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Women’s History Month doesn’t do enough to lift up black lesbians.

Fifty years ago, in 1974, the Combahee River Collective was founded in Boston by several lesbian and feminist women of African descent. As a sisterhood, they understood that their acts of protest were shouldered by and because of their ancestors - known and unknown - who came before them. The CRC’s name honors the military actions of abolitionist Harriet Tubman, known as the 1863 Combahee River Raid, which freed over 750 enslaved people.

The CRC founders and frequent participants are the A-list of Black feminism’s foremothers: Cheryl Clarke, Demita Frazier, Gloria Akasha Hull, Audre Lorde, Chirlane McCray, Margo Okazawa-Rey and twins Barbara and Beverly Smith. The CRC was formed to respond to the Black Nationalist and misogynistic politics of the Black Power Movement and the exclusionary practices of white feminism.

The social upheaval of the 1960s and ‘70s revealed a confluence of political struggles - the Vietnam War, Black Civil Rights, Black Power, Women’s Rights, and LGBTQ+ rights movements, which informed and ignited Second Wave Feminism. In Boston, the busing crisis and the Roxbury murders of 11 black women in 1979 added to the explosive tenor. The surge of activism and organizing was epic, and the CRC was in the mix.

Black Feminists

The National Black Feminist Organization (1973–‘76) in New York City was formed at a time when the single-issue agendas of Black men and white women ignored the dual oppressions of racism and sexism Black women confronted. In the 1970s, NBFO was one of the earliest and most influential Black feminist organizations in Second Wave Feminism, with 10 chapters nationwide. When the Boston Chapter of NBFO broke away - which Barbara Smith and Frazier established and then formed CRC - CRC became the other.

The breakaway from NBFO happened for many reasons. One of the reasons was that CRC was anti-capitalist. “We believed socialist theory was important as we considered the material situations of Black women under capitalism. That did not appear to be a conversation taking place in the NBFO,” Frazier told The Nation Magazine in 2021. For poor Black and LBTQ women, NBFO was too myopic in its scope and in advocating for them because of its “bourgeois-feminist stance.” Because CRC was radical, grassroots, and inclusive in their organizing efforts across diverse racial, class, and identity groups, the CRC felt by explicitly challenging homophobia, NBFO would not do enough to address the specific needs of Black lesbians in organizing as Black feminists.

The Statement

In explaining Black women’s lives as interlocking oppressions (laying the groundwork for the theory and practice of intersectionality), the “Combahee River Collective Statement” is one of the most referenced manifestos across various identity groups and movements.

The most famous line in the Statement captures CRC’s core belief: “If Black women were free, it would mean that everyone else would have to be free since our freedom would necessitate the destruction of all the systems of oppression.” Simply put, it means all systems of oppression impact Black women. If Black women’s interlocking systems of oppression were eradicated, then all other marginalized groups would be free, too. In depicting the struggles of Black women, the term “identity politics” was coined, often maligned by the Left and the Right, and used to justify separatism. Separatism is antithetical to CRC’s core actions of coalition-building. However, “identity politics” means that because Black women’s lived experiences in a capitalist heteropatriarchal society choke our quality of life, we have the right to determine our political agenda.

The Statement’s principal writers were Barbara and Beverly Smith, and Demita Frazier. Queried in a 2014 interview if the Statement’s writers knew at the time what a seminal document they were writing, Frazier replied, “We wrote it as a collective. We crafted the Statement at a time it was ready to be heard. The content and the fullness of it came from our conscious-raising groups and testifying with one another. Although we were young and evolving, we wanted to ensure an intergenerational connection to Black and women of color feminism.”

And still, we rise!

To kick off Black History Month last year, Florida Governor DeSantis rolled out his list of banned Black books. I told Smith I was amused to see the CRC Statement not banned from Florida’s AP African American Studies curriculum.

“I don’t know why the Combahee remains, but it’s a primary document,” Smith says, laughing. “It’s not an individual saying this is what I think Black feminism is as an individual. It’s a political manifesto.”

The Statement has informed the activist and political framework for Black feminist organizing in Puerto Rico and the Black Lives Matter Movement. It’s referenced in academic, political, and grassroots discourses on reparations, mass incarceration, homelessness, and now in the #MeToo Movement. The Statement is frequented in African American Studies, feminist studies, and LGBTQ studies, all the subjects DeSantis has loudly criticized as part of “WOKE” culture.

The CRC was active from 1974 to 1980. Its impact is still seen today.





BlackCommentator.com Editorial Board

member and Columnist, The Reverend

Irene Monroe is an ordained minister,

motivational speaker and she speaks for

a sector of society that is frequently

invisible. Rev. Monroe does a weekly

Monday segment, “All Revved Up!” on

WGBH (89.7 FM), on Boston Public Radio

and a weekly Friday segment “The Take”

on New England Channel NEWS (NECN).

She’s a Huffington Post blogger and a

syndicated religion columnist. Her

columns appear in cities across the

country and in the U.K, and Canada. Also

she writes a column in the Boston home

LGBTQ newspaper Baywindows and

Cambridge Chronicle. A native of

Brooklyn, NY, Rev. Monroe graduated

from Wellesley College and Union

Theological Seminary at Columbia

University, and served as a pastor at an

African-American church in New Jersey

before coming to Harvard Divinity School

to do her doctorate. She has received the

Harvard University Certificate of

Distinction in Teaching several times

while being the head teaching fellow of

the Rev. Peter Gomes, the Pusey Minister

in the Memorial Church at Harvard who is

the author of the best seller, THE GOOD

BOOK. She appears in the film For the

Bible Tells Me So and was profiled in the

Gay Pride episode of In the Life, an

Emmy-nominated segment. Monroe’s

coming out story is profiled in “CRISIS:

40 Stories Revealing the Personal, Social,

and Religious Pain and Trauma of

Growing up Gay in America" and in

"Youth in Crisis." In 1997 Boston

Magazine cited her as one of Boston's 50

Most Intriguing Women, and was profiled

twice in the Boston Globe, In the Living

Arts and The Spiritual Life sections for

her LGBT activism. Her papers are at the

Schlesinger Library at Radcliffe College's

research library on the history of women

in America. Her website is

irenemonroe.com. Contact the Rev.

Monroe and BC.



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