The
synthetic rage over Common’s event with Michelle Obama rests
on the unending demonization of the Black Panther party.
She
was stunningly beautiful. I still remember the sheen of
her black hair, her creamy complexion. She was at the San
Francisco Book Festival, hawking a book of photographs.
She seemed to be 25, although I learned later that her skin
held fast to her secret. Her name was Fredrika, widow of
Dr. Huey P Newton, co-founder of the Black Panther party:
the greatest – perhaps only – American heroes of the last
third of the 20th century.
I was too shy to speak
with her then, but in time, I had affairs with almost all
the women leaders of the Black Panther party. Save one.
We shall come to her by and by. Instead, I spoke to Fredrika’s
colleague, David Hilliard, a compact, gruff old man with
a raspy voice, at one time fourth-in-command of “the greatest
threat to the internal security” of the United
States, according to America’s top law enforcement agent, FBI director
J Edgar Hoover.
The following winter,
I was at Hilliard’s house, and in our two-hour conversation,
I told him that there should be a Black Panther party tour
in Berkeley and Oakland.
A few months later, Hilliard started one, garnering coverage
on CNN; celebrities like California
governor, Jerry Brown
went on it. I called up Fredrika Newton to ask her
why they didn’t want me involved, and she told me she’d
had the idea eight years earlier. Apparently, she just hadn’t
gotten around to doing it. That was the end of that affair.
(I never said these were love affairs.) But there were others.
On the hallowed ground
of the University of California at Berkeley, I organised a 30th anniversary
commemoration of the event that made the Black Panthers
world-famous – the March
on Sacramento (“Arrest
them all. on anything”) – with guest speaker
Tarika
Lewis, the first woman to join the party. Ericka
Huggins, who had faced execution when police framed her
in New Haven, Connecticut,
declined to come; more precisely, when I invited her, she
hung up on me after demanding to know how I had gotten her
phone number. (A one-minute affair.) But later, I brought
Elaine Brown, the first woman to lead the party, to speak
to a standing-room-only audience at my conservative, Confederacy-commemorating
university; and I had dinner for two with
Kathleen
Cleaver, the regal former communications secretary
for the party.
Perhaps
because of its essential female element, the essence of
the Black Panther party lay not in confrontations with the
police – as thrilling as stories of Huey Newton facing down
10 cops are – but in serving
the people. The party gave away free groceries
and shoes, ran free health clinics and schools, and assisted
the elderly. The Black Panthers were lovers of humanity
who sought to realise the social gospel: to heal the sick,
give sight to the blind, comfort the broken-hearted and
set the prisoners free.
Oh, the enemies of civilisation
will trot out the same slander, stories of irrational violence,
drugs and misogyny. Terrorists, they’ll cry, murderers,
racists, reverse Ku Kluxers, thugs, thieves, addicts. And
most Americans, black and white, will believe the lies.
It’s true, some Panthers
had criminal pasts: Newton
was once a burglar, Cleaver’s husband was a rapist, and,
worst of all, party co-founder Bobby Seale was a comedian.
But if we can forgive American president Thomas Jefferson,
a slaveholder, torturer and rapist, we can forgive the Panthers.
At that moment in American history, the heroes wore the
black
hats.
So, cue conservative
outrage over Michelle Obama’s inviting rapper Common to a White House poetry reading, because Common
wrote an
adulatory song about
Black Panther Assata Shakur. The New
Jersey state police protested.
Is it possible that
the vile New Jersey police – just this
week it was announced that Newark’s
police department is being investigated by the justice department
for multiple civil rights violations
– and their rightwing puppetmasters do not know about
COINTELPRO?
That while Soviet tanks crushed Prague’s spring, in America, police assassins, provocateurs and slanderers
felled our saints as
they slept? That the US government admits it had
a programme to “neutralise” the Black Panther leadership?
That J
Edgar Hoover confessed that
this was not because the Panthers were committing
any crimes, but because they were
feeding
children? That medical
experts
testified that Assata Shakur could not have shot the New
Jersey policeman for whose death she went to jail?
Like Geronimo
Pratt, whose murder conviction the courts overturned after
27 years, when evidence emerged that the
government had framed Pratt to remove him
from the Panthers’ leadership, the US government wanted
Assata Shakur because she dared to say that she has
the right to defend her kin against murderers, such
as the white policeman
who
shot
a black 16-year-old in the back in Teaneck,
New Jersey.
Conviction or
no, the honour of our African Eowyn is pristine. Decades
of racist propaganda cannot alter the fact that there is
no greater homage than to say, “Assata Shakur, Black Panther”.
Today, admittedly,
when America’s
president is black,
Assata’s rhetoric seems foreign, anachronistic. Today, I,
like most African Americans, would not stand with Assata
Shakur.
No.
In her presence,
we should all kneel.
BlackCommentator.com Guest
Commentator, Dr. Jonathan David Farley, is the 2004 Harvard
Foundation Distinguished Scientist of the Year. He is currently
Teaching and Research Fellow teaching mathematics at the
Institute für Algebra Johannes Kepler Universität Linz,
Linz Österreich
Click here to
contact Dr. Farley.
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