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By Bill
Fletcher Jr. | SACOBSERVER.COM WIRE SERVICES
"No nation threatens us. We threaten the world." - W.E.B.
DuBois (1958), commenting on the role of the United States
internationally.
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| Bill Fletcher Jr. |
While we commemorate the 40th anniversary of the historic
1963 March on Washington, we should as well be commemorating
another event. On the eve of the 1963 March on Washington,
the life of one of the 20th century's most brilliant individuals
came to an end. W.E.B. DuBois, scholar, Pan Africanist, political
leader, champion of the struggle against White supremacy in
America, died Aug. 27, 1963, in Ghana.
It is easy to forget about DuBois since an orchestrated
effort has been conducted by the larger society to minimize
his contributions and, in fact, to expunge him from our collective
memory. Beginning with the Cold War in the late 1940s, the
government and the right-wing went out of their way to harass
DuBois, restrict his travel and opportunities and limit his
access to those who wanted to or needed to hear his words.
For us at TransAfrica Forum, the work and life of DuBois
was particularly significant because of his commitment to
the struggle against racist discrimination at home, as well
as against imperialism and colonialism abroad.
DuBois saw no inconsistency in taking up both struggles,
usually at the same time. Thus, DuBois is acknowledged as
the "father" of the modern Pan-African movement.
He was directly involved in organizing and helping to lead
the first five Pan African Congresses.
He also was one of the leaders, along with the great Paul
Robeson, of the Council on African Affairs, a U.S.-based advocacy
group on Africa which was, in many ways, a political ancestor
of TransAfrica Forum. DuBois was also a founder of the NAACP,
editor of its magazine, Crisis, and author of the monumental
and definitive study "Black Reconstruction in America."
DuBois would probably have been heralded by the larger U.S.
establishment if he had restricted his criticisms to racial
matters in America. DuBois refused to be so constrained. His
critique of U.S. society expanded over time to examining the
economic roots of racial oppression, as well as his expansive
analysis of Western colonialism and the U.S. role in propping
up colonial empires, allegedly in the name of fighting communism.
Following World War II, when the United States came to the
aid of various European colonial powers, in some cases reinforcing
their domination, in other cases attempting to replace them,
DuBois was one of the courageous few who would not be silenced.
DuBois saw that anti-communism and red-baiting were not aimed
at stopping the spread of a totalitarian ideology, but rather
were aimed at silencing any and all dissent from policies
that advanced corporate interests. For his recognition, the
forces of repression came down upon him.
Ultimately DuBois chose to leave the United States and reside
in Ghana. Before his death he began work on an encyclopedia
of the African world. He did not live to complete it.
It is not enough for us to honor the memory of DuBois, though
that is itself important. Reminding ourselves, and particularly
younger activists and scholars of the renown of such a human
being has a value in and of itself.
Yet for those who work with and support TransAfrica Forum,
and other organizations committed to a democratic foreign
policy on the part of the United States, the life and work
of DuBois has an additional value.
All too often I hear people suggest that international events
are too distant from the realities of the everyday person.
DuBois repudiated such notions, suggesting instead that it
is inconceivable that we, African Americans, can fight the
good fight here in the United States for social justice in
isolation from the fight for what we now call global justice.
A system that would ignore the plague of HIV/AIDS as it ravages
Africa and the Caribbean; a system that would promote the
interests of pharmaceutical corporations over those of the
individuals living with HIV/AIDS, can never be expected to
discover humanity in its treatment of those of African descent
living in the United States.
The reverse is also true. As often as we attempt to illustrate
our patriotism through volunteering to support U.S. wars overseas
and other such adventures, we may achieve awards and note,
but it brings us no closer to achieving actual freedom, equality
and dignity at home. To the extent to which we stand up for
what is right rather than what the establishment deems to
be popular, we regain our humanity. If there is no other lesson
to learn from the work and life of W.E.B. DuBois, it is that
one simple point.
Bill Fletcher Jr. is president of TransAfrica Forum, a
Washington, D.C.-based nonprofit educational and organizing
center formed to raise awareness in the United States about
issues facing the nations and peoples of Africa, the Caribbean
and Latin America. He also is co-chair of the anti-war coalition,
United for Peace and Justice (www.unitedforpeace.org).
He can be reached at bfletcher@transafricaforum.org.
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