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NEWS & LETTERS, April 2002 

Racism and the anti-war movement

Chicago--Recently, I pulled out of a local coalition here that was organized as a response to the post-September 11 anti-Arab and anti-Muslim sentiments in the Chicago area. With my walking out of a coalition that was designed to organize against racism, there are now no Black people active in it. The reason that I pulled out of it has to do with the status of integrated grassroots activity.

All my life I've had to struggle with questions from well-meaning liberal and progressive grassroots activists regarding "why aren't there more Black people involved." To me this question is much like an updated version of Rodney King during the L.A. disturbances asking "why can't we all just get along."

Many white activists do not realize that the risks of taking action are very real to the Black community. I recall when I gave a weekly commentary on public policy and social issues on a Black radio show when I was a teenager in Detroit that my grandmother would be so worried that something would happen to me that I had to start using an air-name. She was from the South, and like countless others in the Black community who supported the efforts for civil rights, she always kept in mind that one takes a risk in effecting change.

Every time a Black person speaks out and stands up for dignity or liberty, we place our personal safety and the safety of our families at risk. I beg to say that the severity of this is lost on the white vanguard activists.

Last fall the U.S. government walked out of an international meeting on racism in South Africa. Prior to it, a report was issued by the U.S. State Department on the status of racism in the U.S. This report chronicled the actions and public policy changes accomplished by Black activists. My point is that Black people in the U.S. are in the midst of a struggle that has always effected changes in public policy.

Today the work of the Black community includes everything from child welfare workers, to corporate affirmative action efforts, to street demonstrations against police brutality-and yes, the peace movement. While there is a citywide peace movement in places like Chicago with few Blacks in it, there are many voices for peace within the Black community. We're facing two locomotives speeding on parallel tracks that never meet, because while they are going in the same direction their objectives are so different. One is working until change comes; the other is working everyday to make changes happen.

When I left the peace group in Chicago I don't think that they understood why. Nor do I think that white, well-meaning, liberal progressive folks understand that their purpose has to be about making change happen here and now. That is the only way you can show respect for the people you encounter.

Being relevant doesn't mean you lead a struggle. Being relevant means that you respect the place you are in and shoulder your portion of the work that has to be done and push forward the cause, instead of the cause of your particular organization.

Audre Lorde, the Black lesbian feminist writer, once said: "When I dare to be powerful to use my strength in the service of my vision, then it becomes less and less important whether I am afraid." Yes, as Black people we speak out at a risk, but not out of fear. If white, well-meaning organizations look around and wonder why their ranks do not contain more than one or two Blacks like myself, they are going to have to clarify their vision, and not just talk about how they are going to get more people to join them

--Marc Loveless

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