
In a speech given at Howard University this
past spring, road-traveled Harry Belafonte, sought to instruct his
audience, predominantly students, on social and political responsibility
through recounts of his life as a musician and activist. Acknowledging
the gap that exists between his generation and ours, Belafonte
highlighted his speech with an analogy likening the "fumbling of the
baton" which took place in the recent Olympics with the US women’s team
to the faulty transmission of social and political momentum achieved by
the Civil Rights generation to ours. While well-intentioned in
attempting to engage our generation’s ideological cloudiness, Belafonte
failed to place his finger on something more fundamental: his touted
Civil Rights Movement bore similar murkiness in its aims. By failing
to mention this fact, the space missed an opportunity to engage in a
healthy discussion on the shortcomings of that movement and possible
ways to avoid those today. Although he did address this in part by
recalling a conversation in which Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. hauntingly
prophesized that ‘we may have integrated into a burning house,’ the
subject lacked adequate probing. Left suspended in the air, so too did
our generation leave his lecture, fired up but nevertheless suspended,
unsure of what that next step should look like.
Luckily for us, the lacuna Belafonte neglected to explore had already
been taken up by recently passed scholar-activist Harold Cruse in his
magnum opus, "The Crisis of the Negro Intellectual." Published in 1967
(and recently re-released by the New York Times Review) Cruse was able
to demonstrate that the Civil Rights and Black Power movements were
fraught with their own contradictions, deficiencies and cloudiness of
aims. As historian Adolph Reed states, "Where Malcolm X was the
intellectual inspiration of Black Power and Kwame Ture was its principal
ideological architect, Cruse was without question its definitive
critical interlocutor." Thus, it is worth revisiting the text. Maybe, it
can provide a moment of clarity into these seemingly overcast and
uncertain times.
"The Crisis" provides a biting analysis of the Civil Rights movement.
Cruse commences by revealing the prime blind-spot of integrationist
forces who assumed the mantle of the Civil Rights movement. Their
insistence on integration belied the reality of the American social
landscape. He states that "while America idealizes the rights of the
individual above everything else, it is a nation dominated by the social
power of groups, classes, in-groups and cliques -- both ethnic and
religious." Stated differently, the ground reality of American
demographics has always considered these factions (Anglo-Saxon,
Catholic, Jewish, etc…) particularly in the political, cultural and
economic sphere. Being a "nation of minorities ruled by a minority of
one," the group -- Anglo-Saxon/Christian Right -- which resides at
the top through welding the most influence and power finds benefit in
projecting a nebulous society of a colorless, raceless and creedless
America because it makes them invisible. And as the old maxim goes,
you can’t touch what you can’t see. This masquerade entices people to
believe that the dominant culture is normative rather than a specific
groups’ construction. Sadly, pro-integrationist forces during the Civil
Rights heyday imbibed this myth and used it as their premise for social
and political action.
Equal criticism is meted out to the Black Power movement. While the
movement has entered the realm of immaculate in our generations’
imagination, it also suffered from some major flaws. Flaws Cruse is all
too happy to flesh out. The first thing he deals with is the general
misconception that the Black Power movement was a radical departure from
the Civil Rights movement. In fact, in terms of aims, the two shared
much in common. Its direct-action approach mirrored much of the Civil
Rights tactics. Black Power, he asserts, gave more credence to
appearance than substance. A fact made clear by its inability to ever
define exactly what Black Power was. The brashness exhibited by
gun-toting militants was betrayed by their conflation of defense with
revolution. For Cruse, it's one thing to arm a couple of folks, it’s
another thing to see how this display will translate into solid social
and economic benefits. After all, one cannot necessarily shoot
his/herself into a job or voting booth. Their pragmatic emphasis which
downplayed theory he argues also led the movement into a quagmire. Their
inability to produce tangible economic alternatives to welfare-state
capitalism forced them to exist within and even depend on the spoils of
that system. A fact that was never adequately dealt with.
Moreover Cruse argues the naiveté that characterized black political,
cultural and economic actors were not shared by other groups who used
this understanding to their advantage. With particular emphasis on the
Jewish nationalists who were able to appropriate and refashion American
Marxism to their liking, Cruse illustrates how they not only dominated
discussions on Civil Rights but were in fact behind-the-scene architects
of the aims and goals of the movement. Guarding selfishly their
relatively secure status in the United States, they championed
integration for blacks while remaining staunchly separatists; an
irony-of-ironies for those who recall their vicious attacks on figures
like Khalid Muhammad and the Nation of Islam in general. Yet, as Cruse
points out, there was logic to these attacks; one that recognized that
blacks as a sociopolitical bloc comprised the largest minority
population in the United States (at the time) and thus had the potential
to challenge their quasi-dominance as a minority group. Blacks, with the
perception of a monolithic social order were unable to come to grips
with the multi-group dynamic of America and were thus situated beyond
the pale of political and economic power. It is here we confronted the
quintessential paradox of the Civil Rights harvest. Representation in
the political and economic sectors grew tremendously just as social
degradation in majority black neighborhoods gathered momentum. Marked by
deindustrialization, the import of lethal drugs, and sharp withdrawal of
federal funds from social and educational programs, these new black
politicians could only shake their heads forlornly as they attempted to
grapple with forces vastly bigger than the municipalities they now
presided over. In a cruel joke, they were left to administer social
ruins.
The most covered subject in the text however is reserved for the Black
intellectual class. According to Cruse, this stratum includes those in
the academy and artists, performing, creative and literary. Their
dilemma lies in their residence in the only integrated sphere in
America. Today this integrated sphere has expanded to include
corporate America whose zealous rush to fill quotas and avoid civic
backlash has created an emaciated class of black mid-level executives
and entry-level employees. Cruse convincingly illustrates that this
groups’ reality is warped because they tend to think that the tentative
acceptance they enjoy in these spaces is indicative of American society
writ large. Consequently, their energy is directed more towards
being interlocutors or spokespersons of Black America to White America
rather than invest their time in building with their own community.
An anecdotal example by a former Howard University Hospital employee
recounts how "Alain Locke used to whisk by black folk to go discuss them
with white folk." Their reliance on the spoils of war, in our case the
hard-fought gains of the Civil Rights Movement, ultimately renders them
reliant and more invested in the institutions that cut their checks than
the communities from which they were birthed. Thus, Cruse aptly
labels them "a rootless class of displaced persons who are refugees from
the social poverty of the black world." Given today’s ultra-sensitive
racial milieu, at least when it comes to overt acts, this group enjoys
relative stability and have taken to resting on their laurels in these
sites. Their folly lies in their ignorance or wistful thinking that
Black America’s woes will somehow bypass them. For Cruse, their
challenge is to turn their gaze inward to their communities. Rather than
key on being their voice, they should add their voice in their
discussions, focus their resistance, and explicate their conditions in a
more comprehensive manner by bringing into the fold the
international and historical forces that shape their local realities. In
essence, their theories must be informed by the community and in turn
they must help to shape the community’s understanding of their
condition. Cruse likens this engagement to Karl Marx, the primer
theoretician of European Communism, and the "Young Hegelians" who were
crucial in developing new theories to explain the emergent industrialist
age that wrecked havoc on the masses of folks then dwelling in the urban
centers of Europe.
Certain to delight and vex many, this book nevertheless has surely
changed the complexion of discussions on black resistance and its
ultimate quest for social change. In his brilliant tome Black Marxism,
Cedric Robinson states that "new theories require new histories." The
Crisis" achieves this feat. For those of us sincerely interested in
creating new theories to manage new generational challenges "The Crisis"
should adorn each of our bookshelves. In one of his last interviews,
Cruse mentioned that the book was a modest attempt to answer some of the
questions Dubois posed through his life’s work. Interestingly enough,
for fans of Robinson’s remarkable Black Marxism you will be pleasantly
surprised to discover that his text was an attempt to address many of
the questions posed by Cruse in an essay entitled "Revolutionary
Nationalism and the Afro-American," a piece that would inform much of
his thematic focus in "The Crisis." So there we have it in short order,
from Dubois to Cruse to Robinson. I implore all to snatch up
publications authored by these intellectual giants. Perhaps, you can
then add your footprints in the sand and provide rejoinders to their
ever-important inquiries. Answers that will take us that much closer to
full liberation. |
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