The evocation of the Black Panther Party often arouses mixed feelings among the revolutionary activists, between fascination and caution. It is therefore essential to have a spare to understand the dramatic history of the party and make the results of these experiments to the current struggles approach. ---- Since its creation, the Black Panther Party (BPP) attracts the attention of U.S. authorities and particularly the FBI, which will in the years 1960-1970 to be very active against revolutionary movements. With BPP, the FBI will be ruthless, all means are good to eradicate the political organization. Somehow, the BPP has condensed all the fears of white America, racist and puritanical. ---- The emergence of the Black Power ---- The BPP was born in Oakland (California) in October 1966. Ten years ago, the movement for civil rights broke the segregationist Southern United States. The peace movement for equal rights has shaken the United States for ten good years. But the violence, poverty and racism remain and in 1965 broke the Watts riots. Political violence is not to be outdone, the Vietnam War raged and protests are violently repressed. The students will engage in an armed struggle with the creation of the Weather Underground . Between 1965 and 1968 two major figures of the cause of black-es are murdered, Malcolm X and Martin Luther King. It is in this context emerges the Black Power, with a new generation of activists who the actors and actresses of the civil rights movement are "Uncle Toms", black with white subject. These young black-es will be defined as "African-American" and consider the black-es must emancipate imposed by white cultural values. This requires a new education which black-es must learn not to feel inferior es and a return to African roots. Ideological roots of the BPP The BPP will be greatly influenced by two figureheads, the black nationalist leader Malcolm X and the famous psychiatrist and Marxist theorist Frantz Fanon of Martinique. The influence of the author of The Wretched of the Earth will be considerable, it is indeed the first to be interested in the cause of black-and are widely colonized peoples in the world in terms of class. Panthers will transpose reflections Fanon in case of black-American art. Little Red Book of Mao's writings and speeches of Ernesto Guevara and Fidel Castro are also ideological influences the organization. Moreover, each new recruit must read collection of quotations from Mao. The BPP is clearly Marxist-Leninist, tinted black American nationalism. The fascination for the lumpen proletariat and the revolutionary violence borrowed from both Fanon and Malcolm X and applied more or less awkwardly American case will also be something to do with the fall of the BPP, the FBI is indeed managed to turn against them. The birth of the BPP The BPP is created by Bobby Seale and Huey P. Newton in 1966. The two men first met in 1962, the first supports the movement for civil rights and the second feels closer to Malcolm X. They are found in 1965, and reflect a revolutionary organization for American black-es. They do not identify with existing ones, because they are not black supremacist and make the difference between racist and non-racist whites. The class struggle is also essential as a reading society. They join a black association of academics who advocate the Merritt College in Oakland. But this is not satisfactory, their proposals are considered too radical by academics and students, and the two men did not want to be " ? revolutionary salon ? . " They decided to return to the streets of Oakland and is in October 1966 in the premises of the Federal Agency against poverty will be written the famous political ten-point program of the BPP. A ten-point program Huey P. Newton wants the program organized dialectically concrete and ideological proposals. The black-American art should be able to find workable answers to their everyday problems while being aware of their condition are oppressed. The long-term goal is to enable the revolution empowering black-es and the peoples of the Third World. " ? 1.We want freedom. We want power to determine the destiny of our black community [...]. 2. full employment [...]. 3. that stops the looting of the black community by whites. [...]. 4. decent housing [...]. 5. the education of our people [...] teaching that we learn our true history and our role in today's society [...]. 6. all blacks are exempt from military service [...]. 7. We want an immediate end to POLICE BRUTALITY and MURDER of black [...]. 8. freedom for all black men held in federal prisons [...] 9. all blacks, when they appear before a court, be tried by a jury of their peers, or people from the black community [...] 10. We want land, bread, housing, education, enough to clothe us, justice and peace (and as the main political objective: a plebiscite supervised by the United Nations, taking place in the black colony which may participate only black colonial subjects to determine the will of black people as to their national destiny). " First actions and success This program will remain in effect until 1972, it attracted many activists and black-are activists like Eldridge Cleaver who made him famous for his rhetoric. The first practical application of this program was the creation of self-defense militias to protect the Black community against verbal and physical abuse by the police. It should not be forgotten that the full name of the organization was The Black Panther Party for Self-Defense . The goal is to enable residents and inhabitants of the ghetto no longer living in fear almost daily police brutality. But also to restore some pride in the black community. Daniel Guerin reports that militias composed of four or five men patrolled neighborhoods in uniform. They had with them weapons, tape recorders and law books. Their main mission was to provide legal advice and monitor the police every inquiry to prevent any abuse of law. Very quickly the organization met some notoriety especially among younger people. Including the use of a particularly nasty vocabulary to police and politicians. In their speeches they often had recourse to talk of the street, combining Marxist rhetoric and ghetto slang. On April 1, 1967 a young black hit by the bullets of the police, the BPP organizes demonstrations to support the family and ask that justice be done. It is at this point that out first issue of the journal of the organization The Black Panther Black Community News Service . While their success is growing a particular event will go to the Panthers on the front of the political scene and a profound imagination of the United States. The BPP enjoys playing the card of provocation. It was at this time that will make the headlines. At the beginning of 1967 Mulford Senator who wishes to fight against armed left-wing proposes a bill to ban gun ownership groups. It is supported by the governor of California, Ronald Reagan though it goes against the dominant American ideology. The BPP organized in April 1967 and a demonstration outside the Capitol in Sacramento. They are in uniform and armed. Bobby Seale delivers a revolutionary speech to the African-American community and more broadly for all and all the oppressed. Their aura is growing, but at the same time they forge an image of internal enemies for many viewers. The U.S. government will never forgive them this stunt succeeded and war is declared. Bobby Seale was sentenced to six months in prison for disturbing public order. A few months later, in October 1967 Huey P. Newton was arrested by police while riding in the car, a shootout ensues. The police officer died instantly, Newton was seriously injured. It will be charged with murder when he is still hospitalized. It is at this point that begins many advocacy campaigns for their release. They find broad support even in liberal circles (left) white. The party is growing nationally. The social program of BPP: Serving the community The BPP may become more important then organize and implement its social program. The majority of Americans are black, live in poverty. The organization wants to actually help the community. Are then organized free breakfasts for children, distribution of clothing, free health clinics, housing co-operatives, aid for the elderly. Prisoners are not forgotten as free bus to prisons are organized for families. The BPP also organizes screening campaigns. And of course the education of young people is a priority. The FBI look at these actions of a very evil eye. J. Edgar Hoover is aware that their influence will grow and it also improves the image of the Panthers are no longer seen as criminals armed blacks. An extremely violent repression It is from this point that the FBI will be ruthless. All methods are good to destroy the BPP. The activists are harassed by the police-are but also their support. Everything will be done to the newspaper is no longer distributed. The police arrived violently during food distributions, frightening everyone. The organization is wiretapping, infiltrated all levels. The FBI hires thugs to gangrene organization. Rumors are initiated by the authorities through false news to divide the members of the organization. One of the most effective strategies is indeed a climate of paranoia. The trial took place against some members are rigged. Nothing is left to chance. This goes misinformation to political murder. The most famous are the assassinations of Bunchy Carter, John Huggins or that of Fred Hampton. In the early 1970s, 28 militants were killed by the FBI and many others were imprisoned. According to Ward Churchill, specialist methods of the FBI, at the end of 1971, the organization is working as it literally destroyed. 1973-1982: long agony of BPP After 1973, the party no longer exists at the national level. For many members this is a long downward spiral marked by exile in Algeria as Eldridge Cleaver, entry into hiding as fugitives, prison, forfeiture see as Huey P. Newton sinking into drugs and flirting with pimping. In 1971, the clandestine armed wing of the organization, the Black Liberation Army had split. It will remain active until 1981, after numerous arrests and killings of its members. His latest stunt is an attack on an armored car with the Weather Underground . Another part of the militants continues to be active at the local level, but their action has significantly associative and reformist orientation. The revolutionary slogans were evacuated from their speech. Some members like Bobby Seale try their luck to be elected to the Oakland City Council. From 1977 to 1982, only the school and the newspaper founded by the organization will still work. The official closing of the school in 1982 marked the definitive end of the BPP. Conclusion: between admiration and skepticism One can only agree with Daniel Guerin early 70s blamed the Panthers their authoritarianism, their amateurism, their fascination with guns and violence, their idealization of the lumpenproletariat as a revolutionary subject. But their quasi-military discipline, virility and sexism despite the important roles sometimes granted to certain activists. Guerin also pointed permanent oscillation of some of its members between reformism and revolution. Nevertheless, it is also because they and they wanted to change the order of things that the BPP has drawn the ire of U.S. authorities. The Panthers wanted to restore pride to the black community and the people relearn to take control by becoming a leading political actor. The authorities did returned the favor and still dozens of members are imprisoned despite countless campaigns to support worldwide. Florian (AL Paris Sud) Two references on the subject: the Tom Van Eersel, Black Panther History of the Black Panther Party , 2006 The early break. the Daniel Guerin From Uncle Tom to the Black Panthers , the good characters, 2010 (1973). Case summary: The roots of racism: From slavery to the ghetto labor movement: black or white, always proletarians Malcolm X: a life in black and white Malcolm X: Building a Black Power The Black Panthers beyond the myth The Black Feminism: at the intersection of oppressions DRUM: The struggle of blacks in the workplace black reformist movements: The pitfalls of bourgeois strategies Harana Par? (historian): "This is the revolt that brought into existence the American Black" A Black Revolution remains to be done
SPREAD THE INFORMATION
Any information or special reports about various countries may be published with photos/videos on the world blog with bold legit source. All languages are welcome. Mail to lucschrijvers@hotmail.com.
Autobiography Luc Schrijvers Ebook €5 - Amazon
Search for an article in this Worldwide information blog
dinsdag 15 oktober 2013
(en) France, Alternative Libertaire AL #230 - Folder Black Revolution: Revolutionary Structure: The Black Panthers ... beyond the myth (fr)
Abonneren op:
Reacties posten (Atom)
Geen opmerkingen:
Een reactie posten