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Fri Nov 21 2008
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Columns
Dr. Manning Marable
Reparations and Our Rendezvous with History
November 8, 2001
The twenty-first century truly began-politically, socially, and
psychologically-with two epochal events: the World Conference Against
Racism, held in Durban, South Africa this summer, and the terrorist attacks
of September 11 which destroyed the World Trade Center towers and part of
the Pentagon. These events were directly linked.
At Durban, the Third World, led primarily by African Americans and
African people, attempted to renegotiate their historically unequal and
subordinate relationships with western imperialism and globalized
capitalism. "Reparations" was seen by black delegates at Durban as a
necessary precondition for the socioeconomic development of a black
community in the U.S., as well as for African and Caribbean nation-states.
September 11th was a violent statement by fundamentalist Muslims demanding
an end to American imperialism's economic and political subordinate
relationships throughout the Arab world. Both events symbolized a challenge
to the U.S.'s uncritical support for Israel, and were to some extent
expressions of solidarity with the Palestinians. The aftermath of both
events left the U.S. government more politically isolated from the African
and Islamic worlds than ever before.
Although the traumatic events of September 11 have pushed the black
reparations issue temporarily into the background, the reality is that U.S.
and Western European imperialism ultimately will be forced to acknowledge
the legitimacy and necessity of at least a limited reparations agreement.
U.S. policy makers will attempt to solidify their shaky relationships with
African countries, to separate them from any possible coalition with radial
Islamic states. The price for their diplomatic support may be debt
forgiveness and some kind of financial aid package to assist in development
projects. If African countries are successful in renegotiating their debt
payments, based in part on the history of colonial exploitation and slavery,
black reparations in the U.S. becomes more likely.
The most difficult challenge in winning the public relations debate
over black reparations inside the United States is that of persuading
African Americans to believe that reparations can be won. Black people, in
a racist society, must constantly struggle to free themselves from cultural
domination and psychological dependency, in order to acquire the belief in
their own capacity to create social change. The quest for power begins
first in one's mind. You cannot become free, unless you begin to think like
a free woman or man.
Indeed, this was Malcolm X's greatest insight and gift to future
generations of African-American people: he changed the way black people
thought about themselves. Malcolm moved us from being the footnotes in
someone else's history, to becoming the key actors in the making of new
history. Instead of singing someone else's song, we discovered the beauty
of our own voices. Reparations thus becomes a way for us to challenge and
to subvert the master narrative of white capitalist America, and to testify
to the truth of our own history.
During colonialism, slavery and segregation, people of African
descent were diverted forcibly into the history of another people. To
reclaim our birthright, we must emotionally and historically return to the
sites of the original crimes, and to speak on behalf of the victims who
perished so long ago. Can we empower ourselves to bear witness on their
behalf, to "speak truth to power," to tell their untold stories embedded in
fractured, fragmented memories long past?
History is more than a simple record of the past; it is the prologue
to the future. When we return to the source of our own history, we unlock
new doors to finding our own identity. We can begin to imagine ourselves in
new and exciting ways, as architects and builders of a new history, the
tellers of stories not yet written, of great accomplishments and discoveries
still distant from our view. I think Malcolm X really understood this.
This partially explains the fierce loyalty and intense identification that
African Americans still feel about Malcolm. One of my students several
years ago explained the difference between how many black folk perceive
Martin vs. Malcolm in this way: "Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., belongs to
the entire world, but Malcolm X belongs to us."
Black reparations "belongs to us" in a similar way. "Reparations"
means "to repair," to "make whole again." The "double consciousness" of
Americans of African descent first described by W.E.B. Du Bois, the age-old
chasm between our identification with this country and our cultural affinity
towards the black diaspora and Africa, cannot be bridged until there is a
final rendezvous with our own history.
This is why, ultimately, that the demand for black reparations is
not fundamentally about the money. The rape victim does not press charges,
and go to court, simply to receive financial compensation. The rape victim
desires and demands that the truth should be told about the crime. The
Jewish survivors and their descendants of the Holocaust in Europe during
World War II, and the Armenian people who experienced mass genocide under
the Turkish Ottoman Empire in World War I, are not motivated primarily by
financial restitution. Victims want the public record to reflect what
actually happened.
Oppressed people live their lives in a kind of state-imposed
traumatic existence, when the criminality and violence hurled against us is
rarely acknowledged. We are presented to the world by our racist oppressors
as being a people outside of history, devoid of a past of any consequence.
To heal the effects of trauma, our stories must be told and retold. The
oppressed thus perceive themselves in a new and liberating way. They can
now, at long last, become actors and exercise agency at the vanguard of a
new history. The divided double consciousness becomes a greater, critical
and truer consciousness, creating the capacity to speak with clarity and
confidence about oneself and the totality of society. As Du Bois wrote in
1903: "the history of the American Negro is the history of this strife-this
longing to attain self-conscious manhood, to merge his double self into a
better and truer self."
At the recent United Nations World Conference Against Racism, these
same points were made, in different ways, by many representatives from the
Third World. The brilliant international attorney and former Foreign
Minister of Jamaica, the Honorable Dudley Thompson, explained to hundreds
attending the reparations plenary session: "Reparations is not about asking
for money. You can't pay me for your raping my grandmother. You cannot
compensate me for lynching my father. What we demand is the restitution of
our human dignity, the restoration of full equality, politically, socially
and economically, between the oppressors and the oppressed."
Harvard University law professor Charles Ogletree, a key theorist
and organizer in the United States on behalf of black reparations also made
clear the linkage between the past and the present at the Durban Conference.
Ogletree reminded delegates that there were "millions of Africans today
languishing in unmarked graves at the bottom of the Atlantic Ocean, and for
whom reparations is a final vindication." Ogletree also predicted: "This
is a movement that cannot be stopped. There are no plaintiffs that will not
be considered. I promise that we will see reparations in our lifetime."
At the Durban Conference, the official U.S. position was that the
enslavement of millions of African people was not "a crime against
humanity." Around the same time as the conference, President Bush's
National Security Adviser Condoleeza Rice stated to the press that "in order
for us to get along" in America's diverse society today, that some of us
"will have to forget" about what happened in the past.
Should Condoleeza Rice, an African-American woman who was raised in
Birmingham, Alabama, who was brought up when four little black girls were
murdered by the bombing of the Sixteenth Street Baptist Church in September
1963-forget? We dishonor those who died, and disgrace ourselves, by
distancing ourselves from the victims of past racist atrocities. They
perished in our behalf, to realize the deferred dream of freedom. Can we
deny their voices to history and to our collective memory?
There's a memorable line from "The Godfather" that's used several
times in the film: "It's not personal, it's strictly business." By the end
of the film, however, we learn that the business of life and death is always
profoundly personal. So when I speak about my great-grandfather, Morris
Marable, who was sold on an auction block in West Point, Georgia in 1854,
for the sum of five hundred dollars, I say that this may have been a legal
business transaction at that time, but I take it personal. When my
grandfather was denied his Constitutional right to vote on Election Day in
the Jim Crow state of Alabama for decades, I take it personal. When my son
Joshua is racially-profiled by police officers, stopped and frisked when he
leaves downtown shops and suburban malls, I take it personal.
Reparations helps us to understand the long-term effects of racial
deficits, the historically constructed accumulated disadvantages, that
restrict and retard black advancement today. The business of the U.S. state
for centuries was to preserve, protect and defend white supremacy as the
central organizing principle determining access to political participation
and power. It was for white racists at that time "strictly business," but
the black reparations struggle makes it "personal" for all of us.
The future beckons ahead as "an undiscovered country." History and
culture are the essential navigator's tools in charting our sojourn from the
present toward that undiscovered country lying just beyond our imaginations.
And in the words of the famous song from the 1960 Freedom Movement, "Ain't
gonna let nobody turn us around."
Dr. Manning Marable is Professor of History and Political Science, and the
Director of the Institute for Research in African-American Studies at
Columbia University in New York. "Along the Color Line" is distributed free
of charge to over 350 publications throughout the U.S. and internationally.
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Don't forget to check out articles from 2007 and 2008 
Dr. Manning Marable
"The Failure of U.S. Foreign Policies" November 9, 2001
"Reparations and Our Rendezvous with History" November 8, 2001
"Terrorism and the Struggle for Peace -- Part Three of Three" September 30, 2001
"Terrorism and the Struggle for Peace -- Part Two of Three" September 29, 2001
"Terrorism and the Struggle for Peace -- Part One of Three" September 29, 2001
"How Capitalism Underdeveloped Black America Updated Edition Now" February 2, 2001
"Stealing the election: The compromises of 1876 and 2000" January 23, 2001
Read Articles by Year: 2007 2006 2005 2004 2003 2002 2001 2000

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