The Black Panther Party for Self-Defense | |
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Famous for taking up guns in defense against police
brutality, the Panthers had many other little-known sides to their work. They
organized dozens of community programs such as free breakfast for children,
health clinics and shoes for children.
Such was their success that they rapidly grew to a size of 5,000 full time party workers, organized in 45 chapters (branches) across America. At their peak, they sold 250,000 papers every week. Opinion polls of the day showed the Panthers to have 90% support amongst Blacks in the major cities. Their impact on Black America can be measured by the response of the state. J. Edgar Hoover, then head of the FBI described them as "the number one threat to the internal security of the United States". In this chapter, we will be looking at the formation of the Panthers, their program and activities, but more importantly, what marked the Panthers out to be different from all other organizations, what led them to be the inspiration to generations around the world to join the struggle against oppression. | |
The Civil Rights Movement | |
The formation of the Panthers was the direct result of the
development of the civil rights movement which had already been in full swing
for more than a decade before they were created.
The movement had largely been based in the south and around demands for
desegregation of the busses, schools, waiting rooms and lunch counters. Hundreds
of thousands had been mobilized to participate in the demonstrations, sit-ins
and freedom rides. Both from the police, local white mobs and the Ku Klux Klan,
civil rights protesters faced the constant threat of brutal attack or even
death. Despite this, the guiding philosophy of the civil rights leaders - in
particular Martin Luther King - remained one of civil disobedience and passive
resistance.
The increasing ferocity of the violence put a great strain on the movement.
Contrasting views on a strategy for Black liberation began to emerge. Stokely
Carmichael was prominent among those who opposed passive resistance and
represented the feelings of a new generation of Blacks who felt that the
peaceful approach was played out.
Alongside the mainstream civil rights was another current: much smaller than
King's movement but still with significant numbers were the Black Muslims. The
Nation believed in separation instead of integration and were completely opposed
to passive resistance. Their radical ideology was appealing but they refused to
participate in the civil rights movement or to become involved in the activities
of non-Nation members.
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Malcolm X | |
Malcolm X saw the limitations of both the Muslims and
King's strategy of non-violence. He saw the need to embrace the social and
economic issues and he attempted to put forward a more coherent strategy than
any Black leader up to that point. It was against this background of upheaval
that the Black Panther Party was created. The Panthers took the revolutionary
philosophy and militant stand of Malcolm X, they were determined that although
Malcolm X had been cut down, they would make his ideas come alive.
The Black Panther Party was founded by Huey P. Newton and Bobby Seale. They
met in the early sixties whilst at Meritt Junior College in West Oakland. The
civil rights movement had ignited Black America: Seale and Newton were no
exception. Both were active in Black politics for several years before they came
together to form the Panthers. Bobby Seale was part of RAM (Revolutionary Action
Movement) and both Seale and Newton became involved in a college-based group
called the Soul Students Advisory Committee. These experiences were critical in
the formation of the ideology of the Panthers as it led to them rejecting the
philosophy of what they called the cultural nationalists.
In Seize the Time, Bobby Seale explains,
"Cultural nationalists and Black Panthers are in conflict in many areas. Basically, cultural nationalism sees the white man as the oppressor and makes no distinction between racist whites and non-racist whites, as the Panthers do. The cultural nationalists say that a Black man cannot be the enemy of the Black people, while the Panthers believe that Black capitalists are exploiters and oppressors. Although the Black Panther Party believes in Black nationalism and Black culture, it does not believe that either will lead to Black liberation or the overthrow of the capitalist system, and are therefore ineffective."Cultural nationalism was a powerful current in the Black movement and one which influenced Malcolm X in his early years as a Black Muslim. The nationalists rejected the integrationist approach and believed in separation from whites. In forming the Panthers, Seale and Newton made a clean break with both the integrationist and the separatist approach. They argued instead that the economic and political roots of racism were in the exploitative capitalist system and that the Black struggle must be a revolutionary movement to overthrow the entire power structure in order to achieve liberation for all Black people. Under pressure from the mass civil rights struggle, the government had made certain concessions: promoting Black officials, mayors, Congressmen etc., but no lasting improvement to the daily lives of most Black people had taken place. In fact, whilst segregation laws had been broken down, the level of poverty had actually increased. Black unemployment was higher in 1966 (after more than a decade of struggle) than in 1954. 32% of Black people were living below the poverty line in 1966. 71% of the poor living in metropolitan areas were Black. By 1968, two-thirds of the Black population lived in ghettos. The Panthers realized that the movement needed to progress beyond the battles for desegregation and to address the fundamental economic problems that people faced in their daily lives. They were the first independent Black organization to have a clear analysis of the type of society we live in: one in which a small class hold all the economic and political power and use it to exploit the majority. Bobby Seale said, "We do not fight racism with racism. We fight racism with solidarity. We do not fight exploitative capitalism with Black capitalism. We fight capitalism with basic socialism. And we do not fight imperialism with more imperialism. We fight imperialism with proletarian internationalism."This was the guiding philosophy of the Black Panthers. But critical to their development was the knowledge that it was not enough to have the right theories, that this must be translated into a concrete set of demands that people can relate to and a clear course of action to achieve those demands. And so the first task of Seale and Newton was to sit down and write a program for the Panthers. October 1966As soon as the program was written, they printed 1,000 copies and went out onto the streets to distribute them. Seale, Newton and their first member, Bobby Hutton put their months paychecks together to rent an old shop front as a base for operations. They painted up a sign saying Black Panther Party for Self Defense and on January 1, 1967 the office was opened. Weekly meetings and political education classes were held to spread the word, and so the first chapter of the Panthers was formed. The party began to grow not only because an organization of that character with a clearly worked out program was needed at that time but because they based themselves in the community, working with the people, for the people. They had an office, they had the ten point platform and program - now was time to put that program into action. | |
Self Defense | |
The Panthers decided to take up their constitutional right to carry arms and to implement Malcolm X's philosophy of self-defense, by patrolling the police. They did this at a time when severe police brutality was common - the police would beat down and kill Blacks at random. They would even recruit police from the racist south to come and work in the northern ghettos. On one occasion, whilst on patrol, they witnessed an officer stop and search a young guy. The Panthers got out of their car and went over to the scene and stood watching their guns on full display. Angrily, the policeman began to question them and tried to intimidate them with threats of arrest. But Huey P. Newton had studied the law intimately and could quote every law and court ruling relevant to their situation. Huey stood there with a law book in one hand and a gun in the other and told the "pigs" about his constitutional right to carry a weapon as long as it was not concealed. He told them about the law and said that every citizen had the right to observe a police officer carry out his duty as long as they stood a reasonable distance away. And he told them about the Supreme Court ruling which defined that distance. A crowd gathered and watched this whole scene in amazement. The Panthers made it clear that they were not looking for a shoot-out and that they would only use their guns in self-defense. They took the opportunity to distribute copies of their ten point program, inform people of the Panthers ideology and invite them to their political meetings. Meanwhile, the flustered and nervous cop took the opportunity to get the hell out of there. The gun had a huge psychological effect, both on the Black community and the police. For the police, it reversed the fear that they so enjoyed creating in others. But for the Black community, it fired their imagination, people felt empowered by seeing Black brothers and sisters protecting their interests. There were two sides to the carrying of guns though, most people saw it as a positive move but others were put off by the militaristic image. On the other side, many brothers in particular, came to the Panther office purely for the gun, the Black uniform - the whole image. When this happened, the Panthers would simply explain that the Black struggle was about a whole lot more than just picking up the gun: it was about educating yourself and then others, about organizing the community programs, selling the newspaper and serving the people. At the same time, they would get the brother to work in the nursery for a while, looking after the children while other members went out on party business. In this way, they tried to make sure that people understood the Panther ideology and that they got a balanced view of what it was all about. | |
Community Programs | |
The programs were of key importance in the Panthers
strategy. Firstly, they demonstrated that politics was relevant to peoples lives
- to feed a hungry child, give out food, clothing and medical care showed that
the Panthers related to people's needs. Secondly, it showed what could be
achieved if you were organized. The programs achieved a great deal with very
limited resources but it also raised in peoples minds how much more could be
achieved if they had the resources available to the government and the business
corporations. Some people have criticized the community programs saying it was
not a revolutionary thing to do but Bobby Seale answers this clearly.
"A lot of people misunderstand the politics of these programs; some people have a tendency to call them reform programs. They're not reform programs; they're actually revolutionary community programs. A revolutionary program is onset forth by revolutionaries, by those who want to change the existing system for a better system. A reform program is set up by the existing exploitative system as an appeasing handout, to fool the people and to keep them quiet. Examples of these programs are poverty programs, youth work programs and things like that."The first program the Panthers organized was the Free Breakfast for Children Program. Lesley Johnson explains how this led her to get involved in the Panthers. "Well, one of the things that I could immediately respect and admire the party for, was its Breakfast for School Children Program. You know my parents were both workers, my father was a shipper and my mother, she worked cleaning clothes, rubbing the spots out, what was known as a spotter. And there were times when I was growing up, the week's oatmeal or whatever would run out and I went to school hungry. So that I could really appreciate what the party was doing."The Panthers would go out and get donations of food from businessmen. Any chain of stores that refused even a small donation would be boycotted. Leaflets would be produced and distributed in the community exposing that business. The programs usually took place in a church hall. Party members would have to work very hard, starting work at 6am every day. They would prepare breakfast, serve children, they would usually sing some songs with them and then, when the children left, they would have to clear the place up and go out to collect provisions for the next day. | |
The FBI | |
The success of the Panther's political activities and
community programs and their huge growth and influence and membership soon
brought them under fire from the American state. The FBI intensified the
COINTELPRO (Counter Intelligence Program) against them. Nearly every office in
the country was raided at some point. In Chicago, all the food provisions for
the breakfast program were burnt out. During one raid in the spring of 1968,
Bobby Hutton, the party's first member, came out with his hands up. The police
shot him in the head and killed him. The attacks became even more vicious in
1969. On December 4, at 1am, the police burst into Fred Hampton's apartment and
opened fire in the bedroom where he lay sleeping with his pregnant girlfriend.
Another Panther called out that a pregnant sister was in the room and the police
paused their firing. Deborah Johnson recalls:
"One of the policemen grabbed my robe and threw it down and said 'what do you know, we have a broad here.' Another man grabbed me by the head and shoved me into the kitchen. I heard a voice from another part of the apartment saying 'he's barely alive', or 'he'll barely make it'. Then I heard more shots. A sister screamed from the front. Then the shooting stopped. I heard someone say 'he's as good as dead now.'"In 1969 alone, 25 Panther members were killed. But the FBI's operations went further. Aside from the constant arrests of Panther members which disrupted the work of the organization and drained them financially, the FBI infiltrated the party and manufactured rivalries and disputes between different members. Today, some would explain the demise of the Panthers as due to the successful operations of the FBI. Undoubtedly, this placed an enormous strain on the organization but there are many countries in the world where political opposition faces even greater repression from the state. Without underestimating the difficulties, they cannot entirely account for the fall of the Panthers. There are a number of factors which contributed. | |
Women in the Panthers | |
The role of women within the Panthers was an area with many problems. At one point, women comprised 70% of the membership of the organization. Yet, all the leading positions were occupied by men. This is not a petty point because it illustrated the different roles that men and women took on. It seems that many women were confined to secretarial, administrative, childcare or other traditional roles whilst men were encouraged to develop the political ideas, speaking and leadership abilities. Also, some of the brothers complained that they were not taking directions from a woman! At other times it was found that accusations of being a counter-revolutionary were spread about a woman just because she did not want to sleep with someone. These problems would have cut the Panthers off from a whole layer of Black women who were not prepared to put up with this nonsense. However, we have to see that sexist attitudes were not unique to the Panthers - it is something that occurs in all organizations because it is related to the oppressive nature of this society and the way in which it exploits women. The Panthers did take action against these attitudes but they did not fully succeed - equality in the party was never achieved. And you cannot be a true community organization, fighting the oppression of society if women are being oppressed within your organization. The membership of the Panthers was 5,000. This seems pretty low when you consider all they achieved but the reason is that those 5,000 members were all full-time! You could not be a member of the organization unless you were unemployed or prepared to give up your job. It is a sign of the tremendous commitment that the Panthers inspired, that they had 5,000 full-time workers but they would definitely have had a much, much larger membership if they had allowed students and people who were working to join. In effect they cut themselves off from hundreds of thousands of people who would have supported them. This also set themselves apart from the rest of the community. | |
Revolutionary Black Workers Groups | |
At that point in time, there were several radical Black
workers groups such as DRUM (Dodge Revolutionary Union Movement), DODGE - named
after the car plant in Detroit and ELARUM (Eldron Avenue Revolutionary Union
Movement). They organized large numbers of revolutionary Black workers. Although
they had some Black caucuses within the trade unions, the Panthers did not
sufficiently develop this aspect of the work. It was of particular importance
because the Black working class are critical in the struggle for Black
liberation.
The Panthers were one of the few groups who understood the whole basis of
American society had to be transformed. It was this understanding that gave them
a revolutionary outlook. But this alone, guarantees nothing. The clarity of
ideas which enables the development of a coherent and effective strategy is
essential in accomplishing the task of the overthrow of capitalism. We would
argue that there were many confused ideas in the Black Panther Party. Some
believed they could develop on the basis of a struggle conducted by a small
armed minority and didn't have a strategy for building a mass organization which
could be sustained over a longer period.
Huey Newton says in Revolutionary Suicide
"But we soon discovered that weapons and uniforms set us apart from the community. We were looked upon as an ad hoc military group, acting outside the community fabric and too radical to be a part of it. Perhaps some of our tactics at the time were extreme; perhaps we placed too much emphasis on military action."This was particularly important as they had reached their high point at the time of the ebbing of the huge civil rights movement. Had the organization been developed with a more long term perspective then the Black Panthers would have been in a position to put themselves at the head of a mass resurgence of radicalism amongst the Black population or even in wider American society. This, above all demonstrates the need for a clear forward view of how events will unfold in society. That is why a careful and disciplined study of events is an important aspect of shaping the outlook of any revolutionary organization. The Panthers have left us with an invaluable experience. Their dedication, will and bravery in the face of what might have appeared as insurmountable odds is an example which any serious Black activist or revolutionary should be proud to follow. They were the highpoint of the civil rights movement. Adrian Wood & Nutan Rajguru |
Friday, January 18, 2013
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