Column: Black World
May 1999
Touchstone of 'American civilization'
by Lou Turner
As aware as we are that we are experiencing a violently changing world, we
are much less aware that with everything we learn from that experience we
are also forming a new concept of the world. World-historic events like the
war in the Balkans, and events much closer to home such as the emerging
anti-brutality movement sparked by the Amadou Diallo murder in New York
City, and before that the NYPD torture of the Haitian immigrant Abner
Louima, as well as the anti-death penalty movement that has grown up around
cases like that of Mumia Abu-Jamal and a whole slew of wrongful convictions
in the state of Illinois, are being connected in the minds of many. And
then the Columbine High School murder rampage happens.
The meaning we thought we grasped of this changed world seemed almost to
evaporate. This experience didn't fit in our developing concept of the
world. In fact, we have only forgotten how we came to understand the
meaning of such events as Kosova, on the one hand, and the racist
low-intensity war on Black life in these United States, on the other. This
forgetfulness marks every transition in our attempt to conceptually grasp
the meaning of "American civilization."
The violence that so grips Black communities, whether of the police-state
kind or the self-inflicted kind that arises from the depths of a social
alienation created by a quarter century of Black economic devastation, has,
as Malcolm X said at the time of the assassination of President Kennedy,
"come home to roost."
Black life has never been anything but cheap in America. In the carnage of
two deranged neo-fascist youth at Columbine, white America found that it
was not spared such hatred, a hatred that its conservative culture the last
25 years convinced it to treat with "benign neglect."
In their Hitler's birthday attack on their classmates, Harris and Klebold,
made clear their hatred for Blacks. Indeed, there is no more chilling
account of the Columbine massacre than the one of the young white woman
student who told of being targeted in the Columbine library by Harris and
then being passed over when he saw a Black student. "I hate n--rs!", Harris
screamed, and then pumped bullets into the head of Isaiah Shoels.
The media, and apparently much of white America, continue to ignore the
racist handwriting on the wall, at the same time as they overindulge
themselves in dime-store psychologism about our so-called "youth problem."
In the same week as the Columbine massacre, there was more than enough
evidence of a youth culture whose mind and spirit stays on freedom at mass
youth marches in Philadelphia and the San Francisco Bay Area, April 24, in
support of Mumia and other political and death row
prisoners.
Black, white, Latino and Asian youth have seen something in the Black
dimension of "American civilization" that not only squares with their own
rejection of this degenerate society but represents a radical challenge to
it, in thought and in action.
And yet, as we saw at the Philadelphia Mumia demonstration, local struggles
in New York and Chicago were in large part responsible for raising the
struggle around Mumia to a new national level, especially when the media,
at the behest of the powers-that-be, do everything in their power to
"disappear" the movement.
New York, more than anywhere else at the moment, is the focal point of
whether the movement will achieve a new stage or succumb to old
contradictions and reformist politics. With, not one but, two high-profile
police brutality trials about to begin, that of the cops in the Louima
torture and in the Diallo murder, New York is where Los Angeles was seven
years ago with the Rodney King trial.
The difference is, however, that the New York trials were preceded by three
months of mass protests and civil disobedience. The slightest perception
that the "justice" done in the New York trials comes anywhere near the
racist outcome of the Rodney King trial, and Mayor Rudolph Giuliani's New
York will take LA to the next stage. Although it took New York seven weeks
to bring out white support and become "fully" multicultural, in fact, it
was radically multicultural from the start. It disclosed the
Marxist-Humanist concept of the Black diaspora's "triangular trade of
revolutionary ideas" between Africa, the Caribbean and Black America.
These two crucial aspects of the present objective situation, namely, New
York's continuity with the 1992 LA rebellion and the growing radicalization
of its multicultural character, are the context in which to assess the
movement and its Black political leadership. That means not only Rev. Al
Sharpton, but local and national leaders who provide him the cover of
legitimacy.
The stage is now set in New York to answer the question posed in Los
Angeles seven years ago, namely: Was the LA rebellion the end, the last
echo, of a dialectic of history set in motion in the 1950s and '60s Civil
Rights and Black Power movements or the beginning of a new dialectical
motion?
In the momentum of the present moment, this question is less likely to be
worked out by the Left, including the Black Left, than by the Black masses
themselves. The Black Radical Congress (BRC), titular heir to the Black
left tradition, has ventured out on the high seas of international politics
and in the Black radical tradition has even tried to connect the Kosova
situation with the one at home, only to obfuscate both. The National
Council of the BRC adopted a lengthy draft statement of the International
Committee of the BRC on April 18 on the situation in the Balkans.
The BRC statement is pitifully abstract in its rhetorical demand to
dismantle NATO and hopelessly naive regarding the UN (Lenin called its
precursor a "thieves kitchen" for Western imperialism), and international
law. More contradictory is that the BRC analysis of Milosevic's fascist
history of ethnic cleansing in Bosnia and Kosova is vitiated by its
abstract demand to end NATO bombing without troubling itself about the
40,000 Serbian troops that have carried out the genocidal ethnic cleansing
of the entire population of Kosovar Albanians.
The one fact of the changed world that the BRC statement does recognize is
that "The struggle for democracy in multiethnic and multiracial societies
is a totally new terrain where the present leaders of the USA [and Europe]
have no experience." Unfortunately, the BRC is at sea when it comes to this
new reality too. (The April 17 fascist bombing in the Black Brixton
neighborhood in London, and two subsequent bombings in an Asian
neighborhood and at a gay bar, still finds the Tony Blair government in a
state of denial about the depth and extent of racism in Britain.)
The revolutionary struggle for radical multiethnic democracy is in no way
separable from condemning genocidal ethnic cleansing wherever it occurs and
supporting national self-determination, from East Timor and Palestine to
Kurdistan and Kosova. That radical tradition, more than anything in today's
changed world, continues to disclose the Black dimension as the "touchstone
of American civilization."
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