COMMENTARY
MALCOLM POSED THE QUESTION-WHICH WAY FORWARD FOR THE BLACK
LIBERATION STRUGGLE? OUR ANSWER- BLACK
LIBERATION THROUGH THE FIGHT FOR SOCIALISM
Let us be clear about one thing from the start, whatever contradictions
Malcolm X’s brand of black nationalism entailed, whatever shortcomings he had
as an emerging political leader, whatever mistakes he made alone the way as he
groped for a solution to the seemingly intractable fight for black freedom he
stood, and continues to stand, head and shoulders above any black leader thrown
up in America in the 20th century. Only Frederick Douglass in the 19th
century compares with him in stature. No attempts by latter-day historians or
politicians to assimilate Malcolm along with other leaders of the civil rights
struggle in this country, notably Dr. Martin Luther King, as part of the same
continuum of leadership are false and dishonest to all parties. Malcolm X, as a
minister of the Black Muslims and after his break from that organization, stood
in opposition to the official liberal non-violence strategy of that leadership.
His term “Uncle Toms” fully applies to their stance. And, in turn, that liberal
black misleadership and its various hangers-on in the liberal establishment
hated him when he spoke the truth about their role in white-controlled
bourgeois Democratic Party politics. The
“chickens were coming home to roost”, indeed! The Jesse Jacksons, the Al
Sharptons, the Obama the “Charmas” who represent today’s version of that
misleadership please step back, step way back.
That said, who was Malcolm X? Or more properly what did he
represent in his time. At one level, given the rudiments of his life story
which are detailed in the Autobiography of Malcolm X, he represented that part
of the black experience (an experience not only limited to blacks in immigrant
America) which pulled itself by the bootstraps and turned away from the lumpen milieu
of gangs, crimes and prisons into what I call ‘street’ intellectuals. That
experience is far removed from the experience of what today passes for the
black intelligentsia, who have run away from the turmoil of the streets. In
liberation struggles both ‘street’ and academic intellectuals are necessary but
the ‘street’ intellectual is perhaps more critical as the transmission belt to
the masses. That is how liberation fighters get a hearing and no other way. In
any case I have always been partial to the ‘streets’.
But what is the message for the way forward? For Malcolm, until shortly before his death,
that message was black separatism-the idea that the only way blacks could get
any retribution was to go off on their own (or be left alone), in practical
terms to form their own nation. To state the question that way in modern
America points to the obvious limitation of such a scheme, even if blacks
formed such a nation and wanted to express the right to national
self-determination that goes with it.. Nevertheless
whatever personal changes Malcolm made in his quest for political relevance and
understanding whether he was a Black Muslim minister or after he broke for that
group he still sought political direction through the fight of what is called
today ‘people of color’ against the mainly white oppressor, at first in America
and latter after travels throughout the ‘third world’. However sincere he was
in that belief, and he was sincere, that strategy of black separatism or ‘third
world’ vanguardism could never lead to the black freedom he so fervently
desired. An underestimation of the power of internally unchallenged world, and
in the first instance American, imperialism to corrupt liberation struggles or
defeat or destroy them militarily never seemed to enter into his calculations.
Malcolm’s whole life story of struggle against the bedrock
of white racism in America , as the legitimate and at the time the
ONLY voice speaking for the rage of the black ghettos, nevertheless never worked
out fully any other strategy that could work in America , and by extension
internationally. A close reading of his work demonstrates that as he got more
politically aware he saw the then unfolding ‘third world’ liberations struggles
as the key to black liberation in America . That, unfortunately for
him, was exactly backwards. If the ‘third world’ struggles were ever ultimately
to be successful and create more just societies then American imperialism-as
the main enemy of the peoples of the world-then, as now had to be brought to
bay. And that, my friends, whether you agree or not, requires class struggle
here. That is where the fight for black liberation intersects the fight for
socialism. And I will state until my last breathe that the key to the fight for
socialism in America
will be the cohesion of a central black cadre leading a multiethnic
organization that will bring that home. And it will not be from the lips of the
Kings of today that the struggle will be successful but by new more enlightened
Malcolms, learning the lessons of history, who will get what they need-by any
means necessary.
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