Malcolm X on 1963 March:“Farce on Washington”
Workers Vanguard No. 1028 |
9 August 2013
|
Malcolm X on 1963 March:“Farce on Washington”
Anger over the exoneration of Trayvon Martin’s killer will no doubt
swell attendance at the August 24 rally marking the 50th anniversary of the
March on Washington. It is precisely the role of Al Sharpton and the other
Democrats and preachers heading up the event to channel indignation over such
atrocities into support for their program of trying to prod the U.S.
government—the chief overseer of the racist capitalist system—to bring justice.
It is fitting that Sharpton & Co. are celebrating the 28 August
1963 March on Washington. Officially hailed as an iconic event of the civil
rights movement, the March on Washington was expressly organized to enforce the
domination of the “moderate” leaders over the massive and convulsive battles for
black rights. Dubbed the “farce on Washington” by Malcolm X, the event was
organized in collaboration with the Kennedy White House, which wanted to stop
any militant struggle in its tracks as well as to corral votes for the
Democratic Party.
The main immediate aim of the March on Washington was to get a
civil rights bill passed through pressuring President Kennedy. But when Kennedy
called the “representative leaders” into the Oval Office, they quickly found out
who was calling the shots. The destination of the march was changed from the
White House to the Lincoln Memorial. March leaders deleted a “statement to the
president” and a call to confront Congress from the event’s official handbook.
Participation was denied to “subversive” groups and speeches were censored. John
Lewis, then a leader of the militant Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee
and today a Georgia Congressman, was not allowed to deliver the part of his
remarks criticizing the Democrats. Even the acclaimed writer James Baldwin was
censored: Fearing he would extemporize, organizers would not let him read his
own speech, which instead was delivered by the actor Burt Lancaster.
On November 10, some two months after the March on Washington,
Malcolm X gave his famous “Message to the Grass Roots” speech in Detroit. He
pointed out that it was only when militants in Birmingham, Alabama, started
fighting back against racist violence and cop attacks that the government
started to profess support for black people’s rights. As Malcolm put it: “And
right after that Kennedy got on the television and said ‘this is a moral issue.’
That’s when he said he was going to put out a civil rights bill.” With Martin
Luther King pursuing his liberal-pacifist strategy while protesters were being
brutally beaten, Malcolm deemed him and the other well-known leaders “fallen
idols,” a sentiment shared by many activists, both South and North.
Accounts of the mass struggle for black equality often omit the
ferment that was shaking Northern cities, where for years there were protests
against rat-infested housing, decrepit and segregated schools, unemployment and
murderous cop terror. By the early 1960s, there were as many protests in the
North and West as in the South. Over the summer of 1963, the Justice Department
recorded 1,412 separate civil rights demonstrations across the country. In New
York City in 1963 and ’64, thousands of Harlem residents formed tenants
councils, organizing to withhold rent to force services and repairs from the
slumlords.
The images of Birmingham cops unleashing attack dogs on black
protesters spurred explosions of anger by Northern blacks, not just over Jim
Crow in the South but also over the raw racist reality that was their own
American nightmare. When a black minister addressing a Harlem rally in support
of the Birmingham demonstrators intoned, “I did not come here to inflame you,” a
voice in the crowd shouted out, “We want to be inflamed.”
The largest of the early Northern protests was the 23 June 1963
“Walk to Freedom March” in Detroit—an event that is barely a footnote in
official histories of the civil rights movement. Organized by Rev. Albert Cleage
and Rev. C.L. Franklin of the Detroit Council for Human Rights, the march was
meant, in Cleage’s words, to “show people how we feel about Birmingham but also
about conditions here in Detroit” (Peniel E. Joseph, Waiting ’Til the
Midnight Hour [2006]). Up to 200,000 people marched along Woodward Avenue to
Cobo Arena, where King gave an early rendition of his “I have a dream”
speech.
The purpose of the march was the same as that of the March on
Washington two months later, with King parading at the front along with
Detroit’s mayor and social-democratic auto union bureaucrat Walter Reuther. In
the words of Malcolm X, they were the “clowns” leading this “circus.” But unlike
the celebrity-studded, tightly censored Washington affair, it was working-class,
black Detroit that was in the streets that day, and many had little sympathy for
King’s “turn the other cheek” nostrums. Behind a group of children singing “We
Shall Overcome” was a contingent of young men carrying a sign reading, “Negroes
With Guns Shall Overcome.”
In a letter to the mayor and police commissioner following the
march, King praised the Detroit cops, stating, “You have proved to the Negro
citizenry of your community that you are a friend rather than an enemy.” For
King’s friends in uniform, it was soon time for business as usual. On July 5,
they blew away black prostitute Cynthia Scott, shooting her twice in the back
and again in the stomach as she lay bleeding on the ground. After the city
prosecutor called the shooting justified, 3,000 demonstrators massed outside
police headquarters shouting, “Get the killer cops!”
In his “Grass Roots” speech, Malcolm X scathingly recounted how the
prominent black spokesmen co-opted sentiment for a militant march in Washington
at the behest of the White House, which, he said, was “scared to death” that
“this black steamroller was going to come down on the capital.” Malcolm
said:
“They called in [Roy] Wilkins; they called in [A. Philip]
Randolph; they called in these national Negro leaders that you respect and told
them, ‘Call it off.’ Kennedy said, ‘look, you all are letting this thing go too
far.’ And Old Tom said, ‘Boss, I can’t stop it, because I didn’t start it.’...
And that old shrewd fox, he said, ‘If you all aren’t in it, I’ll put you in it.
I’ll put you at the head of it.’...
“And as they took it over, it lost its militancy.... Why, it even
ceased to be a march. It became a picnic, a circus. Nothing but a circus, with
clowns and all.
“They controlled it so tight, they told those Negroes what time to
hit town, how to come, where to stop, what signs to carry, what song to sing,
what speech they could make, and what speech they couldn’t make; and then told
them to get out of town by sundown. And every one of those Toms was out of town
by sundown.”
The liberal-led civil rights movement was able to uproot official
Jim Crow segregation in the South, which had become economically outmoded and an
embarrassment to the U.S. rulers internationally. But it could not tackle the
pervasive oppression of the black masses that is rooted in the U.S. capitalist
economy. In fact, the movement ran into a brick wall when it came North. The
basic truth is that black emancipation requires sweeping capitalism away through
socialist revolution.
For Marxists, Malcolm X was a contradictory figure whose political
motion was uncompleted at the time of his assassination in 1965. His break from
the religiosity of the Black Muslims was partial and his eclectic politics of
Third Worldism and black nationalism were incapable of generating a program that
could achieve black liberation. But he was hated and feared by the capitalist
rulers for telling the truth about racist America. Malcolm X deeply understood
that the U.S. government and its representatives, Democrats as well as
Republicans, are deadly enemies of black freedom. For workers and youth today,
this understanding would be a good beginning. While liberals and reformist
“socialists” fawn over the 1963 March on Washington, we honor Malcolm X,
who recognized bourgeois hypocrites and treacherous black “leaders” when he saw
them.
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