I remember that many years ago, when I was a smartass home from
first year of college, I was standing in the kitchen arguing with my father. My
head was full of newly discovered political ideologies and black nationalism,
and I had just read the Autobiography of Malcolm X,
probably for the second time.
A bit of context. My father was from a
background, which if we were talking about Europe or Latin America, we would
call, "peasant" origin, although he had risen solidly into the
working-middle class. He was from rural Virginia and his parents had been
tobacco farmers. I spent two weeks or so every summer on the farm of my
grandmother and step-grandfather. They had no running water, no gas, a wood
burning stove, no bathtubs or toilets but an outhouse, potbelly stoves for heat
in the winter, a giant wood pile, a smoke house where hams and bacon hung,
chickens, pigs, semi wild housecats that lived outdoors, no tractor or car, but
an old plow horse and plows and other horse drawn implements, and electricity
only after I was about 8 years old. The area did not have high schools for
blacks and my father went as far as the seventh grade in a one room
schoolhouse. All four of his grandparents, whom he had known as a child, had
been born slaves. It was mainly because of World War II and urbanization that
my father left that life.
They lived in a valley or hollow or
"holler" in which all the landowners and tenants were black. In the
morning if you wanted to talk to cousin Taft, you would walk down to behind the
outhouse and yell across the valley, "Heeeyyyy Taaaaft," and you
could see him far, far in the distance, come out of his cabin and yell back.
On the one hand, this was a pleasant situation
because they lived in isolation from white people. On the other hand, they did
have to leave the valley to go to town where all the rigid rules of Jim Crow
applied. By the time I was little, my people had been in this country for six
generations (going back, according to oral rendering of our genealogy, to
Africa Jones and Mama Suki), much more under slavery than under freedom, and
all of it under some form of racial terrorism, which had inculcated many
humiliating behavior patterns.
Anyway, that's background. I think we were kind
of typical as African Americans in the pre-civil rights era went.
So anyway, I was having this argument with my
father about Martin Luther King and how his message was too conservative
compared to Malcolm X's message. My father got really angry at me. It wasn't
that he disliked Malcolm X, but his point was that Malcolm X hadn't
accomplished anything as Dr. King had.
I was kind of sarcastic and asked something
like, so what did Martin Luther King accomplish other than giving his "I
have a dream speech."
Before I tell you what my father told me, I want to digress.
Because at this point in our amnesiac national existence, my question pretty
much reflects the national civic religion view of what Dr. King accomplished. He
gave this great speech. Or some people say, "he marched." I was
so angry at Mrs. Clinton during the primaries when she said that Dr. King
marched, but it was LBJ who delivered the Civil Rights Act.
At this point, I would like to remind everyone
exactly what Martin Luther King did, and it wasn't that he "marched"
or gave a great speech.
My father told me with a sort of cold fury, "Dr. King ended the terror of living in the south."
Please let this sink in and and take my word and
the word of my late father on this. If you are a white person who has always
lived in the U.S. and never under a brutal dictatorship, you probably don't
know what my father was talking about.
But this is what the great Dr. Martin Luther
King accomplished. Not that he marched, nor that he gave speeches.
He ended the terror of living as a black
person, especially in the south.
I'm guessing that most of you, especially those having come
fresh from seeing The Help, may not understand
what this was all about. But living in the south (and in parts of the midwest
and in many ghettos of the north) was living under terrorism.
It wasn't that black people had to use a separate drinking
fountain or couldn't sit at lunch
counters, or had to sit in the back of the bus.
You really must disabuse yourself of this idea.
Lunch counters and buses were crucial symbolic planes of struggle that the
civil rights movement used to dramatize the issue, but the main suffering in
the south did not come from our inability to drink from the same fountain, ride
in the front of the bus or eat lunch at Woolworth's.
It was that white people, mostly white men, occasionally
went berserk, and grabbed random black people, usually men, and lynched them.
You all know about lynching. But you may forget or not know that white people
also randomly beat black people, and the black people could not fight back, for
fear of even worse punishment.
This constant low level dread of atavistic
violence is what kept the system running. It made life miserable, stressful and
terrifying for black people.
White people also occasionally tried black
people, especially black men, for crimes for which they could not conceivably
be guilty. With the willing participation of white women, they often accused
black men of "assault," which could be anything from rape to not
taking off one's hat, to "reckless eyeballing."
This is going to sound awful and perhaps a stain
on my late father's memory, but when I was little, before the civil rights
movement, my father taught me many, many humiliating practices in order to
prevent the random, terroristic, berserk behavior of white people. The one I
remember most is that when walking down the street in New York City side by
side, hand in hand with my hero-father, if a white woman approached on the same
sidewalk, I was to take off my hat and walk behind my father, because he had
been taught in the south that black males for some reason were supposed to walk
single file in the presence of any white lady.
This was just one of many humiliating practices
we were taught to prevent white people from going berserk.
I remember a huge family reunion one August with
my aunts and uncles and cousins gathered around my grandparents' vast breakfast
table laden with food from the farm, and the state troopers drove up to the
house with a car full of rifles and shotguns, and everyone went kind of weirdly
blank. They put on the masks that black people used back then to not provoke
white berserkness. My strong, valiant, self-educated, articulate uncles, whom I
adored, became shuffling, Step-N-Fetchits to avoid provoking the white men.
Fortunately the troopers were only looking for an escaped convict. Afterward,
the women, my aunts, were furious at the humiliating performance of the men,
and said so, something that even a child could understand.
This is the climate of fear that Dr. King ended.
If you didn't get taught such things, let alone
experience them, I caution you against invoking the memory of Dr. King as
though he belongs exclusively to you and not primarily to African Americans.
The question is, how did Dr. King do this—and of
course, he didn't do it alone.
(Of all the other civil rights leaders who
helped Dr. King end this reign of terror, I think the most under appreciated is
James Farmer, who founded the Congress of Racial Equality and was a leader of
nonviolent resistance, and taught the practices of nonviolent resistance.)
So what did they do?
They told us: Whatever you are most afraid of doing vis-a-vis white people, go do
it. Go ahead down to city hall and try to register to vote, even if they say
no, even if they take your name down.
Go ahead sit at that lunch counter. Sue the local school board.
All things that most black people would have said back then, without exaggeration, were stark raving
insane and would get you killed.
If we do it all together, we'll be okay.
They made black people experience the worst of the worst,
collectively, that white people could dish out, and discover that it wasn't
that bad. They taught black people how to take a
beating—from the southern cops, from police dogs, from fire
department hoses. They actually coached young people how to crouch, cover their
heads with their arms and take the beating. They
taught people how to go to jail, which terrified most decent people.
And you know what? The worst of the worst,
wasn't that bad.
Once people had been beaten, had dogs sicced on
them, had fire hoses sprayed on them, and been thrown in jail, you know what
happened?
These magnificent young black people began
singing freedom songs in jail.
That, my friends, is what ended the terrorism of
the south. Confronting your worst fears, living through it, and breaking out in
a deep throated freedom song. The jailers knew they had lost when they beat the
crap out of these young Negroes and the jailed, beaten young people began to
sing joyously, first in one town then in another. This is what the writer,
James Baldwin, captured like no other writer of the era.
Please let this sink in. It wasn't marches or
speeches. It was taking a severe beating, surviving and realizing that our
fears were mostly illusory and that we were free.
So yes, Dr. King had many other goals, many other more
transcendent, non-racial, policy goals, goals that apply to white people too,
like ending poverty, reducing the war-like aspects of our foreign policy,
promoting the New Deal goal of universal employment, and so on. But his main
accomplishment was ending 200 years of racial terrorism, by getting black people to confront
their fears. So please don't tell me that Martin Luther
King's dream has not been achieved, unless you knew what racial
terrorism was like back then and can make a convincing case you still feel it
today. If you did not go through that transition, you're not qualified to say
that the dream was not accomplished.
That is what Dr. King did—not march, not give good speeches. He
crisscrossed the south organizing people, helping them not be afraid,
and encouraging them, like Gandhi did in India, to take the
beating that they
had been trying to avoid all their lives.
Once the beating was over, we were free.
It wasn't the Civil Rights Act, or the Voting Rights Act or the
Fair Housing Act that freed us. It was taking the beating and thereafter not being
afraid. So, sorry Mrs. Clinton, as much as I admire you, you
were wrong on this one. Our people freed ourselves and those Acts, as important
as they were, were only white people officially recognizing what we had done.
By HamdenRice
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Confronting ur fears, living through them, a bold step to recovery
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