Following
are major excerpts from a Facebook post by activist and political
muralist Mike Alewitz. They are reprinted with permission from the
author.
When
I first read Malcolm X, and then heard a recording of him speaking,
it was electrifying.
Malcolm
X confronted the racist ideology of the U.S. ruling class. He
educated both Black and white audiences about the hidden history of
African Americans and the racist history of the white ruling classes.
His
pedagogy started me on my own journey into Black history—to the
great civilizations of Africa, to the universities and libraries in
Timbuktu and Alexandria, to the development of culture in Africa and
the Middle East—because that was where the world’s knowledge of
art and science was born.
I
also learned some important lessons about fighting fascists from
Malcolm.
Lesson
#1: You must confront racist ideas
The
U.S. empire was built on the backs of slave labor and the
extermination of the indigenous people—justified with racist
ideologies. Malcolm understood that in a country that was built on
racism, we must take on that ideology and win workers to support the
antiracist struggle—or at least neutralize them.
My
own experience was to bear this out. In 1970, I spoke at an antiwar
rally in Austin, Texas, reporting on the Kent State Massacre. I ended
up moving [to Texas] to organize for the antiwar movement.
In
doing so, I became involved in a struggle against the Ku Klux Klan,
which was ingrained into the Houston Police Department. For years,
the Klan had terrorized the African American and Latino communities,
assaulted and shot up leftists’ homes and organizations in that
city. Twice they had bombed the Pacifica radio station, taking them
off the air.
At
the time, I was a member of the Young Socialist Alliance (YSA). Along
with the Socialist Workers Party (SWP)—which bears little
resemblance to the organization using that name today—we took on
the Klan by organizing a broad coalition to demand governmental
action to stop the terror.
The
YSA and SWP had plenty of experience in such struggles. SWP leaders,
seasoned veterans of the labor battles of the 1930s, understood that
you had to debate the fascists—you could not defeat them by simply
calling them names and engaging in street fights.
In
1971, Debby Leonard ran for mayor of Houston as a socialist. (The
following year I was her running mate, for Lt. Governor, when we ran
a statewide ticket). A few weeks after the announcement, a pipe bomb
was thrown into the SWP campaign offices—one of many right-wing
violent attacks carried out in the city.
The
cops announced to the media that we had probably bombed ourselves to
get publicity. Despite threats and slanders, we organized a broad
coalition to demand the city put a halt to Klan terror.
Through
our campaigns and coalition pressure, we forced the Klan into two
televised debates. There, Leonard exposed the history of the Klan/cop
terrorism and racist ideas.
The
debates were instrumental in forcing the government to bring
indictments against the Klan, including the Grand Dragon of the
United Klans of America, Frank Converse, whom Leonard had destroyed
on air. It was an important victory. After years of terror, our
united front action brought the Klan to heel and the attacks ceased.
Lesson
#2: You cannot put your trust in white liberals
Malcolm
X placed his faith in the African-American community. He did not
attempt to curry favor with white middle-class liberals. Malcolm knew
that ultimately you had to rely on your own community—those that
would be willing to pay the cost in the fight for freedom.
I
was reminded of this as I considered the liberal outrage over Donald
Trump. Trump is being universally condemned for pandering to the
white supremacist movement, even by some Democratic and Republican
politicians. This is as it should be.
But
a few months ago, Bernie Sanders, the leading liberal voice of the
Democratic Party, publicly announced his admiration for Winston
Churchill, one of the most vicious White supremacists in human
history—largely responsible for a genocidal policy against the
people of India, about whom he openly stated: “I hate Indians. They
are a beastly people with a beastly religion.”
Yet
when Sanders made his outrageous statement, the liberal community,
and even “socialist” supporters, refused to criticize him and
have remained silent to this day. I’m not accusing Sanders of being
a white supremacist, but refusing to confront such remarks and ideas
enables more direct racist comments by people like Trump.
Ultimately,
the liberal wing of the ruling class is going to do whatever it takes
to preserve its profits. That’s why the liberal President Franklin
Roosevelt (Sanders’ other hero) put Japanese Americans into
concentration camps and refused to speak out against waves of
lynching that were going on in the South.
You
cannot rely on the Democratic Party to wage a consistent and
successful fight against fascists and white supremacists. Malcolm X
was clear on that.
Lesson
#3: Self-defense must be disciplined and effective
Malcolm
X believed in militant self-defense. He did not posture about it. He
did not provoke attacks. He did not make empty threats.
Within
the civil rights movement, there were political disagreements over
the strategies of nonviolence versus self-defense—including between
Malcolm X and Martin Luther King. But despite the divisions,
shortly after Malcolm X broke with Elijah Mohammed, he sent the
following telegram to George Lincoln Rockwell, head of the US Nazi
Party:
“This
is to warn you that I am no longer held in check from fighting white
supremacists by Elijah Muhammad’s separatist Black Muslim movement,
and that if your present racist agitation against our people there in
Alabama causes physical harm to Reverend King or any other black
Americans who are only attempting to enjoy their rights as free human
beings, that you and your Ku Klux Klan friends will be met with
maximum physical retaliation from those of us who are not hand-cuffed
by the disarming philosophy of nonviolence, and who believe in
asserting our right of self-defense—by any means necessary.”
Well,
no one can accuse Malcolm X of being unwilling to defend himself. By
organizing a militant and disciplined defense, he made attacks
costlier to the racists and revealed the true source of the violence.
The
best self-defense is to organize a broad-based political defense of
free speech and democratic rights. That is why it is wrong to
advocate that fascists have no right to speak—it undercuts our own
ability to defend ourselves. … The tragic events in
Charlottesville show that we cannot always anticipate problems—but
we should strive to be prepared to
physically defend ourselves.
Fascist
and white supremacist movements are kept around to be used by the
ruling class when it feels it is necessary. Donald Trump has
reinvigorated them for the moment. We must now send them back under
the rocks.
Racism
is a cancer that has metastasized throughout capitalist America over
centuries. It will take a thoroughgoing social revolution to uproot
and end it.
1 comment:
You guys really believe fake news?
The KKK are a nothing burger.
They are not institutionalized anywhere in the beautifully diverse USA.
There are only a few thousand. They have zero power.
The fabulous USA is the most diverse country in the world. In America you have what's called free will. This means that it's up to the individual to make their own choices. You can be poor if you choose. You can be independently wealthy and you can be anything in between. No government will decide this for you. We are the most free and beautiful society that the world has ever known.
Liberalism is a mental disorder. Socialism is for little pussy boys like Adam Ritscher. That's right snowflakes. All y'all going down.
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