprise a critical collection of today’s discourse on race in America.  Ever the productive scholar and engaged public intellectual, Dr. Marable authored more than a dozen seminal books on race and politics over the course of his career – works that offer penetrating insights into issues of racial inequality, black leadership and threats to American democracy.

There was always something special, something distinguishing about Manning’s work. His scholarship not only provided a deep and rich analysis of the historical roots of the Black freedom struggle but connected that history to the challenges of the present day. In so doing, his work has provided a context for considering some of our nation’s most distressful social inequalities and set forth a framework to guide the efforts of today’s civil rights activists.

Outside the classroom and beyond his scholarly work, Dr. Marable was an incredibly energized and passionate activist. He took on issues such as the prison industrial complex and police brutality, and advocated for repeal of the Rockefeller Drug Laws.  He authored the popular syndicated column, “Along the Color Line,” which ran in Black newspapers throughout the country. He also served as co-chairperson of the Committees of Correspondence, a democratic socialist organization. But, this certainly is not an exhaustive list of his work.

What I appreciated most about Dr. Marable was that he rejected the presumption that academics need to maintain a social distance from activists. He was not at all interested in being a scholar who merely produced scholarship high in the ivory towers of academia. Instead, he was deeply committed to producing work that had relevance and significance to problems on the ground.

Dr. Marable spent a good deal of the last decade working on a highly-anticipated book on the life of Malcolm X. That book, Malcolm X: A Life of Reinvention sheds new light on what we know about the radical icon of the civil rights movement. For decades, our understanding of Malcolm X’s life has been largely informed by his Autobiography which was co-authored with Alex Haley. But that autobiography was likely censored by what both Malcolm and Haley deemed an appropriate way to memorialize Malcolm X’s place in history – a claim that Marable also makes in his book. Dr. Marable’s book, released today, fills gaping voids in the existing historical record.

Impeccable and objective historian that he was, Dr. Marable combed through Malcolm’s life – and tens of thousands of pages of previously un-reviewed government documents. He was in close contact with Malcolm’s daughters and conducted extensive interviews of those within Malcolm’s inner circle, spoke with former law enforcement officials and family members, and examined prison, hospital, grand jury and medical examiner records. In the end, new details emerged about Malcolm’s life – meetings with foreign officials to help identify broader foreign support for the domestic civil rights movement and, most significantly, information about those responsible for Malcolm’s death.

Dr. Marable came to believe that Malcolm X’s true assassin, the one who fired the “kill-shot” that took his life, has never been charged or brought to justice. That man, according to Dr. Marable, lives very prominently in New Jersey. The scholar activist that he was, Dr. Marable was deeply committed to bringing Malcolm’s chief assassin to justice and hoped that the book would create the conditions necessary to bring about a reopening and re-examination of the case.

While some may view this Malcolm biography as sitting at the top of his scholarly apex, the truth is that all of his work made an enormous and immeasurable contribution to American democracy. He will forever occupy a unique place in the Black freedom movement and our nation is all the better because of his work.

Click here to send a message of condolence to the Marable family.

BlackCommentator.com Guest Commentator Kristen Clarke is Co-Director of the Political Participation Group at LDF. For the last 14 years, she worked closely with her mentor Dr. Manning Marable on a number of projects including 2 books: Barack Obama and African American Empowerment: The Rise of Black America’s New Leadership and Seeking Higher Ground: The Hurricane Katrina Crisis Race and Public Policy Reader (2007). Dr. Marable’s example of scholarship and activism has long inspired her path as a civil rights lawyer. Click here to contact Ms. Clarke.