Last
week saw the dissolution and reformation of an important
coalition in Oakland that had arisen out of the financial
crisis and the spotlight on economic inequities brought
by the Occupy Movement. The Oakland Coalition for Social
and Economic Justice (OCSEJ) has reformed with a different
collection of organizations and players. The causes for
the dissolution are a microcosm of the causes of the schisms
that divide groups, communities, and individuals of good
intent everywhere in the US. The causes were a complicated
mixture of misunderstanding, pre-judging, chauvinism, condemnation-by-association,
institutional pride, racial prejudices, ageism, and the
inability or reluctance of some to articulate or to engage
in a discussion about the imposition of a religious dogma
on a diverse coalition. Like so many grassroots efforts
that do not have a history of working together nor the attractive
or coercive power to entice or force followership, this
effort dissolved and a huge potential force for change may
be lost.
There is no question that the coalescing energy for this
now defunct coalition was derived from the hosting of the
effort by one of the most influential black churches in
Oakland. Accept for the sporadic participation of a rare
few pastors and spirit-led lay persons, black churches as
individual organizations have played only a very minor role
in recent struggles for economic justice. Many participants
in the OCSEJ struggled with their elation at the engagement
of what they perceived as a powerful black institution and
their discomfort with the nature of the leadership style
offered for a culturally diverse coalition. Because of the
shallowness of all of our understandings of the civil rights
movement and the organizing work of Martin Luther King Jr.,
there is a false perception of the role of black churches
in general in that struggle. Many seem to have forgotten
how black Christian leadership – particularly the national
leadership – resisted King and his tactics. Because King
was a black pastor, we give inordinate credit to black churches
as institutions fueling social change.
Occupy in general has been excoriated from the left and the
right for not having a specific agenda or a clearly identified
leadership. I think that the Occupy agenda is the rectification
of economic inequities and that the lack of a clearly identified
leadership is a strength. I also know that the accommodation
or tolerance for leaderless organizational structures and
dynamics is culture bound. Many organizing and institutional
traditionalists are not comfortable in such structures.
These traditionalists are much more comfortable with the
kinds of authoritarian, top-down, militaristic leadership-followership
structures that dominate US society and that have been part
of so much that has oppressed the 99% over many years. IMHO
that discomfort level of traditionalists does not make (of
itself) the Occupy movement’s style bad or wrong or stupid.
The civil rights movement - which had just pivoted to deal
with questions of economic justice - ended because of the
assignation of its one leader, King. There is no way anyone
could end the Occupy Movement by co-opting, corrupting,
or killing any set of individual leaders. We are all leaders
and that is a strength. That criticism of the Occupy Movement
arises out of movement strategy ignorance and a lack of
creativity.
In Coalition meetings the principal representative of this
Oakland black church, by intent or unconsciously, put-down
through innuendo and directly the representatives and formations
of the Oakland Occupy movement. This was tolerated for a
time out of elation at the Church’s involvement. Criticism
of his leadership style was backed-down by his charges of
disrespect of African American leadership. The representative
justified his dominance by referring to an unexamined view
of what the nature of African American leadership style
is and by subtly leveraging the use of the meeting space
of the Church and the Church’s potential influence with
City and private forces.
My examination of his African American leadership style claim
leaves me questioning his understanding. There is no question
that African American institutions have been infected with
what theologian Elaine Pagels writes about as the dominance
hierarchy; Christianity as a movement was infected with
this hierarchy thousands of years ago when Roman Emperor
Constantine adopted Christianity as a state religion. These
dominance structures were then passed to African American
Christians during slavery and afterward. Present day evidence
and anthropological studies have shown that most traditional
Continental African leadership styles were more along the
line of servant-leaders. Leaders did not demand obedience
because of their positions, their possession of crowns,
titles, or staffs. Both before leadership investiture and
afterward, traditional African leaders continuously displayed
leadership skills and judgments that were beneficial to
everyone in the village. Traditional African Chiefs earned
their followers allegiance by what they did for their followers.
Generally they did not lean on positional power or hereditary
power. Using resources, including social capital, to entice
or coerce obedience is no different than what the 1% and
their agents do to cower the rest of us. If authoritarianism
is the traditional African American leadership style, we
ought to drop it like we dropped chitterlings as a defining
African American food tradition.
The Oakland Coalition has found another space in which to
meet. Followers do have a choice as to whether to submit
to dominance practices or not. We all can find creative
ways that are accessible to folks from diverse cultures
by which to organize and be effective.
Another major cause of the dissolution of the Coalition was
due to a misunderstanding of the nature of the Oakland Occupy
Movement in regards to how it functions. This ignorance
of the Occupy coalition partners contributed to a simplistic
damming-by-association that is also done by right wing demagogues
and the corporate media. The problematic association for
the Church was related to the question of the use of violence
– against property. Despite the efforts of many of us and
despite the efforts of almost all of the Occupy formations
that were in the meeting rooms at the Church, Oakland’s
Occupy General Assembly currently has a “diversity of tactics”
philosophy in regards to violence. I think this is a mistake
and that a growing number of Occupy activists are working
hard and will eventually change this philosophy to a commitment
to nonviolent action – which does not mean ending challenges
to public and private institutions.
However, damming-by-association is not only pre-judgment
it is also – IMHO – unchristian. Damming-by-association
is one aspect of the System’s racist response to African
Americans in general. Every African American male must carry
the burden of every other African American male that has
done something the status quo public and private institutions
do not like. Each white person generally is treated more
as an individual – for what they do as individuals; but,
as in the case of Trayvon Martin, a black person could not
walk down the street without the lethal assumption being
made that he is likely a suspicious criminal. We ought not
do that to each other. I am a part of the Occupy movement
but I do not agree with the “diversity of tactics” philosophy
because it is an excuse to use violence by some and violence
is almost never helpful in bringing about radical change.
But, let me say something about the ineffectiveness of a
dogmatic “fundamentalist” approach to those who more than
reserve the option to use violence. From my reading of the
Gospels – and in the Protestant tradition lay people are
encouraged to read the Bible themselves and develop a personal
understanding and interpretation – Jesus frequently met
with and engaged those who he might disagree with, including
those whose practices would be abhorrent to him. His practice
was not one of coercion, enticement, or dominance but one
of persuasion. He worked among the Jewish people who had
a common cultural set of values and found the common ground
there that he worked with to inspire personal and societal
change. By His example, the Christian way of working in
the Coalition would have been to have found that common
ground in the member’s desire for economic justice and to
have moved from there to fashion a working structure that
was open to a diversity of leadership practices, strategies,
tactics, and actions meant to make radical change happen;
and to do that all through persuasion not through enticements
or coercions.
A dogmatic view on nonviolence was used as a justification
for exclusion not inclusion; this is not a way to unify
a nonviolent movement. Neither Gandhi nor King was absolute
on the question of violence. In fact, in John 2 (13-18)
we learn that Jesus Himself was violent against the property
of the money lenders and dove sellers in the temple; He
forcefully whipped their cattle, turned over their tables
and scattered their coins. Both Gandhi and King “embraced
nonviolence as a moral example, and believed that the paradox
(of “loving your enemy”) changes the world more than politics
or violence ever can or will.” Absolutism is not called
far.
Andrew Sullivan recently wrote about Thomas Jefferson’s Bible
where at the age of 77 he cut out holes from the pages to
construct his own understanding of Jesus’ true voice from
the voices in the Bible of those who bent to the dominance
paradigm rather than a “love your enemy” paradigm. Jefferson
characterized this as separating the “diamonds” from the
“dunghill.” Jefferson is the architect of the separation
of Church and State principle in the Constitution. Sullivan
says that “the ability to be faithful in a religious space
and reasonable in a political one has atrophied before our
eyes.” I think that Andrew Sullivan is not cognizant of
a missing dynamic that was present at Jefferson’s time and
some time afterward that is gone today. The Protestant Revolution
had sparked an open public theological debate; unfortunately
dominance paradigms sometimes spun these debates into oppression
and wars. However that theological dynamism was the context
that allowed the intersecting of the social psychological
space of faith with the social psychological space of reasoning
in every active participant in the body politic. Sullivan
implies that those spaces can or could be separated. I do
not think that that was Jefferson’s understanding. Jefferson
and others during his time were also actively engaged in
theological discussion both internal to their denominations
and across denominations while also engaging in political
discussion. If we had more of the former today, there might
be more understanding that we are all searchers for the
truth and believers deserving respect rather than assuming
we are Godless heathens or people whose motivations are
suspect because we do not profess a specific belief or the
dominant society’s beliefs.
I agree with Sullivan when he says that Jefferson’s type
of politically active Christian was “…the kind of Christian
(who) seeks always to translate religious truths into reasoned,
secular arguments that can appeal to those of other faiths
and none at all.” For Jefferson, “No man can conform his
faith to the dictates of another. The life and essence of
religion consists in the internal persuasion or belief of
the mind.” Jefferson feared that the alternative to a Christianity
founded on “internal persuasion” was a revival of the brutal,
bloody wars of religion that America was founded to escape.
Public theological/Weltanschauung discussion
allows for a deepening of spiritual engagement and the discovery
of common human understandings that would enrich our secular
discussions in a democratic society. Without this public
discussion, we sit in our on “world views” and ‘throw stones’
and assumptions at each other.
Separation rather than war has been the current result of
one Church’s efforts to impose its understanding of the
proper way to organize to end injustice as part of a diverse
Coalition.
[Note that the author objects to the term “Occupy” and favors
the use of the term “Decolonize” instead but for the sake
of general reference to the movement has used the “Occupy”
label. Also, note that the author believes that Sullivan
has unforgivably left out the reasons other than religious
freedom that are the founding bases for the US: theft of
land, slavery, and the acceptance of a dominance paradigm
camouflaged as manifest destiny.]
BlackCommentator.com Guest Commentator, Wilson
Riles, is a former Oakland, CA City Council Member. Click here
to contact Mr. Riles.
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