Jared A. Ball and VOXUNION MEDIA/VOXUNION.COM
Still Speaking: An Intellectual History of Dr. John Henrik Clarke
Jared A. Ball 1999
Africana Studies and Research Center
Cornell University
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An Introduction to the Tradition
“You cannot oppress a consciously historical people…{African} Deep thought is a
weapon in the war for liberation…” -John Henrik Clarke
“The Lord shall raise up coloured historians in succeeding generations, to present the
crimes of this nation to the then gazing world…” -David Walker
From the inception of the European trade in enslaved Africans there has been an
attempt on the part of Europeans and their supporters to rewrite the history of African
people to support and justify their endeavors. Conversely there has been an attempt by
Africans to reclaim and defend themselves against such fallacious attacks on their history
and consciousness. For centuries African people throughout the world have sought to
establish an accurate history that can then become a source of liberation. This move to
make history work for the liberation of African and world people has become an African
tradition and as such will be a focus of this thesis. Furthermore, it is to be maintained that
no thought today from any contemporary scholar, African or otherwise, can be seen as
complete without referencing this tradition.
Today, despite his transition into eternity in 1998, John Henrik Clarke stands as a
keeper and advancer of an African-centered academic/activist tradition that is
simultaneously old, new and ever-developing. Clarke’s legacy is his adherence to, and
furtherance of, a tradition of African-centered scholarship, work, thought and
organization that he employed for self-improvement, the improvement of the conditions
of the African diaspora and ultimately the improvement of all humanity. Through the
example of the life of John Henrik Clarke this thesis will seek to illustrate what will
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simply be referred to throughout as the “tradition” that has and must continue to be
referenced for the advancement and development of African people and the world.
This tradition can be broken down into the following four categories. These
categories are themselves arbitrary but will serve only to explore the tradition succinctly
and with ease for the purpose of a relatively short thesis. First and foremost, the tradition
requires a pan-Africanist outlook, or recognition of the unity among all the world’s
African people through common origin, cultural similarity, and common problem. As
Clarke has said, “this {pan-Africanist} perspective defines that all Black people are
African people and rejects the division of African peoples by geographical locations
based on colonialist spheres of influence.”1 As Ronald Walters explains pan-Africanism
began as European imperialism and commerce brought about the movement of enslaved
Africans around the world, thus creating an African diaspora.2 Furthermore, the
previously mentioned European “trade” (a term that should be questioned considering
there was more theft and kidnapping than trade) in enslaved Africans made pan-
Africanist thought, in the words of Tony Martin, “inevitable.”3 Also included here is an
understanding, to some degree, of a need for self-determined nationalist thought in
advancing the freedom of African people.
1 John Henrik Clarke, “The African Heritage Studies Association (AHSA): Some Notes on the Conflict with the African Studies Association (ASA) and the Fight to Reclaim African History,” Issue: A Quarterly Journal of Africanist Opinion Volume VI, Numbers 2/3, Summer/Fall (1976), 8. 2 Ronald Walters, Pan-Africanism, 1 (?). 3 Tony Martin, The Pan-African Connection, vii. It is also important to note that Kwame Toure, speaking in 1996 in New York to the Patrice Lumumba Coalition explained the natural evolutionary path, which Africa was on prior to European interruption in the 15th century, was naturally pan-African. His belief was that the African continent was to be the first unified continent in the world and would have been had they not been interfered with. In other words, enslavement or not, Africa was to be one and will be. The only difference now, since the European interference, is that only revolutionary action will put Africa back on course, but again, according to Toure, this is predetermined to happen by evolutionary, natural progression and will happen regardless.
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Secondly, the tradition places an emphasis on self-teaching, study group and
activist work. This means there is an emphasis within this tradition of not relying on
European/American dominated institutions of education to provide Africans with the
required knowledge for liberation. In fact, because it is expected that “the oppressor will
not give the oppressed the tools they need to free themselves,” study groups and
involvement in outside organizations becomes a powerful tool for the dissemination of
the tradition to the African community.
Thirdly, important to the tradition, is an understanding of the antiquity of African
civilization, societal structure and philosophy. This means, in short, that Africans must
consider in their analysis of contemporary African struggles what Africa produced in
terms of civilization, thought and societal mores that can be referenced today. Those in
the tradition must acquaint themselves with the long-standing global African struggle to
find ways outside of the ideas that originate within the dominant group to recover their
lost glory.
Finally, the tradition holds in high regard the lost art of book collecting and book
referral during discussions, debates, lectures and writings. This has become important to
the tradition as it has been realized that an attempt must be made by those in power who
would suppress information which means a need for some to stockpile and save the
tradition in the form of writing from being lost forever. It has also become a viable tool
for instruction that those in the tradition, whether in book or lecture, refer their audience
to selected books so that their audience can interact with the information directly for
themselves. This is valuable because it decreases the distance between “scholar” and
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“community” and allows for the tradition to do its job, that is increase the awareness and
consciousness of those who engage it.
As Clarke noted in the opening statement, those with a historical consciousness
cannot be oppressed. The origins of the need to recreate consciousness and history are
found in the rise of Europe and their desire for land, labor and resources. The use of
history as a means to justify this reality is a political maneuver that has results in an
assault not only on historical knowledge but also the consciousness of those Europe has
sought to exploit. Therefore, the tradition seeks to be more than a rewriting of history but
to recreate African consciousness.
A people’s actions are always determined by their consciousness so if a people
mean to be free they must be conscious of the nature of their oppression and a vision of
freedom. Assata Shakur has said when asked about freedom that she does not know how
it feels to be free because she is acutely aware of never having been, but that she can
offer what her “visions” of freedom are.4 She is expressing a consciousness that many
Africans have lost; the realization of being unfree and what actual freedom would look
and feel like. This connotes an understanding of what is necessary to actualize freedom.
Discussing the important link between historical consciousness and action, Amos Wilson
explains that:
The psychology, consciousness and behavioral tendencies of individuals and societies are to a very significant extent the products of their personal and collective histories… to manipulate history is to manipulate consciousness; to manipulate consciousness is to manipulate possibilities; and to manipulate possibilities is to manipulate power… Eurocentric historiography is the most formidable ally of White racism and imperialism.5
4 Assata Shakur, interview with Common, Like Water For Chocolate, Common CD, track 15.
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And ultimately, this is what is at stake. Europe embarked on the trade in enslaved
Africans to increase its own power that required destruction of African consciousness to
ease the process. Therefore, if this is ever to be reversed historical consciousness must be
achieved and this has been the role of the tradition in its many forms and stages for
hundreds of years. Clarke’s recognition of this allowed him to place paramount
importance on each tenet of the tradition allowing it to inform his consciousness and
subsequently his conclusions and solutions.
It is with the utmost sincerity and respect to those who have come before that the
reader is asked to consider the times and conditions certain Africans were/are in that
prevented and prevents them from exhibiting each aspect of the tradition in her/his life
and work. Though it is not a primary point of this work to argue or defend the tradition
against other ideologies, beliefs, practices, etc. or to exalt the tradition as being without
flaw, it is believed that this tradition ultimately provides the best solutions for the plight
of humankind. It is believed that the tradition, once given room to breathe, speaks for
itself. Once given said room this tradition, properly put to use, considers all aspects of
African and world struggle and makes room for all theories as they apply and can be used
by the tradition which gives it the necessary power to be so liberating.
The tradition as it was passed to Clarke enabled him to employ and further an
African-centered paradigm, frame of reference or perspective for the study and
interpretation of phenomena that as Ayele Bekerie says, recognizes “the need to look at
Africa’s cultures and history from their own centers or locations.”6 That is Clarke
5 Amos Wilson, The Falsification of Afrikan Consciousness: Eurocentric History, Psychiatry and the Politics of White Supremacy, p.1-2. 6 Ayele Bekerie, “The Four Corners of a Circle: Afrocentricity as a Model of Synthesis,” Journal of Black Studies December (1994), 131.
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borrowed from and built upon a tradition that allowed him to develop a paradigm that as
authors of African Americans and the American Political System explain is necessary to
develop:
A set of general assumptions about the nature of the subject or experience being investigated, what concepts or categories of analysis are the most useful for understanding it, what level of analysis should be adopted, and what questions should be answered in order to develop the most useful understanding of that which is being investigated.7
Formulating and employing a paradigm that performs such tasks is necessary for the
proper understanding of the true relationship people have both to one another and their
universal surroundings. This, as Wilson suggests, is itself necessary in order for people
to perform the proper actions needed for freedom from economic, political and spiritual
domination.
This thesis cannot be expected to be exhaustive in its analysis or research.
However, it is the intention of this work to assist in the reviving, memorializing and
implementing the tradition that cannot be forgotten or overlooked if Africans or humans
in general are to ever be truly free. Though this analysis will focus primarily on the
tradition as it was passed to Clarke during his early days in Harlem, a brief historical
sketch of some pre-Harlem, in fact pre-American, history figures who Jacob Carruthers
calls the “Pioneer African Thinkers,” and who Leronne Bennett, Jr. refers to as “The
Black Founding Fathers,” of the tradition’s primary aspect, pan-Africanist thought.8
These thinkers, mostly from the mid to late 18th century, began to formulate a pan-
7 Lucius J. Barker, Mack H. Jones, Katherine Tate, African Americans and the American Political System (New Jersey: Prentice-Hall, Inc. 1999) 5. 8 Jacob Carruthers, comment made during his 12/8/00 lecture at the mid-Atlantic regional ASCAC conference in Baltimore, Maryland. Also, Leronne Bennett, Jr., The Shaping of Black America, 113-145.
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Africanist thought that would later influence and help shape the tradition as it would be
passed along to and through John Henrik Clarke.
Parenthetically, if there ever was a time when the tradition was entirely out of use
it can only be said to have occurred during the first century or so of African enslavement
in North America. That is, there is enough evidence of at least the pan-Africanist tenet of
the tradition, in the African enslavement in the Caribbean where familial groups of
Africans were kept intact in greater numbers. The cases of the early Maroon societies,
and the establishment of Bayia and Palmares as African societies made up of various
groups of Africans attest to the existence of pan-Africanist thought. However, in North
America this was, for the most part, not the case. This is certainly not to imply an
acceptance of enslavement or docility among those enslaved. It is known that struggle
among Africans brought to the “New World” was constant and in varied form beginning
as early as 1503 in Hispaniola when Africans were known to work with indigenous
peoples for freedom. Similarly, it is understood that in North America the first sizable
revolt against enslavement was recorded in 17129, where most assuredly these were
Africans of different ethnic groups thus making it a pan-African effort. It is only to say
that if there was a break in the primary aspect of the tradition it was most likely a result of
Africans needing enough time to adjust to this variation of their enslavement and then to
organize under some form of pan-Africanism.
The other aspects of the tradition are listed in what could only be expected to be
the proper chronological order. That is, though an understanding of the sameness of the
global African struggle is paramount, only through efforts of small group and self-
teaching could enslaved and oppressed Africans begin to learn and pass along the history
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of Africa’s antiquity or begin to make space for themselves to begin the collection of
books, etc. This is how the tradition builds and is spread, each generation pushing it
along to be built upon by subsequent generations.
The purpose of this introduction was not only defining the tradition of which this
work speaks, but to illustrate the early beginnings and the antiquity of it. John Henrik
Clarke would become a faithful follower of this tradition and as he acknowledged,
without it none of the thought or actions of modern-day scholar/activists would be
possible. The tradition is designed for expansion and development in order to combat an
oppression, a “slavery,” as Clarke would say, that has never ended but only evolved.
John Henrik Clarke would learn from and then incorporate these and other
pioneers into an African-centered package based on this tradition for the purpose of
export into the African world community. His final teachings and writings, as will be
discussed, were formed on the basis of this tradition and a lifetime of experience and
learning. Chapter one will focus on those who have been deemed the “founding fathers”
of the tradition and the varied ways they expressed aspects of the tradition. Chapter two
will discuss the dominant American and global trends that affected the radicalism that
would advance the tradition to where it was at the time of Clarke’s birth.
Chapter three will give us a look at the rise of Harlem as an African “Mecca” and
center for African radicalism. Chapter four will explore Clarke’s birth, early awareness
of a connection to African people and his initiation into the tradition during his years in
Harlem. Here we will show the forms in which the tradition manifested itself during the
various movements of the times. Chapter five will follow the tradition as it is passed
9 Howard Zinn, p.32, 35.
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through Clarke during the years of the Civil Rights and Black Power movements, his
work with HARYOU, Freedomways magazine, AHSA, etc.
Chapter six will discuss the tradition as it is institutionalized during the Black
Studies push where Clarke takes on positions at Hunter College and Cornell. Chapter
seven will explore some contemporary manifestations of the tradition, through AHSA,
ASCAC, etc. It will also discuss Clarke’s legacy and influence on modern scholarship,
teaching and activism.
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Chapter One: African “Founding Fathers”: The Tradition Begins
“The 19th century needs to be studied… the consciousness among Africans was never higher… their use of the term African in all of their organizations’ names is but a
sign…”10 -John Henrik Clarke
“The fifty-year span between 1787and 1837… was perhaps the most important in the history of black America. It was during this period that black pioneers took the first
wavering steps into the unknown by grafting Western political and social forms onto the conscious and unconscious body of the African legacy. It was during this period that
black pioneers created the first permanent African-American institutions and articulated the issues which would give a special tone and texture to Africans in America.”11
-Lerone Bennett, Jr.
We shall begin our exploration here, within this fifty-year period spoken of by Lerone Bennett. These are the years that those in the tradition, including Clarke himself, look to as the origins of their own thought and struggle. These founders of the tradition, though they varied in thought from each other and from the tradition as it has been explained,
laid the basis from which the tradition was allowed to flourish.
“Throw away the image of the god of the whites who has so often brought down our tears
and listen to the liberty which speak in all our hearts.”12 -Bookman Dutty
The words spoken by Bookman Dutty inspired and launched the single most
influential event that brought this tradition into full swing, the Haitian Revolution in
1791. This momentous event inspired and awoke enslaved Africans throughout the
Americas. When Bookman Dutty inspired his sisters and brothers leading them into war
against their European captors the world took notice. Though not alone, this event
represented an inspiration to both enslaved and free alike and ushered in a new wave of
10 John Henrik Clarke, Malcolm X and the Radical Ministry,” audio tape. 11 Lerone Bennett, Jr., The Shaping of Black America, 114. 12 Jacob Carruthers, Intellectual Warfare, Chicago: Third World Press, 1999, 3.
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pan-Africanist thought that would itself become an instrument of empowerment to future
generations.13
The power of this event in both upsetting the European and inspiring the African
can be understood from one paragraph of C.L.R. James’ seminal work on the subject. He
writes:
In 1789 the French West Indian colony of San Domingo (Haiti) supplied two- thirds of the overseas trade of France and was the greatest individual market for the European slave-trade. It was an integral part of the economic life of the age, the greatest colony in the world, the pride of France, and the envy of every other imperialist nation. The whole structure rested on the labor of half-a-million slaves.14
From this statement alone it is clearly seen how the world would respond to the
overthrow of the “greatest colony in the world.”
Certainly, by the end of the twelve year long revolution, the revolution had the
world’s attention. The world either witnessed, heard through news or word-of-mouth of
an African revolution that began with the conquering of “the local whites and the soldiers
of the French monarchy, a Spanish invasion, {and} a British expedition.” It then
culminated in the “defeat of Bonaparte’s expedition in 1803” which resulted in the
establishment of an African state known as Haiti.15 These reverberations also reached the
enslaved and oppressed African community in what was now called the United States of
America.
13 One example includes Carter G. Woodson-“Noting his approval of Haitian folklore, Carter Woodson concluded that the distinctiveness of black diaspora cultures ‘shows how absurd it is for Dr. Robert E. Park and the innocent Negroes who have been trained under him to contend that the Negro who was brought from Africa to America has retained nothing but his temperament.’” –taken from Kevin K. Gaines, Uplifting the Race, p.257. 14 C.L.R. James, The Black Jacobins, ix. 15 James, ix.
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Many of those who would lay the foundation of the first and second aspects of the
tradition, pan-Africanism and the antiquity of African civilization and thought, were
simultaneously influenced by the revolution in Haiti and European/American thought
particularly as it was propagated through Christianity. According to Rosalind Cobb
Wiggins, prior to the 1730s most Africans in America were not Christians. It was not
until the “Great Awakening” of the 1740s that not only European Americans but Africans
held in various forms of bondage (certainly so-called “free” Africans during these times
were in such a state of precariousness that such a term would hardly apply) came fully
into the church.16 In fact, after 1776 the unified states began passing legislation that used
taxation as a means to enforce the teaching of Christianity.17
According to Wiggins it was not until the beginning of the 19th century that
Africans in America began realizing that there was a difference between the espoused
ideology of the Declaration of Independence and the treatment of African people. She
notes that while the relations between European Americans and Africans in America
deteriorated Africans found this as a means for unification. 18 However, there is much
evidence to the contrary, that is, that African people realized their relationship to this
nation far earlier and began to find ways to resist that would later culminate into the
tradition of which this work speaks.
In three of the first five chapters of his book on United States history, Howard
Zinn offers another view on the development of an African understanding of their
relationship with America. With chapter titles such as “Drawing the Color Line,”
“Tyranny is Tyranny,” and “A Kind of Revolution,” Zinn makes several points. Among
16 Rosalind Cobb Wiggins, Captain Paul Cuffe’s Logs and Letters, 1808-1817, p.20. 17 Howard Zinn, A People’s History of the United States: 1492 to the Present, p.82-83.
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them, that the separation of Africans from the European community was made based on
skin color and enforced by harsher treatment and punishment. This separation began
early in the 17th century with the realization that Africans often found non-African allies
in a desire to be free that included Native Americans and indentured Europeans.
Europeans were given access to White privilege that most readily accepted, and that the
so-called Revolution against Britain was false and orchestrated by those who sought to
benefit most in terms of land and wealth from the removal of the colonial British.
In other words, what Zinn explains is that what was seen as a positive and hope-
inspiring revolution for European Americans only increased the skepticism and
awareness of hypocrisy among the African population. As Lerone Bennett explains, “a
man in love in the presence of the beloved does not live the same time as a man in prison
in the hands of the torturer.”19 Those living this time in the prison of enslavement and the
physical and spiritual torture of bondage and denigration began seeing each other as
members of a united group suffering in unified fashion with against a united enemy. This
consciousness led to specific forms of pan-African and nationalist action.
Realizing that the “color line” had been drawn Africans began to act accordingly.
Among the earliest and best-known examples of pan-Africanist thought is that of Prince
Hall (1748-?). After his birth in Barbados Hall found himself in Boston witnessing the
emergence of a new country. During the mid to late 18th century Boston was the
American center of not only the American movement against the British but also the
trade in enslaved Africans. Hall took quick notice to this and began to find ways of
combating this blatant hypocrisy. Hall, like most Africans of the times, recognized the
18 Wiggins, p.26-27. 19 Bennett, Shaping, 114.
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purpose of European American missions; the pacification and preparation for an
oppressed life. After enlisting and fighting against the British in the Revolutionary War,
Hall led the wave of post-war reaction to the betrayal of the ideals espoused during the
war, “freedom, liberty and justice for all.”20
For Hall this post-war reaction to betrayal culminated in his establishing African
Lodge No.1 for men of African descent on July 3rd, 1776, one day before the American
claim to independence. In 1797 Hall, solidly in the tradition and inspired by the Haitian
revolution, called upon the members of his African Lodge of Masons, openly connecting
them “to the wisdom of ancient Ethiopia {as well as} the inspiring action of the Haitian
Revolutionaries,” to liberate their fellow enslaved Africans.21 Clarke, speaking of Hall,
had this to say, “{he} came to the United States and built the first Masonic order but did
not call it that because it wasn’t about socializing and uplift. It was about social uplift; it
was about trying to free the slaves still not free, so he called it the African Lodge.”22 Hall
had found the tradition. After being refused entrance into White masonry he founded his
own lodge which allowed for a small group of largely self-taught Africans to act upon
their pan-Africanist ideology to attempt to free fellow enslaved African people.
Though, Prince Hall as a Mason incorporated and reorganized ancient African
thought, others, in what Kevin Gaines calls the “nationalistic circle of intellectuals,”23
had European/American and/or Christian values at the center of their belief systems.
This group includes such African leaders as the Quaker Paul Cuffe, Richard Allen, David
Walker, Martin Delany, Edward Wilmot Blyden and Alexander Crummell. They are
20 The theme of post-war radicalism is identical to that felt after WWI and WWII. 21 Jacob Carruthers, Mdw Ntr: Divine Speech,” p.16. 22 Clarke, Notes, p.16. 23 Gaines, 103.
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also often said to have begun yet another tradition (as opposed to “the” tradition being
discussed here) that used European and/or Christian values to work for a global African
community. Regardless to what degree these people represented the large African
community’s acceptance of European/America values and ideals, they ultimately must be
and are recognized by the tradition as pioneers.
Despite being said to have based many of his opinions in the value systems of
White America, Paul Cuffe (1759-1817), became one of the earliest in the tradition of
pan-African organization. Cuffe, a relatively wealthy man of both African and European
ancestry, is considered to be the first leader of a Black nationalist movement to begin an
African return to the continent.24 Laying a foundation as an “intellectual antecedent”25 to
both the 19th century genius of David Walker and the 20th century efforts of Marcus
Garvey, Cuffe financed (with his own money) the 1816 oceanic trek aboard his Traveler
of thirty-eight Africans to Freetown, Sierra Leone. As a response by European America
to the efforts of people like Cuffe and certainly later the triumvirate of early 19th century
African revolutionaries Nat Turner, Gabriel Prosser and Denmark Vesey, “the American
Colonization Society was an organized fact.”26 That is that European Americans, fearing
both reprisal and revolution as had been seen in Haiti, paradoxically supported pan-
Africanist movements and organized this colonization society to rid themselves of “free”
Africans in the hopes that this would end their influence on or attempts to aid their
enslaved sisters and brothers.
24 Sheldon H. Harris, Paul Cuffe: Black America & the African Return, 13. 25 John Henrik Clarke, Notes, 189. Also, it is to be noted that the triumvirate of Turner, Prosser and Vesey, though not receiving proper attention here are deeply responsible for the movement of the tradition and the development of pan-African ideals. They efforts were not only heroic but inspired the efforts of those who were both their contemporaries and traditional descendants. 26 Clarke, Notes, 189.
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There was much to be concerned about too. Wiggins notes that “there were
networks among free blacks,” that was used to aid the efforts of Paul Cuffe in organizing
his emigration plans and later by David Walker to spread his Appeal. This network as
Prince Hall must have used included “black Masonic orders…” and as Richard Allen and
Absalom Jones used, “black churches…” and for Cuffe was included “black merchants
and white supporters of which Cuffe writes… all demonstrating the existence of such a
network.”27 Not mentioned by Wiggins is the network established among those still
enslaved that assisted the attempts by Turner, Prosser, Vesey, Harriet Tubman, John
Brown and others. This network was as powerful, if not more so, in arousing the fears
among European Americans that led to the establishment of colonization societies,
militias, etc. all meant to suppress African freedom.
Richard Allen (1760-?) is said to be “the first ‘leader’ to vindicate his people as
responsible human beings capable of acting with dignity and purpose in their struggle for
human rights.”28 He, like his eventual partner Absalom Jones, was a one time enslaved
African who once freed embarked on a long career of using European, Christian,
Methodist values as a tool to improve the lot of his people. This career culminated in the
establishment of the Free African Society and the creation of the “first independent black
church in the United States- the African Methodist Episcopal Church”29 and the “first
mass demonstration in black American history.”30 Established in 1787 by Allen and
Jones, two formerly enslaved Africans now free, this society was dedicated to meeting
the needs of Philadelphia’s suffering African community.
27 Wiggins, 33. 28 Marcia M. Mathews, Richard Allen, 9. 29 Clarke, Notes, 66. 30 Bennett, 123.
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Reeling from extremely poor living conditions and an outbreak of disease
Africans in Philadelphia were suffering. The Society and AME church, which were more
than religious organizations, began addressing the needs of this African community.
They aided the sick, were community centers, at times hideouts for escaped Africans and
was the forerunner to a cornerstone of African business ventures; an insurance company.
They sought to alleviate the suffering of African people living in a nation whose claims
to equality, freedom and justice were recognized as not applying to African people.
Despite believing in the espoused, but never practiced ideals of the nascent American
“Revolution,” Allen and Jones used European, Christian and American values in a pan-
African, nationalist way. That is, like Hall, once aware that white supremacy was
dominated both the political and religious life of American society established an African
organization for African people. Allen would say, “Patrick Henry said something about
hanging together or hanging separately. This applies equally to the Africans!”31
Furthermore, the preamble to the Free African Society would echo the pan-
African/nationalist words written nearly two-hundred years later in the preamble to
Malcolm X’s Organization of Afro-American Unity (OAAU). It called for and
recognized itself as a society for the “African race” whose formation and work should be
conducted in unison “without regards to religious tenets” to “support one another in
sickness, and for the benefit of widows and fatherless children.”32 Important also to the
Society was its emphasis on self-determination. “It gave {Africans} a society of their
own, removed from the paternal benevolence of {eve} well-intentioned white people…
31 Mathews, 56. 32 Mathews, 55 (author’s emphasis).
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and for the first time {Africans in America} were organized as a group to help each
other.”33
Among the pioneers of African-centered, pan-Africanist, nationalist thought and
action David Walker (1785-1830) is perhaps the most influential and spoken about to this
day. His Appeal to the Colored Citizens of the World is the most widely loved, argued
and referred to piece of 19th century revolutionary writing. Written and published first in
1828 with a third printing in 1830 this manifesto would influence the movements of Nat
Turner, Malcolm X and contemporary scholars and activists alike. Jacob Carruthers
notes that Walker, like Hall, made an early pan-African connection between the antiquity
of Ethiopia and Egypt to the Haitian revolution to the condition of African people in the
United States and the world.34
Walker’s call for the use of religion as a means to liberate, the call for the use of
violence in the cause of freedom, which as Lerone Bennett says pre-dates Frantz Fanon’s
call for violence in the “colonial context,”35 and the unification under one struggle of all
African people continues to be a challenge to all African people. This challenge has been
sent down through successive generations. As James Turner has noted “Walker’s
presentation was an authentic African-centered discourse on liberation and the essential
human rights of the oppressed…” that shows “an intellectual link” from Walker to Martin
Luther King, Jr. to Malcolm X.36
Again, like Cuffe, Allen and Jones, Walker used his relative political and
economic “freedom” to produce something of liberating value to the large number of his
33 Mathews, 59. 34 Carruthers, Mdw Ntr, 16. 35 Bennett, 135. 36 James Turner, David Walker’s Appeal, introduction, 11.
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oppressed and unfree people. Walker was born “free” and used this relative mobility to
run his own business which allowed him also to publish his own writing. The
aforementioned “network” of Africans and sympathetic European Americans helped to
distribute his Appeal which if found on one enslaved meant severe punishment and/or
death. As for himself, Walker predicted that his own death would come at the hands of
those whose very existence and safety depended upon an uneducated, uninspired and/or
unprepared African population. And he in fact was to suffer a suspicious death shortly
after the publication and spread of his Appeal. Despite all of this arguments still rage
over whether or not Walker could be considered pan-African or nationalist.
However, Walker’s value to the tradition cannot be overstated. Sterling Stuckey
has said that, “{Walker} is the father of black nationalist theory in America because so
much of the substance of that theory is found in his writings.” Similarly, Thabiti Asukile
has said that, “{Walker} expressed many future black nationalist aims and sentiments,
such as the unified struggle for resistance of oppression (slavery), the issue of land
reparations, the concept of people of African descent in America governing themselves,
racial pride, and criticism of American capitalism.”37
However, Walker’s role in the tradition is best summarized by Turner who
explained that:
The enduring value of the Appeal is centered in its conscious African-centered perspective ‘… that organizes itself around a social theory of reality” meant to implement change in the society towards freedom. If Walker had a dictum it would have been that freedom must be actualized by oppressed people themselves, which requires them to assume an independent methodology to analyze their world in order to change it… ‘David Walker’s heirs- both conscious and unconscious- have been legion.’38
37 Both Stuckey and Asulike quotations taken from: Thabiti Asulike, “The All-Embracing Black Nationalist Theories of David Walker’s Appeal,” Black Scholar, v.29, No.4, p.16. 38 Turner, 14.
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Another of the pioneers is Martin Robinson Delany (1812-1885). Delany, a
staunchly proud man whose love for self and claims to having descended from African
royalty marked his pan-African/nationalist actions. Like Prince Hall Delany, refuted by
White Masons, used his Black Masonry to organize Africans in America and to call for a
self-determined effort for liberation. He, Like Paul Cuffe, called for African emigration
but settled on Africa after having first suggested Central or South America. Later he
would himself go to West Africa and engaged in dialogues with African leadership for
the purposes of establishing an African American settlement. Delany is also to be
credited with coining the phrase “Africa for the Africans” in 1861 which was made
popular some eight decades later by Marcus Garvey who himself got it from one of his
mentors Duse Mohammed.39 Frederick Douglass said of a comparison between himself
and Delany that, “I thank God for making me a man simply; but Delany always thanks
him for making him a black man.”40 All of this has allowed for Delany to be considered
the “father of Black Nationalism.”41
Delany in his time made many references to issues still confronting African
America and while not fully adopting all tenets of the tradition left much for subsequent
generations to build from. Delany, like most of the pioneers, still had his roots and
thought based in Eurocentric concepts of religion, history and consciousness. However,
like other pioneers, his recognition of rampant White supremacist thought in and out of
the church and Masonry led to his pan-Africanism/nationalism which allowed him to take
these base beliefs and apply them to the condition of African people. Again, it could not
be expected at that time in history, particularly prior to the full establishment of the
39 Ron Walters, Pan-Africanism, 52. 40 Robert S. Levine, Martin Delany and Frederick Douglass and the Politics of Representative Identity, 6.
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tradition, for an African to have developed the necessary consciousness to forgo entirely
this Eurocentric base for analysis. As Clarke would one day say, “what African of the
19th century had the time” to read or write the voluminous works necessary to fully
develop an African consciousness rooted in African thought based on African societal
organization?42
So, while certainly pan-African and nationalist, Delany would accept European
class structure as being universal, at the same time, recognizing a century earlier what
Kwame Toure and Charles Hamilton would acknowledge, that Africans represent a
“nation within a nation.”43 Delany wrote that:
There have in all ages, in almost every nation, existed a nation within a nation- a people who although forming a part and parcel of the population, yet were from force of circumstances, known by the peculiar position they occupied, forming in restricted part of the body politic of such nations, is also true… such then is the condition of various classes in Europe; yes, nations, for centuries within nations, even without the hope of redemption among those who oppress them. And however unfavorable their condition, there is none more so than that of the colored people of the United States.44 Similarly, while not actually considering the political create and nature of an a-
historical Biblical account of history as would be done by his successors of the tradition,
Delany does seek to apply Biblical teachings to the condition of African people.
Learning Latin and “possibly Greek,” Delany, in the tradition of Hall, Allen, Walker and
others sought out a Biblical solution for his people. For him emigration to either
Central/South America or Africa was for the purpose of establishing a Black Israel.45
This exemplifies what Clarke what say about Africans “misreading the Bible” and
41 Clarke, Notes, 27. 42 John Henrik Clarke, Debate Over the Origins of Western Civilization, 1996. 43 Kwame Toure & Charles Hamilton, Black Power… 44 Martin R. Delany, Condition, Elevation, Emigration & Destiny of the Colored People of the United States, 12-13. 45 Victor Ullman, Martin R. Delany: The Beginnings of Black Nationalism, 6.
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“looking for our history in the mythology of others” that continues to this day and all too
often without the pan-African or nationalist interpretation of Delany.
But like other pioneers, Delany also exemplified the third aspect of the tradition,
that is the recognition of Africa’s antiquity and the relationship between it and Egypt and
Ethiopia. Ullman writes, “there was no doubt in Delany’s mind that ‘Princes shall come
out of Egypt; Ethiopia shall haste to stretch out her hands unto God.”46 In The Origin of
Races and Color Delany took on the task of distinguishing race and color from its
nascent connection to servility and inferiority. As early as 1879 he was seeking to
rewrite a history that to this day remains among the most heatedly contested issues of our
times. Though steeped in Biblical history Delany does note the antiquity of African
civilization and the Black/Africanness of Egypt and Ethiopia, clearly recognizing the two
as being among nations of “pure” African stock.47
Also, interestingly enough, among the issues Delany confronted in his day that
have been passed down to contemporary African American concerns is the issue of
political power and the value of the African vote. Like the modern arguments of a Lani
Guinier Delany was aware of the tendency for racial-bloc voting which denied a racial
“minority” from having any true political or voting power.48 As a forewarning of the
gerrymandering scandals of today Delany explained that while in the North there existed
no Federally appointed Africans due to the poor ratio of Africans to European Americans
he admonished the Africans living in the South not to allow this to happen to them. If
political power was to be based on numerical dominance then Delany said, “{no} small
46 Ullman, 5. 47 Delany, The Origin of Race and Color, 93. 48 See Lani Guinier, Tyranny of the Majority.
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faction {should} control a party discarding the rights of the rest because the great
majority of that party are comprised of people different in race from themselves.”49
Despite Delany’s adherence to certain aspects of Eurocentric thought, he was
acutely aware of the necessity for the second aspect of the tradition. In 1869 he
established his Historical Society as a response to the ideological and intellectual warfare
of the time being waged against African people. As if Delany heard Amos Wilson’s
words of a century-plus later he called for an African control of historical knowledge.
Delany said, that “if we let the Yankees manufacture a history as they do wooden
nutmegs, we shall have of the former about as good an article as they give us of the latter,
and as much like the genuine.”50
Two figures linked by friendship and ideology were Alexander Crummell (1819-
?) and Edward Wilmot Blyden (1832-1912). Blyden is described by Clarke as being the
exemplar of “pan-African thought representing the West Indies, America and
Africa,”51and of the 19th century pioneers these two provide the most tangible links to the
20th century passing of the tradition. Like the other pioneers both men held to
Eurocentric beliefs in Biblical history, though Blyden’s preference for Islam of
Christianity furthered his break with that mold.52 Both were pan-African in their mission
supporting African emigration, but perhaps first, both practiced the fourth aspect of the
tradition being heavily into book collection53 and both would follow Delany’s example
and have direct influence on the 20th century development of historical societies and
clubs.
49 Ullman, 414. 50 Ullman, 404. 51 Clarke, Notes, 50. 52 See Edward Wilmot Blyden, Christianity, Islam and the Negro Race.
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Despite both Blyden and Crummell being strong believers in non-African
religions, Blyden’s preference for Islam is made clear and Crummell was an Episcopal
Reverend, each was able to use their beliefs to empower African people. As with other
pioneers, both men had their visions and interpretations of African history and people
colored by the Eurocentric scholarship of the day. While Blyden would accept, at times,
some frightfully Eurocentric opinions of African history he did recognize that “the mind
of the intelligent Negro child rebels against the description s of the Negro given in
elementary books- geographies, travels and histories.”54
For Crummell’s part, he too took on some quite Eurocentric views of religion and
history. While acknowledging, as other pioneers, the hypocrisy of European American
society, he remained true to the European belief in the supremacy of Christianity. He
supported the Eurocentric notion that African religion was pagan and was defeated by
Christianity due to divine mandate but he also believed that Christianity was taught
improperly, used to socialize Africans to be mere slaves and was thus offered to Africans
as a “Plantation Religion.”55
It is also interesting to note Crummell’s pre- Booker T. Washington, W.E.B.
DuBois disagreement fusion of the diametrically opposed views of the two over self-
sufficiency in industry and the importance of education. He wrote an article “Common
Sense in Common Schooling,” where he supported “industrial training,” in 1891 and six
years later he would be a founding member of the American Negro Academy whose
53 Hollis R. Lynch, Edward Wilmot Blyden, 27. 54 Edward Wilmot Blyden, excerpts from his inaugural speech as president of Liberia College in 1881. Quoted from Clarke, Notes, 57-58. See, however, Blyden’s remarks that African enslavement though more cruel than God had intended did in fact originate out of “divine Providence” and was for “spiritual improvement” and overall “African enlightenment.” Quoted from E.W. Blyden, Christianity, Islam and the Negro Race, 385. 55 Alexander Crummell, Africa and America, 90-94.
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purpose was to “collect evidence and undertake research that would inform, inspire, and
uplift the black race.”56
Both Blyden and Crummell would leave for extended sojourns in Africa during
the 1850s. Crummell would stay for twenty years, 1853-1873, where he would study and
support the settlement of Sierra Leone and Liberia and both men were elected to positions
in the Liberian government. These were nationalistic and pan-African actions. Both
supported an African nation being established and controlled by Africans and both saw
the link between Africans of the continent and of the diaspora, notwithstanding of course
the belief that Africans exposed to the European culture were more prepared for
leadership.
Like Delany before, and those in the tradition after, Blyden called for his people
to begin to reconsider themselves using their own image as a base. This was no doubt an
influence on his friend Crummell’s founding of the American Negro Academy (ANA) in
1897 at the behest of another intellectual giant-in training W.E.B. DuBois. DuBois
would write in tribute to Crummell that upon meeting him he “instinctively bowed before
this man,”57 as if knowing that years later he would ask Crummell to be a part of an
organization that would have rippling effects passing on the tradition.
As Josiah Ulysses Young, III has written, Crummell, despite some questionable
thought and behavior, must be accepted into the pantheon of pioneer elders. True,
Crummell had a disdain for biracial people causing him to leave Liberia, he felt African
enslavement was a first step towards Christian salvation of the African pagan, and was
overall influenced by White supremacist thought, but he must be remembered as “a great
56 Elinor Des Verney Sinnette, Arthur Alfonso Schomburg: Black Bibliophile & Collector, 39. 57 W.E.B. DuBois, Souls of Black Folk, 135.
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misguided ancestor of Pan-Africanist ideology.”58 For, Crummell did leave behind the
ANA which would take its place among those organizations that would influence and
push the tradition forward through small African-run study groups and societies including
the one whose membership would one day include John Henrik Clarke and be renamed
the Blyden Society.
The pioneers of the tradition were not perfect, nor was their coverage or the depth
of interpretation of them offered in this cursory overview. It must be remembered,
however, that they were laying the foundation for work that would be passed on, built
upon and furthered, as any good tradition should be. Most notable is the conspicuous
absence of such men and women as James Forten. Despite being a very successful
businessman his pan-Africanism led him to remark that, “we will never separate
ourselves voluntarily from the slave population in this country, they are our brethren…
and we feel that there is more virtue in suffering privations with them, than fancied
advantages for a season.”59
Samuel Cornish and John Russworm, who published the first African newspaper
in America, Freedom’s Journal which included contributions from David Walker and
Richard Allen among others. In it all the issues in debate then and now were discussed;
struggle, self-defense, consciousness, civil, human and political rights, etc. Others not
given their proper due include: Daniel Cover, Hosea Easton, Maria Stewart, Sojourner
Truth, James McCune Smith, Harriet Tubman, James Holly, Mary Anne Shad and
countless others who were either omitted entirely or glossed over for two reasons. One,
space and time constraints do not here permit more than an “honorable mention” so to
58 Josiah Ulysses Young, III, A Pan-African Theology, p.27-30. 59 Bennett, 133.
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speak. Secondly, the figures explored with any detail in this introduction to the tradition
are the names most readily identified with the tradition in its course through John Henrik
Clarke.
As for the pioneers mentioned, in the case of religion it matters little that these
pioneers, as is said of David Walker, were “{blind} to the importance of religion in
Africa.”60 They challenged the religion of their day to produce the freedom, it claimed it
would, for African people. Though speaking of DuBois and religion, Phil Zuckerman has
found the right words to describe the reality of these African pioneers. He writes that,
“religious life is never a realm unto itself, but is always and everywhere interwoven with
the given social and cultural forces with which it finds itself inevitably enmeshed.”61
Each, in his own way, found a pan-Africanism that linked the struggle of all
African people and each, in his own way, found a means to call upon the African
community to do for self in the face of extreme white supremacist antagonism. This
resistance to the aggressive hatred of the times, which included calls for all out genocidal
destruction of the African community in America during Indiana’s constitutional
convention, generated a consciousness that has yet to be equaled. Clarke’s admitted love
for the struggle of this era comes from the consciousness of epoch that resulted in an
open acceptance of this population as members of the African world. Central to the
tradition being discussed here is this understanding.
An African consciousness extant during the 19th century can be seen in the names
of the organizations created: The Free African Society, the African Methodist Episcopal
Church, the African Friendly Society, Sons of Africa, African Female Band Benevolent
60 Asulike, 21. 61 DuBois on Religion, ed. Phil Zuckerman, 57.
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Society of Bethel, Female African Benevolent, Daughters of Ethiopia, African Abolition
Freehold Society, African Female Anti-Slavery Society and people lived in places like
“Little Africa,” and “New Guinea.” These names reflect a consciousness needed for a
proper understanding of the conflict engaged in and adds to the importance of these
founders in the tradition.
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Chapter Two: A Changing World; the Tradition Responds
The revolution of 1876 was, in fine, a victory for which the South has every right to hang its head. After enslaving the Negro for two and one-half centuries, it turned on his emancipation to beat a beaten man, to trade in slaves, and to kill the defenseless; to break the spirit of the black man and humiliate him into hopelessness; to establish a new dictatorship of property in the South through the color line. It was a triumph of men who in their effort to replace equality with caste and to build inordinate wealth on a foundation of abject poverty have succeeded in killing democracy, art and religion.
-W.E.B. DuBois62
In this chapter we will give a brief description of the dominant trends of the times
leading up to Clarke’s birth; the post-Civil War Reconstruction era, America’s expansionism, the migration North by many Southern Africans and the emergence of two
figures by whom Clarke would be greatly influenced.
The era prior to Clarke’s birth in 1915 was a time of African resistance to a
European-American backlash against Reconstruction and a response to America’s overall
imperial behavior. The “revolution” spoken of by DuBois was an attack on significant
gains newly “freed” Africans would attain immediately following the conclusion of the
Civil War. Two trends prevailed at this time that greatly affected African America. One,
the United States was attempting to establish itself as a world power. This meant
colonization of the Americas and, at home, returning Africans, who had begun to flourish
during post-Civil War Reconstruction, back to infidel laborers. This led to the second
trend, that of Africans resisting this forced return and beginning to build on the efforts of
those in the 19th century to restore a lost humanity. Both of these trends would greatly
affect and influence those who would later greatly affect and influence Clarke.
62 DuBois, Black Reconstruction, p. 707.
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Reconstruction had witnessed a period of African empowerment both politically
and economically, however brief. Africans in America had seized hold of education,
political representation and business development. However, concomitantly, there was
White resistance to such development. In Black Reconstruction in America 1860-1880,
in his chapter “Back Toward Slavery,” W.E.B. DuBois summarizes the fall of the African
during the period of Reconstruction. DuBois explains that a White backlash occurred
largely in response to the need to “reduce black labor as nearly as possible to a condition
of unlimited exploitation.” This would not only allow for the burgeoning of a Southern
capitalist class but would also appease Southern Whites who had just recently witnessed
“their slaves- their most valuable and cherished property- taken away and made free.”63
Though “free,” Africans were now bound to their former places of “employment”
in a variety of ways all meant to secure them as permanent subsistence laborers. Clarke
often recounted this history by explaining the “one more bale” phenomena.64 He would
explain that the former masters would tie Africans to the lands through systems of
peonage and sharecropping always expecting more from African labor at the end of the
year than originally agreed upon. By forcing Africans, by contract or coercion, to buy
tools, seeds, equipment, etc. from their former masters a debt existed that could never be
paid leaving Africans in a vicious cycle of toil for the benefit of another. The end of the
year’s work was perpetually and inevitably insufficient, always leaving African workers
in need of “one more bale.”
63 Ibid., p. 670, 673. 64 Clarke, tape…
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In fact, this reality is further detailed in a chapter by George Groh, which he calls
“One More Bale.”65 Groh uses the period of Reconstruction as a base to discuss the
migrations North by African people, a point to which we shall return. He explains the
conditions that would lead to the migration by describing the random and wanton
violence perpetrated against Africans by White Southerners, the disenfranchisement of
Africans, and the establishment of Black Codes which codified African inferiority.
Further, General Carl Shurz best summarizes the overall sentiment felt by White
Southerners towards their former enslaved Africans in a special report for President
Andrew Johnson. The good General admitted that, “the emancipation of the slave is
submitted to only so far as chattel slavery in the old form could not be kept up.”66
However, America faced yet another problem as the 19th century came to a close,
that of markets. America was desperately short of markets to which to sell its surplus
production. This inability to sell off surplus production led to a recession that hit the
United States in the 1890s thus prompting a desperate need for imperial expansion for the
purpose of procuring overseas consumers. This would strongly affect the Pan-African
nature of African struggle in the United States and abroad as African people around the
world became more immediately involved in the struggle for African liberation.
In 1890, the same year of the American slaughter of Indigenous Peoples at
Wounded Knee, the Census Bureau called an official closing of the “internal frontier”
and began to explore options for further expansion.67 This idea was not necessarily new
as the Monroe Doctrine and the Mexican-American War attest, but other events were
now forcing American capitalism to again branch out. The Berlin Conference of 1884-85
65 George Groh, The Black Migration, 3. 66 Groh, p.9.
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was of no small consequence in affecting American capitalism. The purpose of the
conference was to divide up the continent of Africa, ignoring African sovereignty, to ease
its exploitation by European nations. European nations including, France, Germany,
England, Austria-Hungary, Belgium, Denmark, Spain, Italy, the Netherlands, Portugal,
Russia, Sweden, Norway, Turkey and the United States all convened to peaceably carve
up Africa for themselves.
This provided a temporary calming effect on European domination of Africa and
left America to seek hegemony over the Pacific and Latin America. In fact, during the
period of American Civil War, Reconstruction, and what DuBois calls the “revolution of
1876,” there are at least ten documented accounts of US imperial military campaigns in
these two regions. From Argentina to Japan to China, Nicaragua and even the Ryuku and
Bonin Islands America interfered militarily to secure investment and market space.
As we mentioned earlier, the importance of consciousness cannot be
overestimated and those seeking to oppress understand this. To garner support for
American expansion and capitalist empowerment the moguls of media took to their
typewriters. Just as the Spanish-American war was ready to begin for the purpose of
spreading U.S. business interests into Cuba an article by the Washington Post shows
explicitly the desire to, as Noam Chomsky says, “manufacture consent.” It writes, “A
new consciousness seems to have come upon us- the consciousness of strength- and with
a new appetite, the yearning to show our strength… the taste of Empire is in the mouth of
the people even as the taste of blood in the jungle…”68
67 Zinn, 290. 68 Zinn, 292.
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President Theodore Roosevelt, working with other expansionist politicians and
military officials, also supported imperial efforts. Cuba became a prize to American
business interests and the feeling was that their on-going revolutionary struggle against
the Spanish could not be expected to produce a government that would support American
capitalist dominance. Roosevelt, raising support for U.S. invasion of Cuba, joined the
propaganda development even to the degree of sending copies of Rudyard Kipling’s
poem “White Man’s Burden” to his peers. He noted that Kipling’s work was “poor
poetry, but good sense from the expansionist standpoint.”69
Roosevelt can best be seen in his similarity to another notorious European
expansionist and Roosevelt contemporary, Cecil John Rhodes. As mentioned, at the time
America was looking to increase its vassalage her partner in crime Europe was doing the
same. It was only the temporary organized imperial efforts of Europe and America that
settled on Africa for Europe and the Americas, parts of the Caribbean and the Pacific for
the United States. It was a gentleman’s agreement among scoundrels. Rhodes, carrying
out his duties in Southern Africa and somewhat less like his compatriots in America, was
unabashedly out for European (read White) world dominance. He lamented the 18th
century break between Britain and the U.S. and spoke openly about reconnecting the two
under one White world power.
Rhodes would say, “I contend that we are the first race in the world, and that the
more of the world we inhabit the better it is for the human race.” He continued,
explaining that his life goals were, “the furtherance of the British Empire, for the bringing
of the whole uncivilized world under British rule, for the recovery of the United States,
for the making of the Anglo-Saxon race but one Empire. What a dream! But yet it is
69 Zinn, 292.
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probable. It is possible.”70 Roosevelt, not to be out-done by Rhodes’ white supremacy,
noted himself that America’s unwillingness to annex Hawaii in 1893 was “a crime
against white civilization…” and that “all the great masterful races have been fighting
races.” He further exclaimed that, “no triumph of peace is quite so great as the supreme
triumph of war.”71
Parenthetically, just as the United States employed secret societies in the form of
the Ku Klux Klan, White Citizen Councils and White Leagues to further White
dominance, England used the secret order modeled after the Order of the Jesuits “a
church for the extension of the British Empire.” It is out of this effort that Rhodes sought
to pass this legacy to subsequent generations through his Rhodes Scholarship still in
existence today (whose membership includes a ‘whose who’ of European/American
political and business leadership, including now former President William Jefferson
Clinton). These scholarships were, and are, meant to unite Eurocentric thinkers for the
purpose and furtherance of European world dominance under a “Union of English-
speaking peoples.”72
Similarly, America’s concern over the Cuban revolution against Spain was not
limited to the establishment of a Cuban government unfriendly to U.S. interests. As we
mentioned, just as the Haitian revolution inspired and moved Africans elsewhere into
struggle it struck fear in the hearts and minds of Europeans everywhere. Because of
Cuba’s racial makeup there was a fear that the Cuban revolution would bring about
another Black republic. Winston Churchill wrote that, “two-fifths of the {Cuban}
70 Bernard Magubane, The Making of a Racist State, 102. 71 Zinn, 293. 72 Magubane, 112. See also DuBois, Black Reconstruction, p. 679 for American use of these secret societies.
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insurgents in the field are Negroes. These men… would, in the event of success, demand
a predominant share in the government of the country… the result being, after years of
fighting, another black republic.”73
The mere thought of another Haiti was too much. Enough was enough and
America went into a three month “war” against Spain in 1898 to secure Cuba for itself.
From this “war” with Spain, along with Cuba, came Puerto Rico, the Philippines, Guam
and Hawaii through annexation. So by 1901 80% of Cuba’s mineral exports were
controlled by American corporations, the Teller Amendment which has been passed in
Congress to protect the liberty of the Cuban people was ignored and the new Platt
Amendment was signed assuring American control over Cuban affairs which lasted until
1959. 74
However, the Philippines had its own special role to play in relation to the African
struggle in America. Winning the Philippines from Spain and winning it from the people
were two different things. The struggle for the Philippines would last three years and
illustrated to both the American public at large and the African community in particular
America’s vicious racism. The Filipino people were subjected to the worst forms of
American racism and warfare and their resolve against a much larger and more powerful
military was astonishing. This war also ignited African militancy against America’s
White supremacy and challenged African’s own views on their relationship to the United
States.
Africans conscripted to fight in the Philippines began asking themselves for
whom were they fighting and supporting when even though pressed into service of the
73 Zinn, 296. 74 Zinn, 303.
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United States from 1889-1903 an average of two Africans were lynched at “home” by
“fellow” Americans each week. Some Africans who were enlisted in American military
service deserted and fought for the Filipino people who were seen as fellow non-White
family and a variety of people spoke out in protest of the racism and violence from Henry
McNeal Turner to Mark Twain. 75
Occurring alongside the American movements during post-Reconstruction and
American expansionism was a series of others movements within African America that
had a direct affect on John Henrik Clarke. Though a series of movements they are
generally all considered the Great Migration. That is, these were the movements of a
great many Africans in the Southern United States to the North. Out of these movements
came others; Northern towns became Northern cities and of the two most prominent,
Chicago and New York, the latter would serve as fertile ground for the African struggle
in America.
Clarke tells of his move from Georgia up North in 1933. He describes how he
and a friend left the South and, as hobos, traveled by train first to Chicago and then New
York.76 This would be how he got to New York, the place where Clarke would be trained
in the ways of African and world history, but it was also how many before him came
North and established the community that would then influence him. Carter G.
Woodson, among others, describes the long history of African migration North in A
Century of Negro Migration. Woodson explains that the desire for movement North
began somewhere around 1815 when Northern states began making life, relative to that in
75 Zinn, 308. 76 Barbara Eleanor Adams, JHC: Master Teacher, p.53.
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the South, easy. He also connects this migration to the calls for the abolition of slavery
by Quakers who had made such claims as early as the 1740s.77
However, there are several factors that gave rise to this desire to migrate. Most of
these factors stemmed from a lack of economic opportunity in a South dominated by
racism and a White elite that exploited African labor, which in turn exploited poor White
labor and resulted in brutal assaults on African people. The repressive South, with its
desire to refuse education, also played a role. Africans sought improvement
economically, educationally, as well as, physically. Worldly economic factors and the
boll weevil also assisted Africans in the decision making process to go North. As we
briefly discussed earlier, the calming effect of the Berlin Conference in 1884-85, which
brought intra-European peace in their conquest of Africa, evaporated into World War I.
With the entrance of the United States into this war the cheap labor of the African
was sorely needed in the North. This brought about waves of Africans moving in search
of better opportunities. The issue of African migration before and after America’s
entrance into WWI brought about both internal conflict among Africans debating over the
move, as well as, external conflict as Whites played a tug-of-war over African labor.
African leaders like Booker T. Washington and Frederick Douglass supported Africans
remaining in the South. The former stating that Africans should remain in the South
where there was land and multitudes (“cast down your buckets”) and the latter
exclaiming that Africans should remain for the purposes of political power.78
77 Carter G. Woodson, A Century of Negro Migration, 1, 18. It should also be noted that Woodson seems to give undue credit to both Quakers and the likes of Thomas Jefferson, Patrick Henry and others for sparking a desire not only for freedom but for movements North. He gives little attention, here anyway, to Africans both “free” and enslaved who led these struggles and seems to miss the avarice with which people like Jefferson and in some cases Quakers dealt with African people in thought and practice. 78 Woodson, Migration, 164.
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Southern Whites were torn as well. Poor whites looked gleefully at the flight of
competitive laborers while the elite lamented such a loss because it meant a reduction in
cheap laborers. The latter of course also lost the wedge of race that could be placed
between White and Black laborers thus reducing the overall cost of labor. Similarly, this
fear of the White elite was a response to a loss of a cheap African “labor reservoir.”79
Closer to the American entrance into World War I the Southern White elite grew more
concerned about the flight of African labor. They began running newspaper articles
telling of the awful conditions Africans found themselves in up North, the actual lack of
economic opportunity and an African desire to return South where life was better.
There was also class conflict within the African community that was aroused over
the issue of migration. Woodson explains that there was a class aspect to the migration.
While it is clear that many who left were poor, land-less Africans looking for uplift (in
fact as Woodson explains most Africans who left belonged to the “intelligent laboring
class”80), there was also an African bourgeois that sought improvement. With the fall of
Reconstruction and the all-out assault by Southern Whites against their African
population, African leaders and politicians found their stay to be more precarious.
Deposed political leaders found that they had little tying them to the South, with no
income or political power so they too joined the ranks of those moving North.
Those affluent Africans who had chosen to stay attacked those who left as they
feared a loss of markets, followers and constituency. Kevin Gaines notes that minstrel
images were employed by these Africans seeking to keep people in their pews, theaters,
and voting boxes. He explains that the criticisms from African leadership were “hardly
79 Gaines, Uplifting the Race, p. 88. 80 IBID, 163.
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unique.” This “class was unable to sympathize with destitute or ambitious blacks’ flight
from misery and repression in the rural South.” He goes on to note that this played “into
the hands of mass-media pundits, southern white planters, and northern investors in large-
scale agriculture, who fearing the mass exodus of coerced back farm labor, discouraged
migration.”81
The more affluent Africans of the South, who were initially unhappy with the idea
of leaving a South that had through segregation given them easy access to African
markets that assured relative economic success, did eventually decide to leave.
According to Woodson, these Africans relied on previous investments for income and
gave up economic comfort (that was most likely evaporating as their markets moved
North) for a more politically and socially safe environment in the North. This move also
helped this group of Africans, who through economic gain and a desire for higher
education, became threats to a Southern racial order that frowned on such behavior. This
move gave them a reprieve from the mob brutality that confronted them more regularly in
the South.
Education by itself served to motivate Africans to move North. Educated
Africans, in the aforementioned Southern racial order, were not welcomed leaving them
often in unsafe circumstances. However, their movement North “robbed” the Africans of
“their due share of the talented tenth.”82 Woodson, at the time his work on the migration
was written in 1918, felt that while the talented-tenth of the South went North their
constituency remained in the South leaving them with unfulfilled dreams. This,
Woodson felt, left Northern enlightened Africans to keep their “light under a bushel”
81 Gaines, 89. 82 IBID, 165.
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while those who remained South gave in to that order and fell silent.83 This resulted in no
positive African leadership in the South only those who followed the White Southern
way. As far as the Northern African being forced to hide her/his light we shall see that
this would not necessarily be so. In fact, the pioneers of the 19th century left a foundation
that would allow for subsequent generations of Africans to establish small areas of space
for the propagation of the tradition that would be reflected in the life of John Henrik
Clarke.
At the close of the 19th century there was a mass awakening in America of ethnic
heritage and awareness. The combined events of the 19th century already mentioned,
along with a continued influx of European immigrants resulted people confronting
changing identities. As the pot melted it burned a sense of history into its ingredients.
Elinor Des Verney Sinnette, in her work on Arthur Schomburg writes, “ethnic societies
flourished during the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries when Irish, German,
and Italian-American groups were formed to maintain members’ links with their
European heritage.”84
Africans in America were not to be left out of this movement either. There was a
growing interest in and production of African history that was clearly a holdover from the
efforts of, among others, the pioneers we have mentioned. In 1828 the earliest of these
groups was formed in Philadelphia, it was called the Reading Room Society. In 1834
David Ruggles opened the first African-centered bookstore in New York City paving the
way for future bibliophiles like Schomburg, George Young, Richard B. Moore and
others. Ruggles, it should also be noted, was the editor of America’s first African
83 IBID, 166. 84 Elinor Des Verney Sinnette, Arthur Schomburg, p.39-40.
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magazine, Mirror of Liberty and was said to be “the Father of the Underground
Railroad.”85 This was followed by the formation of the {Benjamin} Banneker Literary
Institute in 1854 and like its predecessor, the Reading Room Society, it required its
members to research, write, present and debate topics on and surrounding African people
and history. Perhaps the former was named not only for a man whose memory is owed
all the credit for the surviving design and layout of the nation’s capital but for a man who
wrote that there should be a position added to government, a Secretary of Peace. This
person would be, “perfectly free from all the Present absurd and vulgar prejudices of
Europeans upon the subject of government.”86 In 1897, just one year after the United
States Supreme Court ruled in Plessy v. Ferguson that segregation was to be the law of
the land and ensuring that Africans would be exempt from federal civil rights law thus
sealing the fate of a time period that Rayford Logan called the “nadir” of Reconstruction
era advancement for African people87, Crummell helped establish an organization that
whose efforts would be felt up through the present. After returning from a twenty-year
sojourn in Africa, and perhaps influenced by a call from Martin Delany in 1869 for the
creation of historical societies, Alexander Crummell helped to found the American Negro
Academy (ANA) in Washington, DC.
As we have mentioned, Crummell though lacking some of the preferred tenets of
the tradition, was among the pioneers who allowed for the tradition to develop and
expand. For after all is said and done Crummell left an organization that would allow for
the flourishing of African radicalism and historical research. The ANA, along with its
sister organization in Philadelphia the American Negro Historical Society also formed in
85 Bennett, 132. 86 Bennett, Shaping, 142.
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1897, was established to “collect evidence and undertake research that would inform,
inspire, and uplift the black race.”88 The ANA was a serious organization with rigorous
enrollment regulations. Membership was kept to “forty persons, ‘men of Science, Letters
and Art, or those distinguished in other walks of life.’”89 At the opening session of the
ANA W.E.B. DuBois, a man who, as mentioned, felt that in the presence of Crummell he
must “bow,” read from his powerful paper “The Conservation of Races” espousing the
necessity of Pan-Africanist thought. He wrote, “the advance guard of the Negro people-
the eight million people of Negro blood in the United States of America- must soon come
to realize that if they are to take their just place in the van of Pan-Negroism, then their
destiny is not absorption by white Americans.” As Ronald Walters notes, this paper and
statement are sensible conclusions reached by DuBois considering they came one year
after publishing his seminal Harvard doctoral thesis on The Suppression of the African
Slave-Trade to the United States of America, 1838-1870.90
Wilson Moses, however, notes that this paper shows a young DuBois trying to
impress Crummell and the ANA by succumbing to some very essentialist notions of race.
ADD MORE FROM MOSES’ BOOK AND DUBOIS’ PRESENTATION TO
THE ANA… PAGES 264-265.
For assistance in forming the ANA Crummell turned to men such as Walter B.
Hayson, graduate of Oberlin College, Kelly Miller a mathematician who taught at
Howard University and was a strong advocate for the creating an African studies program
87 Rayford W. Logan, Betrayal of the Negro… 88 Sinnette, 39. 89 Sinnette, 50. 90 Ronald W. Walters, Pan Africanism in the African Diaspora, 38. Walters uses this DuBois presentation to state that DuBois, despite the claims of others that it was H. Sylvester Williams, popularized the term and concept of Pan-Africanism.
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there, Paul Lawrence Dunbar the poet and creator of the ANA name and John Wesley
Cromwell a formerly enslaved African who graduated from Howard University’s Law
School and was a founder of a local newspaper. Cromwell was also a bibliophile who
wrote The Negro in American History in 1914, eight years earlier than Carter G.
Woodson’s The Negro in Our History.
In 1914, one year prior to the birth of Clarke, Cromwell sponsored the acceptance
of membership into the ANA of both Woodson and the man whose influence on Clarke
was such that his name would be mentioned in nearly every Clarke writing and lecture,
Arthur A. Schomburg. Born in 1874 of a White father and an African mother in Puerto
Rico, Schomburg would later grow to be among the greatest bibliophiles and influences
on those studying African world history. Later called the “Sherlock Holmes of Negro
History” it is also said that, “he was the silent co-author of many volumes” having
provided so much of the necessary research material from a legendary collection of books
garnered over a long life of collection.91 This led J.A. Rogers to say of him that
Schomburg was “a walking encyclopedia.”92
As we have said, the imperial efforts of the United States as the 19th century came
to a close spawned a radicalism and Pan-Africanism that would greatly affect the African
population in America. As America sought to expand those who were to be trampled by
such efforts resisted and these combatants found heirs in the likes of Schomburg. Young
Arthur Schomburg began a political education at an early age by spending much of his
time in Puerto Rico with the tabaqueros (cigar makers) who were the grassroots working-
class scholars of the day. There he met people like Bernardo Vega, a tabaquero and
91 Sinnette, 1,2. 92 Joel A. Rogers, World’s Great Men of Color Volume II, p.452.
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leader of the Puerto Rican independence movement and Socialist Party. In Vega’s
Memoirs he writes of Schomburg as having left the Jesuit school to become and an
autodidact or self-taught man.93
American aggression brought unification among Puerto Rican and Cuban
revolutionaries. Nationalists from both islands together “petitioned in Madrid and
protested at home for independence from colonial subjugation.”94 The Cuban
revolutionary Ramon Betances sought to unite the Cuban and Puerto Rican people saying
that they should “work together as brothers who suffer a common injustice, let us be one
also in the revolution calling for independence of Cuba and Puerto Rico.”95 Betances
while organizing and working for such a reality would become for Schomburg a “father
figure.”96
Among those resisting Spain and America’s colonizing efforts in Puerto Rico
were Flor Baerga and Rafael Serra who, in 1888, found Los Independientes, a social and
political club for those in defense of Puerto Rican independence. Here Schomburg
continued his political education listening to lectures from Baerga and meeting the Cuban
revolutionary and fellow member of Los Independientes Jose Marti.
Like the Africans from the southern United States prior to Schomburg’s birth,
many from Cuba and Puerto Rico would also seek out economic and educational
advances in New York City creating a small Mecca for revolutionaries from those
regions to meet and work together. Schomburg, caught up in this trend, himself went to
New York in 1891. One year later, in 1892, Jose Marti’s newspaper Patria writes that a
93 Sinnette, 9. 94 Sinnette, 15. 95 Sinnette, 16. 96 IBID, 16.
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new club had been formed of Cuban and Puerto Rican revolutionary independence
seekers that had Schomburg as its secretary. While in New York Schomburg also joined
the Prince Hall Lodge of Masons further connecting himself to the tradition that he would
subsequently pass on. Schomburg was fast becoming a first-hand student of revolution
and would soon use that in his source collection, writing, and as we will show, his
teaching of John Henrik Clarke.
However, it was Schomburg’s efforts in the creation and support of historical
societies that formed yet another on the tradition’s links. In 1905 his mentor John
Edward Bruce, or Bruce “grit,” convinced Schomburg to take his love for book collecting
and historical study and join the Men’s Sunday Club. This was an informal club of
informal scholars who would meet at Bruce’s house to discuss issues relating to African
people around the globe. On April 9, 1911 this club was formalized into the Negro
Society for Historical Research. Among the greatest impact this organization would have
was its pan-Africanist orientation being the first such organization to incorporate scholars
of both forma and informal training and from all regions of the African diaspora.97
The year 1900 can be marked as an especially important one for our purposes
here. First, it was during this year that the European/American global imperial efforts
further awakened the worldwide African population to its need to unify. As Clarke has
written, the European/American Berlin Conference in general and Belgium’s treatment of
Africans in the Congo in particular, became “part of the motivation for {Black
Americans} to the early Pan-African Movement.”98 This led leaders like DuBois and
97 Sinnette, 105. 98 Clarke, Notes, 195.
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others to, in 1900 in London, convene the first of several Pan-African Conferences in the
first half of the 20th century.
In addition, 1900 is also important for, two years after the United States had
secured expanded territory with the completion of the Spanish-American War, another of
the links to Clarke and the tradition arrived in New York City. Hubert Henry Harrison,
“The Black Socrates,” was poised to take center stage on the center stage of African
revolutionary thought and action in America, Harlem, USA.
This was the beginnings of the era of the New Negro, or as Leonard Harris has
said, the era of “ethno-genesis,” where Africans began to create a new identity in
opposition to what had been given them by European America.99 As Gaines notes, this
era was greatly influenced by Africans coming from the West Indies of which Harrison
was one.100
Harrison stands as a link between African thought of the diaspora, the burgeoning
New Negro identity movement, the confluence of radical and militant thought crossing
from socialism to Pan-Africanism to nationalism, and the convergence of all of this on
Harlem, “the ideological and cultural center,” for all of these movements. 101 From the
example of Harrison’s life we will be able to see all of the influences that would later be
passed on to John Henrik Clarke upon his arrival to Harlem in 1933.
Harrison’s relative anonymity in the historical record is equaled only by the
admiration he receives from those who did know of him. This is explained well in J.A.
Rogers’ introductory paragraph on the man and his friend. Rogers writes:
That individuals of genuine worth and immense potentialities who dedicated their
99 Leonard Harris, lecture on “Alain Locke: Identity and the New Negro,” audio cassette. 100 Gaines, 234. 101 Portia James, “Hubert Harrison and the New Negro Movement,” 82.
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lives to the advancement of their fellow men are permitted to pass unrecognized and unrewarded from the scene, while others, inferior to them in ability and altruism, receive acclaim, wealth and distinction, is common- yet it never ceases to shock all but the confirmed cynic. Those with a sense of right and wrong, of fitness and incongruity- whether they be wise men or fools- will forever feel that this out not to be.102
Clarke would benefit from a knowledge of Harrison in large part because of his
indoctrination into the tradition by among others, Rogers and John G. Jackson, both of
whom knew and were influenced by Harrison, a point to which we shall return. Jackson,
writing of Harrison, said that the latter was unknown or unheard of because he was a
“champion of unpopular causes.”103 Jackson, quoting from the aforementioned piece on
Harrison by Rogers, says that Harrison overcame the hardships poverty, a family to
support, a “candid tongue, a passion for knowledge; {and} on top of all that, a black
skin,” existing in America. Jackson continues, “surely, a more formidable string of
handicaps would be hard to conceive.”104
Harrison took on his “unpopular causes” in the most grand style of the tradition,
the street corner soap box. A highly educated man with no education at all, Harrison
became the most prominent of Harlem orators. Among those “unpopular causes”
Harrison chose to fight for, the uplift and liberation of oppressed people, a refutation of
organized religion (he, in fact, was an atheist), and he challenged capitalism. As we will
discuss, Clarke’s flirtation with the Socialist and Communist Parties and his subsequent
movement away from them based on their inability to overcome white supremacy had as
a precursor the experiences of Harrison.
102 J.A. Rogers, World’s Great Vol. II, 432. 103 John G. Jackson, Hubert Henry Harrison: The Black Socrates, 2. 104 IBID.
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Harrison was born in St. Croix, in the Danish Virgin Islands, in 1883. Though he
received schooling there (even teaching some), for a brief period of time at the University
of Copenhagen, and later in United States high school, Harrison was in the tradition of
being largely self-taught. Once migrating to New York in 1900 he scored a perfect score
on his Civil Service exam, worked in the post office and then as a freelance journalist.
He later lost this job after writing a series of articles where he was critical of White
America’s favorite African, Booker T. Washington.
In 1909, while DuBois was aiding in the formation of the National Association for
the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), Harrison joined the Socialist Party and
officially entered the world of radical politics. As we will discuss in the next chapter this
move would have a profound effect on the Pan-African struggle taking place in Harlem
that would have global impact for generations to come.
This was the beginning of an era that would have enormous influence over world
struggles. As we have mentioned, the calming effect of the Berlin Conference on
European imperialism failed culminating in World War I. The initial peace that the
Conference provided evaporated and proved unable to prevent Europeans from fighting
one another to control of the richest mineral and natural resource land mass in the world.
As Gaines explains this was the era of “the triumph of Bolshevism in Russia, the
democratic ideals of {the impending} World War I… along with the mass migration of
African Americans cityward {all culminating in the} conditions for more militant ‘New
Negro’ intellectuals and leadership.”105
What we will discuss next chapter are the emergence of Harrison and other
African leaders during this time period, their relationship to a burgeoning Harlem and its
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history, and the groundwork they would lay for the birth and arrival in Harlem of John
Henrik Clarke.
105 Gaines, 234.
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Chapter Three: Harlem
Harlem is indeed the great Mecca for the sightseer, the pleasure-seeker, the curious, the adventurous, the enterprising, the ambitious and the talented of the whole Negro world; for lure of it has reached down to every island of the Carib Sea and has penetrated even into Africa. -James Weldon Johnson106 {Harlem} attracted the African, the West Indian, the Southerner, the Northerner, the man from the city, the man from the town, the student, the businessman, the artist, the writer, and so on. -Clovis Semmes107
Here we will offer a brief history of Harlem, explore the confluence of African radical thought, i.e. Pan-Africanism, nationalism and socialism, and the era into
which John Henrik Clarke would enter Harlem
The Harlem Clarke would meet was not always the center of the African
liberation struggle in America though it most certainly was by the time of his arrival in
1933. It had become home to the African American elite, the intellectuals and artisans,
and was home to America’s most vital and powerful African radical activity. As James
Weldon Johnson was aware, Harlem had a broad attractive quality that attracted African
people from around the globe, including the likes of Arthur Schomburg, Hubert Henry
Harrison and Marcus Garvey. The outcome of Harlem’s lure of such a wide scope of
Africans from America and the diaspora was a meeting of the various trends within
African radical thought, not excluding the influence of European radical thought. In fact,
it is this period, particularly after the Bolshevik Revolution of 1917, that sees the infusion
of European radical thought in the name of socialism into the tradition that had up to this
point been largely pan-Africanist and/or nationalist.
106 Harlem USA, ed. John Henrik Clarke, 12. 107 Clovis Semmes, Cultural Hegemony, 204.
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The three dominant varieties of African struggle extant in Harlem at the time of
Clarke’s arrival were Pan-Africanism, nationalism and socialism. By pan-Africanism we
mean the various movements aimed, as Clinton E. Marsh writes, “toward economic
cooperation, cultural awareness, and international political solidarity among people of
African descent.”108 By nationalism, avoiding the larger and on-going debate over
definition, is meant movements whose goal was the political and economic control over
African communities, already almost entirely separated or segregated, whether or not the
ultimate goal of separate land or nation was expressed or sought.
The three would both unite and fracture African peoples as they sought to
formulate a plan of liberation. These trends would also later become the frame of
reference and methodological tool of John Henrik Clarke. This becomes clear as we will
see that in nearly every lecture and writing over the last twenty or so years of Clarke’s
life he would state emphatically that he was simultaneously a Pan-Africanist, a nationalist
and a socialist and that using all three caused “no contradiction.” This is a direct result of
these three ideologies being the dominant trends in African radical thought as they
coalesced in Harlem in the decade or so before Clarke’s birth and later arrival to New
York. The most prominent thinkers in the African struggle as it took place in Harlem
from DuBois to Harrison, to A. Philip Randolph and Marcus Garvey all focused their
attentions on one or more of these three trends further weaving them into the fabric of
Harlem’s African radical thought tapestry.
However, Harlem’s history was not always that of the African world. It began, as
all the United States and New York City did, as a land of the indigenous or First Nations
108 Clinton E. Marsh, From Black Muslims to Muslims: The Transition from Separatism to Islam, 1930-1980, 80.
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people. As Europeans began encroaching through theft, murder or “dealing,” Native
Americans began losing the land so that eventually the Dutch controlled what they would
call New Amsterdam in the early years of the 17th century. In 1626 eleven Africans were
brought and settled on the outskirts of the area in what was then called The Bowery.
These eleven Africans soon built a wagon road that extended to the upper most part of the
Dutch territory that was called at that time “Haarlem.” As Clarke explains, it would be
“about two hundred and seventy four years… before Harlem (now spelled with one ‘a’)
was changed into a Negro metropolis.”109
1900 would prove a seminal year for Harlem and the entire world African
community. The emergence of pan-African thought under the leadership of the first of
three men from Trinidad, H. Sylvester Williams, George Padmore and C.L.R. James, to
develop and organize under such thought would begin with the first pan-Africanist
Conference in London. 110 This, and the conferences to follow, would have great impact
on the radical culture that would later develop as Harlem was Africanized.
However, prior to this Harlem was, throughout the 1890s, a wealthy White
community that had developed as downtown Manhattan had an enormous increase in
population. The wealthy White elite felt that a move uptown would be prudent and more
accommodating. Real estate speculators, expecting new subways routes out to Harlem to
bring multitudes of tenants, built housing accordingly only to find that they built more
than they could rent. Instead of taking a loss they began courting African tenants. Clovis
109 Harlem USA, 12. 110 While many point to Williams as the founder of the term “pan-Africanism,” Ronald Walters claims that DuBois should be given said credit. Walters calls attention to a DuBois speech delivered in 1897 to the ANA where he uses the term “pan-Negroism” with the same meaning. Walters also explains that DuBois’ 1896 Harvard dissertation on the “Suppression of the Slave Trade” was in fact written with a great understanding of pan-Africanism further supporting his belief that DuBois be credited with the inception of the term and use of the concept as a methodological tool for research. Walters, 38.
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Semmes writes, “rather than face financial ruin in Harlem’s deflating real estate market,
some White landlords and corporations were willing to rent to African Americans.”111
Around 1909 some a rash of newspaper ads were published inviting Africans to
move up to Harlem.112 Between these invitations and the horrendous race relations
throughout New York Africans gladly began the move. Poor race relations both inside
and outside of New York brought Africans there. After a fourth race riot in New York
Africans, led in part by Adam Clayton Powell, Sr., began a moving into Harlem.
Externally to New York, the aforementioned racial strife in the South brought with the
migrations many more Africans to Harlem. In fact, both Groh and Woodson remark on
the Southern influence on the newly developed Northern African regions and the
animosity met from Northern Whites who saw migrating Africans as strike breakers, and
“inferior individuals unworthy of consideration which white men deserve.”113
As Clarke explains, African Harlem was beautiful, clean, safe, full of hope and
expectations.114 Resulting from self-pride and a sense of community, Harlem’s
cleanliness and peacefulness made it fertile ground for the growth of African struggle and
the meeting and expansion of ideas. As mentioned, African radicalism in America (and
abroad) was sparked by the outbreak of World War I and Harlem was the center of it all.
Africans around the globe witnessed themselves for the first time being pulled
into battle for foreign causes. Africans were forced by the thousands to fight for their
respective colonial powers: for the French some 211,000 Africans were taken from their
West and Equatorial colonies and 270,000 from their North African territories where
111 Clovis Semmes, Cultural Hegemony and African American Development, 202. 112 I Remember Harlem, videotape. 113 Woodson, Migration, 179. See also Groh, p. 7. 114 Clarke, A Great and Mighty Walk, St. Claire Bourne film.
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roughly 200,000 Africans died in defense of France. The British, not to be out-done,
took roughly 80,000 from its colonies and forced another million or so into being porters
where roughly 100,000 died from war, poverty or disease. Germans, Belgians and
Portuguese also reached into their African reserves and when all was said and done the
total African loss of life defending the various European colonial oppressors was at least
300,000.115 America was no different and as a result attitudes among the world’s African
population underwent further radicalism.
In October of 1919 the New York Times ran an article describing a change in the
form and practice of African radicalism in America. No longer was African leadership
“still under the influence of Booker T. Washington,” they were no longer, as Philip Foner
writes, “docile and accommodating,” they were “ radicals and revolutionaries.”116 World
War I had challenged Africans to reevaluate their struggle and among the avenues open
to these militants were socialism, Pan-Africanism and nationalism.
One year after the start of World War I, in 1915 the year of Clarke’s birth, Carter
G. Woodson formed the Association for the Study of Negro Life and History, George
Young opened The Young Book Exchange, the film Birth of a Nation was released and
Booker T. Washington died. The release of Birth and the death of Washington are
significant for the fact that they signaled an end to one era of African struggle and the
simultaneous rise of White nationalism. This White nationalism was largely in response
to the crushing of African Reconstruction, and subsequently gave the African struggle a
newness it needed to combat oppression.117
115 Basil Davidson, Modern Africa, 6-7. 116 Philip Foner, American Socialism and Black Americans, 265. 117 Note to discuss Clarke lectures on White nationalism being the governing ideology of most of the world for last 500 years.
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Grace Elizabeth Hale writes that the film Birth of a Nation was a film spectacle
that depicted Reconstruction as a “race war,” and explained that “both the white South
and the white North {had} slipped free from any last traces of moral obligation to the ex-
slaves.” She continues that the film set a tone for national White group consciousness. It
sought to depict Africans as having “destroyed the Old South’s racial paradise and the
North’s idealistic if misguided attempt to lift up an ‘inferior race,” and that the refutation
of the “ ‘hell’ of Reconstruction,” brought about not “just a reconciliation but the birth of
the new Anglo-Saxon nation.”118
William Monroe Trotter, in response to the realization of the film’s purpose as a
creator of anti-African consciousness (decades before the likes of Noam Chomsky would
make similar claims about the purpose of consciousness creation by American media),
sought to prevent showings of the film in Philadelphia. Further resistance to the film
came in an attempt by Booker T. Washington and Emmett J. Scott, Washington’s
personal secretary, to create an African-owned film company that would film Birth of a
Race using Washington’s book Up From Slavery as an accurate depiction of African life
in America. Washington’s death in 1915 and an intra-African class struggle that resulted
in an “aesthetic guerrilla war” prevented this enterprise from ever happening. 119
Similarly, African response to such an American national rise of White
supremacy produced some seminal works that would prove to have great influence on the
development of African scholarship and historical understanding. Included here, were
DuBois’ piece “The African Roots of War,” detailing the centrality of African land and
118 Grace Elizabeth Hale, Making Whiteness, 79. 119 Greg Carr, Tribute to John Henrik Clarke, videotape, 1998 and also Gaines, Uplift, 250.
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labor to European conflict.120 DuBois also published The Negro in 1915 that becomes a
basis for the study of African people and history and would “open up the study of Africa
for a line of distinguished Black historians such as… Carter Woodson and John Henrik
Clarke.”121 DuBois, writing later about his 1915 publication, noted its importance saying
that, “no historical series in the world had ever admitted that Africans had any history.”122
Woodson, inspired by the times and efforts of the ANA, would also publish in 1916 The
Journal of Negro History which in its inaugural issue describes a Pan-Africanist view of
history connecting Africans in America to the oldest African and world civilizations.123
Furthermore, by 1915, the aforementioned confluence of African radical thought
was in full swing. This was the era of the “New Negro” where, as mentioned by Leonard
Harris, an “ethno-genesis” was taking place. Alain Locke, who initially was quite
“assimilated,” became radicalized after his being rewarded the Rhodes Scholarship in
1907. Upon meeting for the first time, those who had selected him, Locke realized that
unbeknownst to them they had selected an African. Their response was to begrudgingly
go through with the awarding of Locke, despite his not being White, but he now began to
use his philosophical background as a base for challenging and debunking European
notions of African people. This change was recognized by, among others, John Edward
Bruce and Arthur Schomburg who invited the self-taught historian Locke to be the first
guest lecturer of their newly formed Negro Society for Historical Research.124 This, and
120 DuBois, “The African Roots of War,” Atlantic Monthly, 1915. 121 Ronald W. Walters, Pan-Africanism, 39. 122 W.E.B. DuBois, The Negro, with new introduction by Herbert Aptheker (1975), 5. 123 An example of this Pan-African connection to the antiquity of civilization and the first being in Africa is seen in an essay by Monroe N. Work, “The Passing Tradition,” Journal of Negro History, v.1, no.1, 1916. 124 Sinnette, 44. The move to bring Locke to lecture was also a partial response to the feelings of illegitimacy among the informally or self-taught scholars in the society. Schomburg had many feelings of reservation and nervousness around more formally trained scholars such as DuBois and Woodson, a feeling that was at least in part transmitted to Clarke.
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his experience with the Rhodes Scholarship committee, brought about Locke’s transition
into Pan-Africanist thought and as Harris explains joined him with DuBois and Garvey
the two other leaders of this “ethno-genesis,” or creation of the “New Negro.”125
Also, by 1915, A. Philip Randolph had migrated from Ohio and been in Harlem
for four years. One year later Marcus Garvey arrived in New York. Hubert Harrison had
already been in Harlem for fifteen years spending, by then, six in the Socialist Party
along with DuBois who had been in New York since 1910. These figures best exemplify
the meeting of leading forms of radical thought and deserve at least brief attention here.
The entire World War I era had reinforced both radical White supremacist action
and an American government attack on radicalism, primarily socialist and communist
thought. Both “Red Summer” and the “Red Scare” in the year 1919 illustrated the two
primary opponents to the African struggle, race and class. The “Red Summer,” race riots
or “pogroms” as has been said, where Africans returning from World War I found
themselves under severe attack from angry Whites was a manifestation of the white
supremacist aspect of the struggle. Simultaneously, United States government repression
against socialist thought during the “Red Scare” resulted in a “hunt for ‘alien radicals’ to
be deported… mass raids,” where by 1920, “2,758 {socialists} were arrested in thirty-
three cities” and showed the antagonism stemming from the dominant economic order.126
It was into this climate that this era’s African radicals found themselves.
Along with the era of ethno-genesis and the New Negro the early 1900s
representation of the African struggle against race and class in New York can best be
represented by the efforts of Marcus Garvey and A. Philip Randolph respectively. That
125 Leonard Harris, “Alain Locke,” lecture cassette. 126 Philip Foner, American Socialism and Black Americans, 312.
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said, then certainly both the meeting and inspiration of those two can be found in Hubert
Harrison. Harrison, “the father of Harlem radicalism,” who played an instrumental role
in the development of both the race-first and class-first ideologies. 127 Harrison would
come to represent many aspects of what the tradition would develop into; the autodidact,
nationalist, study group and organization.
From his lectern on the corners of his “Harlem Streetcorner University”128
Harrison gave lectures that showed his knowledge of the social sciences and his ability to
apply them to the conditions of his people. Though a socialist and friend of Harrison,
DuBois chose to help found and lead the Niagara Movement, later the NAACP, while
Harrison chose the more radical Socialist Party which he felt did better confronting the
economic conditions of African people. Portia James describes this as the challenge in
African struggle between the Tuskegee Machine (emphasis on labor rather than education
and politics) and the growing militancy of African America on the one hand and the
“increasingly militant struggle between U.S. labor and capital.”129 This supports what we
have established as the two primary concerns facing Africans in America race and class
and also illustrates the pull between Booker T. Washington and DuBois.
Rod Bush summarizes the split between Washington and DuBois as essentially
resulting from the southern context which produced the former enslaved Washington and
his attitudes towards race, class and caste that clearly differed from a more middle-class
cosmopolitan DuBois. DuBois and others could not understand or agree with
Washington’s seeming acceptance of America’s caste system and his unwillingness to
127 Foner, p. 266 and Portia James, “Hubert H. Harrison and the New Negro Movement,” The Western Journal of Black Studies, vol. 13, no.2, 1989, 83. 128 Portia James, 85. We will also see this theme repeat itself as Clarke talks about his experience and studies in Harlem’s “University of the Streets.”
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properly blame European Americans for the division and disparity among the races. He
notes that this frustration with Washington came from the fact that not only was
Washington “the most powerful Black leader of this period (1895-1915), he was the most
powerful African American leader in the history of the United States.”130 Frustration with
Washington derived from this reality coupled with the reality that Washington’s
prominence coincided with an overall decline in African American education, voting and
an increase in segregation.
Bush, like Clarke but unlike many, reminds us that DuBois had once been a
supporter of Washington. In fact, in 1907 the two had together published The Negro in
the South dealing with African America’s economic condition. But that the final straw
had been drawn when during a lecture in Boston Washington refused to answer questions
or discuss African voting rights and education. When William Monroe Trotter, perhaps
Washington’s most stringent antagonist, disrupted the speech he was arrested and put in
jail. DuBois agreed with Trotter’s criticism and “this marked the definitive split”
between the two. However, DuBois would later note that both he and Washington lacked
an understanding of “the nature of capitalistic exploitation of labor, and the necessity of a
direct attack on the principle of exploitation as the beginning of labor uplift.”131 This later
understanding clearly comes from the addition of European socialist thought into the
African radical thinking of the early twentieth century.
Socialists had long been in disagreement with Washington over his suggestion
that Africans “offer themselves as a pool of cheap, reliable labor” and his call that
Africans “shun alliances with white workers, especially in labor unions” and that they
129 Portia James, 83. 130 Rod Bush, We Are Not What We Seem,73.
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should “seek an alliance with their ‘natural friends,’ the capitalists.”132 What this also
illustrates, as we will see shortly, the insufficiency of the Socialist Party in dealing with
the effects of white supremacy on the African community. In other words, socialists
were not quick to acknowledge White resistance to African inclusion in labor struggles
forcing them to consider African-centered organizations.
As mentioned, the early 1900s saw a rise in Socialist activity and American
repression of such activity. This brought enormous attention to Socialism within the
African community as the advances and setbacks of Socialists were witnessed. However,
little attention was paid by socialists to the specific problems of the African community.
Harrison supported the efforts of White socialists who recognized this such as Isaac
Rubinow and brought the “Negro Question” into full discussion within the Socialist
Party. However, the Socialist Party was more interested in helping DuBois found the
Niagara Movement/NAACP whose mission was more integrated.133 DuBois had, in
response to Washington’s 1895 “Atlanta Compromise” address, witnessed that since then
there had been massive disfranchisement of African people, the codification of African
inferiority and the reduction of financial aid to institutions of African higher learning.134
Shortly after the death of Booker T. Washington the Socialist Party’s Appeal to Reason
published the following, an example of their criticisms of Washington’s efforts:
The career of Booker T. Washington is undoubtedly an inspiring indication of the possibilities of Negro development under favorable conditions. But it also reminds us that the salvation of the Negro race is not possible through the work of individual benefactors like Washington, or even the united racial action which is only a means of intensifying racial prejudice, but through united economic and
131 Bush, 74. 132 Philip Foner, 183. 133 P. Foner, 182 for the role of the Socialist Party in the founding of the NAACP (chapter on it). 134 P. Foner, 182.
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political action to secure industrial and social freedom and opportunity for all men, regardless of race or color.135
What Harrison, and others, were confronting in the Socialist Party was its own
history of resistance to acknowledging white supremacy as a unique problem to class.
Despite claims just mentioned that the Socialist Party sought equality for all people
“regardless of race or color” did not release them from their own history of showing little
concern for African people. Even the comments of socialist legend Karl Marx that would
later inspire the greatest of African radicals, Paul Robeson were ignored, for Marx
himself wrote that, “labor with a white skin cannot emancipate itself where labor with a
black skin is branded.”136 Nor was Lenin or Trotsky remembered when they both
supported “national self-determination” and the rights of all nationalities to “cultural” and
“political” autonomy.137 Socialist resistance to African development, aside from it being
a European concept and construct, can be understood in its relation to its own diaspora.
That is, that as Foner explains socialist historians have deliberately ignored socialist
history outside of Europe seeing it as merely a “minor by-product of European
socialism.” This helps explain socialist resistance to their own history of racial
oppression as their history had largely been written ignoring the American context which,
of course, leads to the omission of the African relationship to socialism.138
As we have said, Harrison preferred a more radical tract than DuBois.
Recognizing socialist resistance to dealing with white supremacy he formed the Colored
Socialist Club (CSC) in 1911. DuBois joined those in attacking the move claiming that it
135 P. Foner, 257 - author’s emphasis to show Socialist antagonism against nationalist thought or action. 136 Paul Robeson Speaks, p.15. 137 Foner, 275. See also Leon Trotsky on Nationalism and Self-Determination. 138 P. Foner, 3.
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brought “isolation” and was too similar to other segregated organizations nationwide.139
Despite Harrison’s claims that the CSC was meant to be proof that the Socialist Party was
ready to address the specific issues facing the African community within America, the
organization folded by 1912 due to lack of funds, lack of attendance but primarily out of
fear of DuBois’ attacks and his negative influence.140 This led to Harrison’s break with
the Socialist Party so that he could “work among his people along lines of his own
choosing.”141
It was during the years after his break with the Socialist Party that Harrison would
become the influence that J.A. Rogers, John G. Jackson and John Henrik Clarke would
later admire and recognize. In 1917 and 1920 he would expand on his post-socialist
radical thinking in The Negro and the Nation and When Africa Awakes respectively.142 It
was also during these years that his lectures in the Harlem streets would, among others,
gain the interest and friendship of other notables in the African socialist world. Among
these were Richard B. Moore, Cyril Briggs and A. Philip Randolph who by 1915 had
become a regular attendee at Harrison’s corner. 143 Despite the fact that by this time
Harrison had moved from a “class first” analysis to a “race first” analysis he and the more
strict socialist Randolph were able to work with one another on several projects including
the Independent Political Council which would later become The Messenger group.
Randolph and his partner Chandler Owen both had been part of the migration
from south to north. Both had arrived in New York and joined the Socialist Party in
139 P. James, 84. 140 P. James, 84. 141 P. James, 85. 142 Note to expand on these books. 143 P. Foner, 266- where it is also said that Moore and Briggs were in disagreement with Harrison over his lack of faith in the Socialist Party. Moore would later break with the Socialist Party to join the Communist Party and Briggs would later found the African Blood Brotherhood in 1917.
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1916. They quickly became active in New York politics and following in the footsteps of
J. B. Reed and in November of 1917 published The Messenger a Black socialist paper.
Reed had printed the first Black socialist paper in Montana called American Negro
Socialist whose purpose it was to spread the tenets of socialism to Africans across the
nation. The Messenger was at the time herald as the only Black socialist paper of its time
and was meant to not only spread the word of racism but was designed to “fight the
hydra-headed monster- race prejudice.”144
The same month that witnessed the first issue of The Messenger also bore witness
to a global event that would infuse energy and vigor into the African struggle. This time
it was the Bolshevik Revolution led by Vladimr I. Lenin. Seven months after the United
States had entered World War I the Revolution was a sign to the socialist world that
socialism was in fact going to take hold worldwide. While most African leaders in
America, including DuBois, suggested Africans put aside their problems with America
and join the war effort African socialists were confident that this was in opposition to
progressive action. With the arrival of the Russian Revolution socialists, Black and
White, found their validation and increased efforts against American participation.
In a move that would proceed the actions of J.A. Rogers and his 1930s travel to
Ethiopia to report back to the African community first-hand accounts of the war against
Italy, John Reed, an African socialist in America, wrote back eye-witness accounts of the
Russian Revolution. Among those reports were descriptions of Lenin’s plans to
incorporate national liberation from Czarist Russia giving each its own autonomy.
Reed’s words, read throughout Harlem, gave rise to the nationalist consciousness in
144 P. Foner, 272.
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African America. If Russia was giving freedom and liberty to its formerly oppressed
nationalities, who more than the African in America was deserving of such liberation?
Randolph and The Messenger were equally effected by these events. They wrote
bringing attention to the issue of colonial domination in Africa and, like DuBois, spoke
clearly about the “scramble for Africa” being the basis of European world war. They
spoke out against the Versailles Treaty and the League of Nations explaining that both
were “imperialist” and called for the establishment of an ‘International Council on the
Conditions of Darker Races.’145
Similarly, the second pan-Africanist Conference of 1919 called for by DuBois in
Paris sought to address, among the myriad problems facing Africans around the globe,
the inability of DuBois and Trotter to raise the issue of African exploitation at the same
1918 Versailles Peace Conference.146 These decidedly pan-African efforts and
perspectives were signs of the times and again had a great influence on the radical
thinking occurring in Harlem. Pan-Africanism, nationalism and socialism were
consistently being used in unlimited combinations as Africans sought out ways to
improve their conditions. An international perspective was increased as Africans from
the diaspora poured into New York, and Harlem specifically, fertilizing one another.
Another of the major figures from the diaspora whose arrival in Harlem in 1916 brought
about massive changes to the political landscape was Marcus Garvey.
The confluence of Pan-Africanism, nationalism and socialism has no greater
illustration than the meeting of Harrison, Randolph and Garvey. Garvey had traveled
throughout the Caribbean and the Americas where he witnessed an oppression of “the
145 P. Foner, 276. 146 Turner and Turner, Richard B. Moore: Harlem Radical, 166.
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darker races” that rivaled what he had seen in his Jamaican homeland. This created in
him a pan-Africanism and nationalism that would lead him to establishing the largest of
all African organizations in America or abroad. The Universal Negro Improvement
Association (UNIA) and its sister the African Communities League (ACL) would
become powerful and lasting forces in the African world community and no less so than
in Harlem.
In 1916 Harrison had formed Harlem’s “first” forum for the discussion among
Africans of arts, sociology, science, economics and politics. His Harlem People’s Forum
would later lead him to the 1917 establishment of the Liberty League of Negro
Americans. Harrison’s efforts were directly related to his break with the Socialist Party
and his frustration with the NAACP. He would explain that the Liberty League was
established with “the realization of the need for a more radical policy than that of the
NAACP that called into being the Liberty League of Negro Americans. And the
NAACP, as mother, must forgive its offspring for forging farther ahead.”147 It was also
here that Garvey, after suffering some political setbacks and considering a return to
Jamaica, was convinced by Harrison to stay and speak. Garvey took full advantage and
began an almost immediate boost in membership into his UNIA.
Harrison’s League produced a newspaper, The Voice, which he called the first to
discuss the New Negro consciousness of the times. This was quickly followed by among
others, Randolph’s The Messenger and Garvey’s Negro World. Through their works
these three were able to work together and against one another voicing their various
opinions. While Randolph and Garvey were bitter foes arguing over the tenets of
socialism versus race-first nationalism, Harrison remained almost in the middle. His
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nationalism prevented a strict adherence to socialism, at least as that meant the Socialist
Party, but his understanding and almost cosmopolitan view of global economics
prevented Harrison from fully joining Garvey staunch racialist ideology.
Though Harrison had written for and edited Garvey’s Negro World the inability of
Garvey to expand his idea past his base feelings of race and his seeming love for empire
and European-styled civilization brought an end to his relationship with the former two.
After Garvey, in response to his anger towards mulattos and the light-skinned African
elite, stated that the KKK was a “greater friend” Randolph and The Messenger launched a
full scale assault to have him removed. The “Garvey Must Go” campaign was put in
high gear.
To the dismay of 21st century African-centered historians the greatest leaders of
the African American world supported this effort. DuBois, Randolph, Harrison and
others all took part in aiding the United States government, and a young up-and-coming
crazed vulture J. Edgar Hoover, in convicting Garvey of mail fraud and his subsequent
deportation. Sides were drawn. Figures such as Carter Woodson, whose “political
activity brought him perilously close to being drawn into the ‘Marcus Garvey Must Go’
campaign” ended up assisting and writing for Garvey.148 Arthur Schomburg, who had
earlier spurned attempts by DuBois to gather damaging information against Garvey,
spoke out for Garvey against his detractors.
Parenthetically, it is of interesting note that such a believer in racial purity as
Garvey was both his means for first coming to the United States, to meet Booker T.
Washington, and one of his most ardent defenders, Schomburg, were both biracial.
147 P. James, 86. 148 Tony Martin, The Pan-African Connection, 102.
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Schomburg’s defense of Garvey even led him to attack Woodson’s creation of the
Journal of Negro History. Writing to his friend John Edward Bruce, “Garvey’s
staunchest supporter among the Afro-American intelligentsia,” Schomburg explained that
although Woodson’s efforts were basically solid he was “stealing our thunder.”149 This
animosity between Schomburg and Woodson also had a history that dated back to the
establishment of the Negro Society of Historical Research with its more militant
nationalist membership and Woodson’s Association for the Study of Negro Life and
History. Woodson’s group felt the former was too concerned with racial pride to be of
true scholarly value and when Woodson published his The Negro in Our History in 1922
sides became clearly drawn. Locke of the NSHR criticized the work as being an
unorganized grouping of facts and Schomburg was quick to notice that despite all of his
help in providing Woodson with research material his name or organization were not
mentioned or given credit.150 This seems also to have to do with antagonisms over
training. Schomburg was admittedly timid and unsure around more formally trained
scholars and Woodson seems to have been suspicious of the ability of those informally
trained.
Meanwhile, Woodson’s feud with DuBois over the latter’s bourgeois mentality
was exacerbated by the schism created by the arguments of and with Garvey. This would
later prove to be a cyclical theme as Clarke would later adopt aspects of this antagonism
towards “traditionally” trained scholars.
Though Woodson would be criticized by those in Garvey’s camp for taking
money from Carnegie and other white philanthropists (an attack Woodson himself would
149 Tony Martin, The Pan-African Connection, 102. 150 Sinnette, 126.
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later levy against DuBois) and even for “plagiarizing” Garvey (as asserted by Negro
World editor H.G. Mudgal)151 Woodson acknowledged the brilliance of Garvey.
Woodson wrote:
Whatever may be said about Garvey’s mistakes, he cannot be recorded in history as a fanatic or a fool… His claim to be recorded in history lies in the fact that he attracted a larger following than any Negro who has been developed in modern times. Negroes here and there in America have been hailed as leaders, the press has given them great praise, and their friends have sung of their virtues in high tones; but a thorough analysis of these famous Negro leaders will disclose the fact that they owed their prominence mainly to white men who considered such spokesmen as those person through whom they could work to keep the Negro in his place.152
If we are permitted here to make an oversimplification, the differences between
African radical thinkers, the differences in opinion between the Harrisons, Randolphs,
and Garveys may be found in the varying degrees to which each thought the other was
trapped by European civilization. It has been written that Garvey’s race analysis and
support of capitalist development prevented him from linking with those in struggle over
economic issues, i.e. the socialists or communists and that this was a result of his being
caught in a European societal con.153 Here the differences between a DuBois/Harrison
view of pan-Africanism and socialism appear most vividly and are described well by one
of the major influences on pan-Africanism and communism Malcolm Nurse, more
commonly known as George Padmore. Padmore explained that DuBois saw pan-
Africanism as a “political philosophy” meant to support African self-determination, the
struggle against European colonization and the development of independent African
nations around a socialist economy. Garvey, on the other hand, saw pan-Africanism as a
151 Martin, 108. 152 Martin, 101. 153 Rupert Lewis and Patrick Bryan, Garvey: His Work and Impact, 289.
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means to return Africans to the continent to develop a continental capitalist community.
“Why should not Africa give the world its black Rockefeller, Rothschild and Henry
Ford,” Garvey asked, adding, “capitalism is necessary to the progress of the world, and
those who unreasonably and wantonly oppose or fight against it are enemies of human
advancement.”154
Garvey’s seemingly Eurocentric view of societal, economic and political
organization helps also to explain his break with Harrison who, along with friend Robert
Poston brokered harangues against what Europeans called “civilization.” To them
“civilization” was an “ideological category, the West’s racist theodicy, or justification for
the atrocities of the slave trade and colonialism.”155 Garvey’s unwillingness to break with
Western notions of race and economic/social development, even if inverted, and his
desire for Black Empire building may have proven too much for the likes of Harrison
whose version of decolonizing the mind meant refuting all that came with white
civilization.
What we have attempted to describe here is a World War I era radicalism that
thrived and would propel later movements. The amount of writing and cross-pollination
of this era cannot be underestimated or overlooked. Out of this era came the combination
of the three major trends of pan-Africanism, nationalism and socialism. These trends all
appear in the efforts of Cyril Briggs leader of the African Blood Brotherhood and editor
of The Amsterdam News and publisher of Crusader, the Crisis magazine under the
leadership of W.E.B. DuBois, the Challenge from William Bridges, the aforementioned
work of Owen and Randolph in Messenger, Garvey’s mentor while in London Duse’
154 George Padmore, Pan-Africanism or Communism, p.. 83-84 and Marcus Garvey, Philosophy and Opinions, vol. II, p.72.
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Mohamed and his African Times and Orient Review156 which was imported to America
by Schomburg’s mentor John Edward Bruce, Hubert Harrison’s Voice, the Emancipator
run by W.A. Domingo, etc.
However, for us, here, the importance of these men is their representation and
efforts in Pan-Africanist, nationalist and socialist thought. For as mentioned, these are
the influences that Clarke would meet upon his arrival to Harlem in 1933 and would form
his basis of analysis for the remainder of his life. The following chapter will discuss
Clarke’s birth, early years and move to Harlem, his indoctrination into the tradition and
his early work leading up to the Civil Rights and Black Power era.
155 Gaines, 241.
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Chapter Four: Initiation
I’m from Alabama- red clay still On m’ feet,
I gitta gal’ n’ Alabama, who lives On de Chinaberry rout; Yeh, I’m from Alabama,
An’ dat’s nothing t’ brag about. Gon’ sent fer m’ gal’ n’ Alabama,
So she kin marry me; Gonna brang dat gal t’ Harlem An’ how happee we gonna be.
Gonna build her a house on “Sugar Hill,” Where day’s never feelin’ low;
Yeh, I’m from Alabama, But I ain’t goin’ back no more.
-John Henrik Clarke157
Let little Bubba think about something… give Bubba a book. The boy’s got a head on his shoulders and maybe one day he will lead us out of all this stuff.
- The Early Community of John Henrik Clarke158
This chapter will take a look at the early years of Clarke’s birth, first African awareness
and move to Harlem. Here we will see Clarke developing in the context of the three major trends of radical African thought. From there we will look at his initiation into the tradition being spoken of herein, including those who conducted this initiation, and the first stages of his ideological development and work as he emerged from his primary
tradition-indoctrination.
John Henrik Clarke would often retell the story of his birth by beginning with the
tale of how he upset his family and friends by delaying the customary new year’s
celebration of 1915. The custom was that those in Union Springs, Alabama would gather
for a big feast each new year’s day, however, Clarke’s mother who was expecting the
arrival of her new child at anytime refused to cook until that child was born. So, as
156 It is also from his time spent with Mohamed, an African nationalist and socialist, that Garvey learned the phrase “Africa for the Africans!” 157 John Henrik Clarke, “I’m from Alabama,” Rebellion in Rhyme, 72. 158 Barbara Adams, Master Teacher, 26.
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would be the case many years later, the African community eagerly anticipated the arrival
and first sounds of John Henrik Clarke. His birth did signal the beginning of the
festivities that day, January 1st, 1915, but as Clarke would say he never lived down
delaying the feast.
The enmity with which Clarke viewed people trained solely within the
European/American tradition had its origins in his own beginnings. While America
rewards scholars who come through and remain in an American/Eurocentric paradigm it
devalues those who would dare learn or operate outside that framework. In a society
such as the United States that prizes the notion that Africans would, and do, gain
immediate benefit from simply being allowed a seat next to European American students
in a classroom the positive aspects of separate schooling are generally ignored. However,
the early separate/segregated159 life of Clarke’s southern African community and
schooling brought about an awareness in Clarke that most do not get in today’s world of
fallacious fables such as integration and the “melting pot.”160
Vital to the development of a Pan-Africanist and nationalist consciousness is an
awareness not only of the continent of Africa but one’s relationship to it. For Clarke this
began as he says with the first of his “three deities,” his great-grandmother. The other
two, his mother and his first teacher Miss Evelina Taylor would also play important roles
in this development. Being born into segregated rural Alabama had its advantages.
Integrationist ideals notwithstanding, growing up in an isolated all African setting did not
159 The distinction must be made between separation and segregation. As explained very well by Leronne Bennett, Jr. the latter is an imposed condition by an antagonistic and dominant group while the former is a chosen and often preferred condition set and controlled by a specific group. The concept and practice of separation challenges and refutes the notion that being segregated is necessarily a negative for any given group. 160 For s discussion of this “melting pot” myth-making see, among others, Jacob Carruthers’ Intellectual Warfare.
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have the negative effects some would like to think it would. For instance, and only
dealing with the educational aspect of separate development, Pansy Atkinson’s work on
this issue clearly shows how in many cases Africans exercise their learning potential
more so when in their own communities than when “integrated” into the
Europeans/American school system.161 In Clarke’s life this certainly was the case. It was
his great-grandmother who first made known to him his connection with Africa. She did
so in the tradition of the hallah, that is through story.162
Moreover, his great-grandmother made Clarke aware of the strength and depth of
the African past, which if not at all encouraged, was in fact discouraged by
European/American teachers he would encounter later in life. She told him of the
“bravery” of the Africans she said she witnessed being brought directly from the
continent. She made him feel connected to these Africans and did so in a way that
accentuated the positives of that connection. At a time when the country was watching
films like Birth of a Nation and witnessing the African image cartooned on minstrel
stages and advertisements, Clarke was being prepared to combat this.
Similarly, Clarke’s learning of a connection to Africa and Africans included the
communal lifestyle of those in these early communities. Clarke would often recount the
experience of watching as sharecroppers, like his father, would all rotate crop attention
making sure that everyone in the community had their crops taken care of when needed.
As Clarke would further go on to say often, “socialism existed” among these families.
The communal experience and memory would later prove to be not only a major
161 Pansye Atkinson, An African American’s View: Brown vs. Topeka: Desegregation and Miseducation (Chicago: African American Images, 1993). 162 Clarke, 3.
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influence on the man John Henrik Clarke but also greatly influenced the paradigm and
practice of Clarke’s philosophy of history.
As we have discussed, education in the rural south was being dominated by the
primary trends of northern philanthropist desires for a vocationally trained African
community ready to support the labor needs of ever expanding industry and the southern
drive for subservient manual labor-based religious training through such organizations as
the American Missionary Association.163 Clarke’s elementary introduction to African
consciousness put him almost immediately at odds with his surroundings. This African
consciousness begged that he ask the question during Sunday school lessons when
Biblical pictures were shown him, “where are my people” in the book of God? As Clarke
would often ask later in life reflecting on his childhood query, “if God is supposed to be
for all people and have no regard for kith and kin, couldn’t he have let into heaven one
brown or black angel?”
These and other questions would lead him to a quest for the role of African people
in history. As we have discussed, America’s purpose in educating all its citizens,
particularly its most exploited ones, is not for uplift but for practicality. Africans were
(and are) not supposed to have any connection to world civilization so as a young Clarke
sought out such history he met resistance. The societal role of keeping Africans properly
conditioned, i.e. improperly educated, was personified by one of Clarke’s early grade
school teachers. When asked by Clarke what role African people had played in world
history said, as Clarke explains, “ Gagsteiter {the teacher}… {who}if he is still alive is a
liberal with a capital L said, ‘John, you come from a people who have no history… but if
you work real hard you might one day grow up to be a great man like Booker T.
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Washington.’”164 This experience would almost force Clarke into the tradition being
spoken of here.
In 1924 Alain Locke was sent to Luxor, Egypt representing both Howard
University and the Negro Society for Historical Research to witness and report on the
reopening of the tomb of King Tutankhamen. Schomburg and long time friend and
mentor John Edward Bruce “Grit” aided in having Locke be selected and funded for the
trip. It was a testimony to their confidence that Locke would provide sound coverage and
writing on such a powerful event for the African community. Not only would this prove
true, but one year later, in 1925, while young Clarke was but ten years old, Locke would
publish an anthology that brought Clarke into contact with the tradition. The New Negro,
part of the literary wing of the rising consciousness shift among Africans in America
reached the hands of Clarke and in it an essay that would change his life and set a new
course.
Contained therein was an essay by Arthur Schomburg, “The Negro Dig Up His
Past,” published as part of Locke’s anthology. It is a short but powerful historical sketch
that began to uncover for Clarke the mystery and the lies told him by Gagsteiter and
American education in general. Schomburg wrote,
The American Negro must remake his past in order to make his future. Though it is orthodox to think of America as the one country where it is unnecessary to have a past, what is a luxury for the nation as a whole becomes a prime social necessity for the Negro. For him, a group tradition must supply compensation for persecution, and pride of race the antidote for prejudice.165
163 Negro Education in Alabama, 115. 164 Clarke, any number of tapes… 165 Arthur Schomburg, “The Negro Digs Up His Past,” The New Negro, ed. Alain Locke, (New York: Touchstone, 1925) 231.
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By the 1925 publishing date Schomburg and Locke had become good friends.
Both had participated in various organizations together and shared similar views on the
purpose and need of knowledge to liberate African people worldwide. However, if there
was anything Schomburg did not like about Locke it was his middle class indoctrination
into American education and society. As mentioned earlier, Locke did not confront white
supremacy head on until his acceptance of the Rhodes Scholarship (a scholarship whose
ignoble purpose has been explained) and it was not until then that he began using his
training in a pan-Africanist, African-centered way. This, as Schomburg noticed, made
Locke’s dealings with the larger African community unsettled. But, as Sinnette notes,
Locke was the “doyen” of the Harlem Renaissance and the twelve-year period spanning
the 1918-1930 era of the “New Negro” while Schomburg was its “documentor.”166
Locke described his purpose and that of The New Negro as such:
The intelligent Negro of today is resolved not to make {racial} discrimination an extenuation of his shortcomings in performance, individual or collective; he is trying to hold himself at par, neither inflated by sentimental allowances nor depreciated by current social discounts. For this he mush know himself and be known for precisely what he is, and for that reason he welcomes the new scientific rather than the old sentimental interest in {him}.167
Reading this and Schomburg’s essay, Clarke was beginning to prepare himself for
the inevitable journey he would make in 1933 to Harlem. He would say, “{The New
Negro} was my first awareness that Black people had a history older than Europe.”168
Find JHC poem about Negro Digs… mentioned in Master Teacher p. 72. Upon
arriving in Harlem, by way of the hobo, Clarke paid a visit to Schomburg where upon he
immediately asked to be taught African history “right then, during {Schomburg’s} lunch
166 Sinnette, 107. 167 Sinnette, 106.
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hour!”169 It is also during his first meeting with Schomburg that Clarke first encountered
a young African born in Ethiopia, raised in Puerto Rico and recently arrived in Harlem
who would become a life-long friend and fellow giant in the field of African history,
Yosef ben Jochannan.170
This meeting with Schomburg would begin a process of laying the groundwork
for the interpretation of history that Clarke would develop and employ. Here was told by
Schomburg to first, “study the history of Europe, for when you know the history of your
oppressor, you will know why you were misplaced in history.”171 The legacy of the
tradition was being cultivated in a young Clarke by Schomburg who, through several
years of mentoring, connected Clarke to it and provided early exposure to a paradigm for
study that would be nurtured during Clarke’s early years in Harlem.
By the time of Clarke’s arrival in Harlem what Elombe Brath calls the “pan-
Africanist pantheon” of Malcolm X, Patrice Lumumba and Frantz Fanon had all been
born (1925), the Schomburg collection had been purchased by the New York Library
(1926), Marcus Garvey had been deported and Hubert Harrison had died (1927). The
stock market crashed (1929) and Franklin Delano Roosevelt was elected President of the
United States (1932) where he, in response to the market crash, instituted his New Deal
and Work Progress Administration (WPA). All of these events would directly affect
Clarke’s life and thought development.
In addition, two years prior to Clarke’s arrival in Harlem by way of the rails, in
1931 the hobo life had brought nine young African boys into a national and international
168 Adams, Master Teacher, 70. 169 Clarke, pick a tape. 170 Yosef ben Jochannan interview with the author, 11/00. 171 Clarke, Notes, 29.
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political skirmish that would increase the radicalism of another of Clarke’s mentors. The
Scottsboro Boys and case, where nine African boys were accused of raping two European
American women while traveling as hobos, became a major cause not only for Africans
seeking justice but White radicals as well. The Communist Party of America (CPA)
sought to use this case as an opportunity to advance their cause of uniting workers by
showing international support for these young men caught in a capitalist and racist
American systemic culture. Richard B. Moore working for the International Labor
Defense (ILD) and CPA would become one of their best weapons in this effort.
Richard B. Moore, an African from Trinidad who had made his way with his
family to New York in 1909, had been involved in every aspect of Harlem radicalism
since his arrival. Moore would also follow the well-tread path of Africans who would
join and then leave the Socialist Workers Party over the treatment of African people by
the party. DuBois, after once resigning after deciding to support Woodrow Wilson’s
1908 campaign for president, warned in 1924 that, “if American socialism cannot stand
for the American Negro, the American Negro will no stand for American socialism.”172
Because of a two-pronged goal of gaining political independence for the
Caribbean and elevating the status and race pride of Africans in America Moore
embarked on a radical and pan-Africanist struggle that brought him in contact with a
multitude of organizations and activist work. As mentioned, Moore had once joined the
Socialist Party whose height was reached in Harlem from 1917-1919. But Moore also
found his way to the African Blood Brotherhood, the People’s Education Forum, the
League of Struggle for Negro Rights which he led with writer Langston Hughes, and
eventually joined the International Defense League and Communist Party which he felt
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was the most radical organization of the time. It was through the IDL that Moore came in
contact with the Scottsboro case. He became an instant aid to the cause by taking the
Harlem-based oratorical skills that had enabled him to organize and debate with other
radicals on the road gaining support for the Scottsboro boys as well as the larger African
community as well. He would explain in 1940 that:
The Scottsboro Case is one of the historic landmarks in the struggle of the American people and of the progressive forces throughout the world for justice, civil rights and democracy. In the present period, the Scottsboro Case has represented a pivotal point around which labor and progressive forces have rallied not only to save the lives of nine boys who were framed… but also against the whole system of lynching terror and the special oppression and persecution of the Negro people.173
Between the Schomburg collection of books, the legacies left by Harrison and
Garvey (the latter not yet dead but in exile) and the events surrounding Roosevelt’s New
Deal administration Clarke had only to absorb and learn. These legacies and others were
being preserved by those, who by 1921, had begun spending many hours gathering,
reading and discussing African history and struggle at George Young’s Book
Exchange174.
Harlem radicals of the times would go to Young’s for organization, knowledge
and some went on to become a collectors of their own. Richard Moore is but one
example. After his break with the Socialist Party Moore embarked on an autodidact
mission to learn African history which began to shape his consciousness. This personal
education culminated in the 1942 establishment of The Frederick Douglass Center on
West 125th street which would not only serve as a resource for material on African
172 Turner and Turner, Richard B. Moore: Caribbean Militant in Harlem, 42. 173 Turner and Turner, Richard B. Moore…, 62. 174 Explore possible connection between Young, a former Pullman porter, and A. Philip Randolph’s Pullman porter organization.
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history but, like Young’s, would become a central meeting place for African radicals and
organizers. This aspect of the tradition would be carried on by Moore into his own radical
career as Harlem activist and friend/mentor to Clarke.
Clarke’s arrival in New York brought him in contact with all of the radical
thinking of the times. He witnessed the beginning of the political career of Adam
Clayton Powell who had begun working in the Coordinated Committee for Negro
Employment an organization sanctioned by A. Philip Randolph, whose slogan “Don’t
buy where you can’t work,” had taken hold. Randolph, as Clarke would say, was “the
father of the movement” to make the labor force open to African Americans and as
mentioned was one of the major representatives of the three primary trends among
African radical thinkers during this era in New York.175
Clarke’s early concern for the conditions of his and other people also brought him
in contact with the Communist Party (CP) and specifically membership in the Young
Communists League (YCL). For most African radicals of the time communism and
socialism offered an outlet, one of few, for attempts towards liberation. In reference to
his own study of and dealings with communism Kwame Toure has said that, “as a young
Black man concerned about the liberation of Black people I went to what was available
and at the time {the 1960s} the only thing there was Marxism.”176 This, perhaps, best
explains why Clarke and other Africans worldwide, including those previously
mentioned here, leaned towards the CP.177 Clarke was befriended early on by a young
175 B.E. Adams, Master Teacher, 62. 176 Kwame Toure on The Need for Organization, audio cassette. 177 I would like to note similarities between the statement of Toure (the notion that communism was most readily available as a solution to the oppression of Black people and that is where it derives its popularity among Africans) and those of many African fighters for liberation. One example is Mandela who spoke regularly and often about the fact that the ANC was not communist but only allied itself with communists as a means to free themselves from those exploiting them.
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Russian communist George Victor upon arriving in New York who first introduced
Clarke to the ideology but not the concept of communism and anti-capitalist thought.
In other words, though “communism” as a term and economic system, may have
been new to Clarke, his aforementioned experiences in the African communities in the
southern United States had already taught him the basics as far as communal living and
working for a community rather than an individual. This theme and understanding would
not only repeat itself as Clarke dealt with the White Left but become an enormous
problem and eventually end that relationship. In his own words Clarke explained:
While I was a valuable member of the Young Communist League and even a recognized young fellow traveler, I always had a difference of opinion on party cultism. I resented the fact that Karl Marx had all the answers and that nothing else was to be considered. I always had conflict with that. And this was at eighteen.178
The struggle between African radicals and communist/socialist movements is well
described by one of Harlem’s greatest writers Richard Wright. In novels such as Native
Son and the brilliantly written The Outsider, Wright explores through fiction the
problems faced by Africans dealing with the Communist Party. However, in his non-
fiction effort, Black Power, Wright decides to abandon fictitious discussion of the issue
for a straightforward blunt explanation of the conundrum Africans face: the “cultism”
Clarke mentioned of communism. Wright’s words on this deserve to be quoted at length,
he writes:
My belonging to a minority group whose gross deprivations pitched my existence on a plane of all but sheer criminality made {all the changes in the world towards communism} welcome to me. From 1932 to 1944 I was a member of the Communist Party of the United States of America and, as such, I held consciously in my hands Marxist Communism as an instrumentality to effect such political and social changes…Today I am no longer a member of that party of a subscriber
178 Adams, Master Teacher, 62-63.
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to its aims. Let it be said that my relinquishing of membership in that party was not dictated by outside pressure or interest, it was caused by my conviction that Marxist Communism, though it was changing the world, was changing that world in a manner that granted me less freedom than I had possessed before… Communism was mainly an instrument of Russian foreign policy, I publicly and responsibly dropped its instrumentality and disassociated myself from it.179
Clarke’s ability to see past the “cultism” and Eurocentrism of communism and
socialism was directly related to his early childhood experiences and then his initiation
into the tradition which officially began with his becoming a member of the Harlem
History Club in 1933 shortly after arriving in Harlem. It is here that early consciousness
of Africa given him by his great-grandmother was expanded. Other than his studies
under Schomburg it was the Harlem History Club, who in 1934 changed its name to the
Blyden Society in honor of the aforementioned “founding father,” that brought African
into focus for Clarke and laid the foundation for his perspective and work for the
remainder of his life. The program was established by Willis N. Huggins, was run out of
the YMCA on 135th street where Clarke had found residence upon arrival and was a
fountainhead of knowledge in African and world history.
The Blyden Society brought Clarke into contact with the powerful triumvirate of
Huggins, J.A. Rogers and John G. Jackson. Huggins was a Ph.D. who taught high school
and Rogers, a one-time advisor to Marcus Garvey had by 1933 become “the most widely
read pamphleteer in Black America,” was a historian and journalist. Both were
extremely active in local and global politics and with the onset of the Italian-Ethiopian
War in 1935 began reporting on and advocating for Ethiopian defense and freedom.
Huggins formed an organization, The International Council of Friends of Ethiopia and
179 Richard Wright, Black Power, xxxv-xxxvi.
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Rogers actually went to the battlegrounds in Ethiopia to give first-hand accounts
untouched by American corporate press to the people.
The Blyden Society, both in name and function, was following the tradition of,
among the others, the previously mentioned American Negro Academy (ANA). Rogers,
who like most African historians in Harlem, used the vast resources of the Schomburg
collection and together with Huggins and Jackson created a veritable “reading cult.”180
Members would not only read vociferously, they would present to one another and even
act out the histories they were learning in the form of theater. This would allow Clarke
and others to learn at an intimate level that most to this day do not and would greatly
prepare him for his future teaching and debating.
The affect the Italian invasion of Ethiopia had on the African community at large
was powerful. Newsreels were still new to the world and for the first time images of
Africans in war were shown to wide audiences. In Harlem there was a revival of the
Garvey movement and marches in the street in favor of defending Ethiopia. Among the
responses to this was the creation of the African Pioneer Movement under the leadership
of Carlos Cooks. Cooks, who is less known because he banned the media from covering
him, is said to have been, “the greatest Black mind in the world from 1940 to 1966” and
who “stands over {Martin Luther} King and Malcolm {X} like a giant over midgets.”181
Huggins’ dedication to the support of Ethiopia led him to, as leader of his Friends
organization, deliver an address on behalf of Ethiopia to the League of Nations in 1935.
180 The words of Clarke quoted in Larry Crowe’s Reflections, 6. 181 Carlos Cooks and Black Nationalism, ix.
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He was joined in this by Arden Bryan, who as president of the Negro Nationalists of
America, sent petitions to the League as well.182
It was during this Huggins’ trip that Clarke was given his first opportunity to
deliver an address to the Blyden Society on the ethnicity of Jesus Christ. This was, no
doubt, a continuation of work Schomburg had done in a 1921 presentation to the ANA on
“The Negro and Christianity,” which detailed African influence and participation in early
Christianity. This lecture was in part a tribute to John G. Jackson who was quickly
becoming one of Clarke’s primary influences and who by 1934 had already published
The African Origin of the Legend of the Garden of Eden, Jesus Christ Was a Negro and
The Pagan Origins of the Christ Myth.183 This would also, as mentioned, prove a major
theme for Clarke as he used the history and rise of religions to connect and illustrate
African spirituality to colonization of the African mind to the theft and abuse of African
lands.
Jackson had been in Harlem since 1923 when at the age of fifteen he and his
family moved from South Carolina. In 1925 while still in high school he was selected
and asked to write as a contributing author to Garvey’s Negro World and by 1932 had
become the Blyden Society’s Associate Director.184 Rogers had been a mentor and
historian to Jackson and others in the society and had, following the footsteps of John
Reed in 1917, went to Ethiopia as an on-site reporter of events for the African community
at home.
182 Richard B. Moore: Caribbean Militant in Harlem, 167. 183 These works would later culminate in Jackson’s Christianity Before Christ. 184184 “Sitting at the Feet of a Forerunner: An April 1987 Meeting and Interview with John G. Jackson,” James Brunson and Runoko Rashidi, African Presence in Early Asia, 197.
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In 1937 Huggins and Jackson published Introduction to African Civilizations
which not only set out to destroy the misconceptions most had about African history but
it also outlined the tradition and passing of scholarship and a course of action for
implementing such study into primary education. The book is quite phenomenal. It
outlines history in a pan-Africanist, African-centered manner where Huggins writes that
the methods used were developed in the Harlem “literary societies,” and tested on their
memberships. The book dealt with in 1937 topics that are still being debated today:
African origins of humanity, religion, science, technology and then includes a teacher’s
survey of the nation’s schools to see how best to aid or implement African study.
Discussion of the word “Negro” and its origins is included, predating debates that still
rage, not omitting the use of the term “African” to describe the entire diaspora.
Another of the fascinating and powerful outcomes of this society were the
connections made. Clarke, during the Blyden Society years, would meet and associate
with a veritable whose who of world radicals. Kwame Nkrumah, Nnamdi Azikiwe, Ho
Chi Min (who also worked at a Boston diner with a young Malcolm Little!) and John
Tengo Jabau and others. This would lead to an even greater global perspective that
would be beneficial as time progressed.
By 1937 The Blyden Society had reached its peak. Its members were learning
and increasing, its interaction with figures such as Schomburg and the legacies left by
Harrison and Garvey were being passed on and under such leadership the young Clarke
became versed in African-centered history, a perspective he would alter perhaps, but
never lose. That is, the frame of reference, the paradigm, the methodology for study and
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practice was given him early during these years in the Blyden Society and he would
never waiver too far from that core.
As the Blyden Society was teaching and preparing its students to combat the
negative imagery and historical portrayals of African people around the world their
efforts were echoed in the sentiments of one of the greatest African freedom fighters of
the 20th century. Paul Robeson who during the 1930s was at the height of his acting and
stage career was also becoming more of a force in the global struggle for African and
oppressed people’s freedom. It was at this time that he furthered his commitment to that
struggle by making the following declarations during a series of interviews given
spanning 1937-38. Speaking to the aforementioned reality of film and media depiction of
African people and the role both play in shaping nation consciousness Robeson
remarked:
I find I cannot portray the life nor express the living hopes and aspirations of the struggling people from which I come… Films make me into some cheap turn… You bet they will never let me play a part in a film in which a Negro is on top… I thought I could do something for the Negro race in films: show the truth about them – and about other people too. I used to do my part and go away feeling satisfied. Thought everything was okay. Well, it wasn’t. Things were twisted and changed – distorted. They didn’t mean the same… That made me think things out. It made me more conscious politically. One man can’t face the film companies. They represent about the biggest aggregate of finance capital in the world: That’s why they make their films that way. So no more films for me.185
This kind of class suicide (at the height of his career Robeson was making minimally
$100,000 a year) is still unparalleled and shows the kind of commitment that makes
Robeson among the most powerful and important figures in the history of humanity’s
struggle against oppression.
185 Susan Robeson, The Whole World in His Hands; A Pictorial Biography of Paul Robeson, 1981, 92.
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But, in 1938, the African world lost one of its greatest collectors of information
and Clarke’s own mentor. Arthur Schomburg, who had led the twentieth century wave of
pan-Africanist and African-centered scholarship died. Two years later in a mysterious
death ruled suicide Willis N. Huggins was also gone. Clarke has hypothesized that
Huggins was killed by Italians in his neighborhood unhappy with his brand of teaching.
However, Clarke had been taught the importance of global study and interpretation from
Schomburg and the “politics of history” from Huggins, two valuable lessons he would
never lose.
Clarke’s indoctrination into the tradition during his early years in Harlem is
evident also in the poetry and short stories he was writing. In the 1990 publishing of
Rebellion in Rhyme Clarke explains that the poems published therein were nearly all
written between the years 1933 and 1941 during his tenure in the Harlem History
Club/Blyden Society. The influence of his political and historical training is clearly seen
in these poems. For instance, as a precursor to the 1990s discussions of his association
with such works as Marimba Ani’s Yurugu and Michael Bradley’s The Iceman
Inheritance, Clarke refers to the fears that European farmers faced concerned with the
lack of fecundity of their lands in “Meditations of a European Farmer.” Clarke’s
European farmer asks, “I wonder will the fields ever again yield eatable bread.”186 It is
these very fears that result in the thesis of both Ani and Bradley’s work that physical
environment directly affects the psychological and cultural outlook of a people.
In poems such as “Love,” “The Mother Speaks,” “Shame,” “Interracial,” and
“Time to Die,” Clarke deals with themes most directly affecting his life at the time.
Respectively, a desire to love a justice that does not exist, the ironies of Africans fighting
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in wars that do not yield for them the freedoms they grant others, the brutal lynching of
Africans in America, the inability for interracial love to flourish in a fervently racist
society and somewhat prophetically his wish to die before his body betrayed him, “before
my eyes are weak.”187
By 1941 Clarke published his first poem in The Crisis called “American Scene”
in which he commented on the powerlessness of Africans in the American legal system.
It tells of a man convicted in the American judicial system “for being black,” 188 when
there was no other recourse for the court to take and is an early glimpse into Clarke’s
ideological position regarding Africans in America. This same theme, that of the
continued reduction of African people to a lesser-than or condemned “race,” was being
played out on the world stage as well.
American and European struggles over who would control the land and labor of
the world erupted into World War II. Like the first-world war, Africans were conscripted
and forced into battle defending their respective colonial powers. 80,000 Africans were
forced into battle for a crippled France with roughly 20,000 dying during Germany’s
invasion either fighting or execution by Nazis. Britain gathered 280,000 Africans from
its territories stolen during the Berlin Conference with similar losses. And again, African
numbers in combat were more than matched by the numbers who remained home
increasing labor output to support their colonial powers’ war effort. America too rounded
up its African population for both labor and combat service.189 Among them, Clarke was
186 Clarke, Rebellion in Rhyme, 3. 187 Clarke, 46. 188 Clarke, “American Scene,” The Crisis, January, 1941. 189 Davidson, Modern Africa, 61-65.
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drafted and entered the army that year signaling an end to his initiation and the beginning
of his practicing the tradition.
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Chapter Five: Early Application of the Tradition
“All History is a current event…”190
-John Henrik Clarke
In this chapter we will discuss the application of the tradition as Clarke returns from military service. This chapter will discuss the period between 1940 and
1970 where Clarke influenced and would be influenced by the periods of Civil Rights, Black Power/Consciousness and the beginnings of the Black Studies
Movement. John Henrik Clarke was never an athlete or physical powerhouse. As his
childhood community recognized Clarke’s strength was his mind. This remained true
during his four-year stint in the armed services. Clarke, as he readily admitted, was no
soldier, but as an administrator and leader of men he was just fine. He used his skills as
such, an administrator, organizer and one with a strong memory to benefit those under his
command. His men were always well taken care of, had their supplies and whatever
tools were necessary to make completing their tasks as easy as possible. It was this kind
of attitude, that “service is the highest form of prayer,” and that preparation was more
than half the battle that Clarke brought with him into his scholarship, teaching and
activism; his students were always well prepared.
It has been speculated by Greg Carr and others that Clarke’s time in the army was
a time he needed to recover from the deaths of Schomburg and Huggins, two of his most
beloved mentors.191 To what degree this is true cannot be determined but what is clear is
that upon his return from military service Clarke was eager and immediate with his desire
to imitate his mentors’ efforts joining, organizing, teaching and moving his people. Carr
190 John Henrik Clarke, “Malcolm X and the Radical Black Ministry,” audio tape. 191 Greg Carr, “Tribute to John Henrik Clarke,” videotape, 1998.
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calls this Clarke’s “era of organizational development”192 because it is this time period,
post 1945, that Clarke increased his participation in African activist activity which from
1945-1965 has been characterized as the nonviolent direct-action phase of the African
struggle in America.193
The post World War II period falls in line with the trends of increased radicalism
that followed the other major wars being discussed herein; The American Revolutionary
War, Civil War, the American expansion wars culminating in 1898 and World War I.
The continent of Africa was ripe with revolutionary movement as Africans returning
from battle in Africa and Europe (the African “theater” of war is another often
overlooked aspect to the world wars) wanted the benefits of democracy and freedom they
were told they were dying for abroad.
In America despite calls from the likes of DuBois that just as African Americans
had “closed ranks” to fight in the first World War they again rally for the second,
Africans in America were not realizing the American citizenship rights thought to come
with their loyalty.194 As abroad, Africans in America were returning home with a new
perspective, a global outlook, that said, “if we fought and died overseas for freedom,
liberty and democracy, we want it at home too!” These seeds grew and blended with the
already extant African radicalism, discussed in previous chapters, and developed into
what would later be called the Civil Rights Movement but which was actually African
America’s contribution to a global struggle being waged against White supremacy and
192 IBID. 193 One example of this claim is found in the work of Timothy B. Tyson, “Robert F. Williams, ‘Black Power,’ and the Roots of the African American Freedom Struggle,” Journal of American History, 9/98, 16. 194 DuBois, “Close Ranks Again,” Amsterdam News, 2/14/1942. Of the many vacilations of DuBois this is yet another. On the one hand he is clear that Europe’s World Wars are essentially about the colonization of Africa but then suggests that African American support of these wars will lead to their own increase in freedom and justice in America.
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colonialism. Clarke was not lost in this post-war fervor for struggle. As mentioned,
Clarke charged into this post World War II period with a fervor to continue along the
path his mentors had laid out for him.
Upon his return from military service Clarke sought out and took on various odd
jobs to combine that little income with the GI Bill in order to support his growing family.
He went to New York University for a time majoring in History and World Literature.
Clarke’s love for literature and writing that had resulted not only in his own body of work
and his first published effort, “American Scene,” also continued to blend with his
Harlem-based African education to form an interest in activist writing.
In 1945 Clarke would witness first-hand the fifth, and what many consider to be
the most influential, Pan-African Conference in Manchester, England. Clarke himself
argued that this conference was a manifestation of the teachings of Marcus Garvey in that
out of this conference much of the African independence fervor would mount.195 Of the
many notables present George Padmore would write that this conference differed from
the others, much to his delight, due to its “plebeian character.”
Unlike the other conferences Padmore said, “now there was expression of a mass
movement intimately identified with the underprivileged sections of the colored colonial
populations.”196 Leonard Jeffries, commenting on Clarke’s attendance at this conference,
notes that this made Clarke a “world leader” in that he was able to sit with those who
would lead the African world freedom movements.197
In 1945-46 Clarke would help found the Harlem Writer’s Guild where he would
work with activist/literary giants such as John Oliver Killens and James Baldwin. These
195 Clarke, Notes, 92. 196 George Padmore, Pan-Africanism or Communism, 139.
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men signified the old call of the Harlem Renaissance period DuBois and others had long
been making that artists use their various talents in the aid of their fellow oppressed
people. Both Killens and Baldwin represented well the larger concern for liberation over
personal creative contribution. Two brief examples include Killens’ written response to
the highly debated questions over Black and White involvement in the struggle to liberate
Africans in America and Baldwin’s written response to the issue of Black and Jewish
relations. Killens explained to White readers that:
Our emotional chemistry is different from yours… your joy is very often our anger and your despair our fervent hope. Most of us came here in chains and most of you came here to escape your chains. Your freedom was our slavery and therein lies the bitter difference in the way we look at life.198
Similarly, Baldwin was removing the African struggle in America from its
confines within the borders of the United States. Discussing Black/Jewish relations
Baldwin would write that though anti-Jewish sentiments among Africans in America is
justified due to the exploitative relationship between the two, “the root of anti-Semitism
among Negroes is, ironically, the relationship of colored peoples- all over the globe- to
the Christian world.”199 These two excerpts are simply meant to illustrate the kind of
expanded thought both influenced by and influencing Clarke as he began Carr’s “era of
organizational development.”
It was also here that Clarke would meet Lorraine Hansberry, known mostly for
her later classic A Raisin in the Sun and Harold Cruse. Cruse would later write a
blistering attack on Clarke and others in his well-known The Crisis of the Negro
Intellectual, a topic to which we will return.
197 Jeffries interview. 198 Debbie Louis, And We Are Not Yet Saved, 135. 199 Black Anti-Semitism and Jewish Racism, ed. Nat Hentoff, 5 (author’s emphasis).
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Soon to follow was Clarke’s founding of the Black Academy of Arts and Letters,
his work as a book review editor of the Negro History Bulletin, his editing of African
Heritage and his involvement with Benjamin A. Brown and the publication of the
Harlem Quarterly from 1949-1950. The short publishing life of the Harlem Quarterly
was nonetheless yet another important bridge between the old aspirations of the ANA, the
Harlem History Club and, as Todd Boroughs has noted, between future publications such
as Freedom and Freedomways magazines.200 Brown made clear the aspirations of the
Quarterly, thus continuing the tradition of the first historical societies such as the ANA,
when in its introductory issue he explains:
Our purpose in publishing HARLEM QUARTERLY is to bring our readers short stories, poetry, and articles on all aspects of Negro life and history… in this respect we are proud to bring our readers a broad cross section of opinions on problems facing American Negroes, West Indians, Africans and our white allies today.201
This mission statement makes clear a pan-African and African-centered vision of the
publication that is, again, a furtherance of an old idea.
As for Clarke, his contributions to the Quarterly came primarily from his personal
experiences and training told in story form. In his short story “The Bridge” Clarke tells
of the dangers and adventures of hobo life, a life he had experienced during his migration
from the rural south to his eventual stop in New York. It is a gritty tale of hobos
struggling to move from train to train, moves that prove fatal to the hobo card king of
Three Card Monte, the hobo’s game of choice.
Another of Clarke’s submissions to the Quarterly, “Return of Askia,” is yet
another short story based on the savior of the 15th century Songhay empire Mohammed
200 Todd Boroughs, unpublished paper on JHC and Freedomways.
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Abu Bekr Et Tourti, founder of the Askia dynasty and commonly known as “Askia the
Great.” Clearly this tale comes out of Clarke’s early training from Schomburg and those
in the Harlem History Club/Blyden Society and is meant to remind African readers of the
glory of the African past. Clarke makes sure to add, what would later become a regular
piece of his lectures and writings, that this African kingdom was one of many that thrived
before Europe had crawled out of the darkness on the backs of enslaved Africans. The
year of this tale is 1497 and as Clarke explained this was before, “the news of
Christopher Columbus’ discovery of the new world {had} reached all ears.”202
The period of publication of the Quarterly, the 1950s, witnessed further world
developments that would continue to influence the African struggle in America, and as
such, Clarke. This was the period of decolonization as Africans, Asians, those of the
Caribbean and Latin America began to force European powers to find new ways to
control and exploit their territories. It is also the period where those struggling for
freedom had to develop new ways and means of interpreting independence and evolving
European schemes at maintaining power. As Parenti explains, “{European powers}
discovered that the removal of a conspicuously intrusive colonial rule made it more
difficult for nationalist elements within previously colonized countries to mobilize anti-
imperialist sentiments.”203 Rebellions and World Wars had weakened the colonial powers
to the point that they needed to grant “independence” to their territories in order to quell
opposition. And it is here, in the realm of paradigm, interpretation, frame of reference,
201 Benjamin A. Brown, “Prospectus of Harlem Quarterly,” Harlem Quarterly, winter 1949-50, volume 1 Number 1, 1. 202 Clarke, “The Return of Askia,” Harlem Quarterly, v.1 number 1, 45. 203 Michael Parenti, Against Empire, 16.
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that Clarke and those of the tradition sought to inform combatants of European
dominance.
African nations, following the 1940s independence of Indonesia (1946), India
(1947), and the success of the Chinese Revolution (1948-49) began gaining their own.
1952 saw the first African nation reach at minimum “flag,” or nominal, independence as
Egypt was able to break ties with colonial Britain. “Flag” independence refers to two
separate but very similar ideas. One, that a newly “independent” country can raise its own
national flag over its land and institutions but that its economic, political and, therefore,
social existence remains controlled by the former colonial power. Secondly, “flag”
independence refers to as Parenti explains, “the flag {of the colonial power} stays home,
while the dollar goes everywhere- frequently assisted by the sword.”204 This was the
reality those struggling for freedom had to address. There was now developing newer
forms of exploitation that required evolving old thought to accommodate a new form of
enslavement.
1954 saw the landmark Supreme Court decision to desegregate public schools in
the Brown vs. The Board of Education of Topeka Kansas. The efforts of Charles
Houston, Thurgood Marshall, the NAACP and psychologist Kenneth B. Clark were
instrumental in this decision which ruled that the 1896 decision of Plessy vs. Ferguson
had not been met and that the “races” were not separate and equal instead that they were
separate and unequal. 1955 was the year of the Bandung Conference that influenced,
among others, a young Muslim minister Malcolm X and Harlem congressman Adam
Clayton Powell, Jr. (the latter attended as a witness), both of whom were impressed by
the show amongst non-European nations of their desire to shed European colonial rule.
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Similarly, in 1955 the Montgomery, Alabama bus boycott, seen by many as the official
beginning of the African American Civil Rights Movement, spearheaded by Rose Parks’
historic seating decision, began which brought a reluctant young Baptist minister to the
fore of the Montgomery Improvement Association, Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. In 1957
Ghana won its nominal independence and former Blyden Society member Kwame
Nkrumah became its first president, and Guinea followed in 1958. In 1959 the Cuban
Revolution had more than a subtle impact on the African liberation struggle going on
then in America. These early movements towards independence on the continent of
Africa and the Americas also brought about a shift in the relationship between the United
States and those seeking to severely alter its political, economic and social structures.
We will return to this in the pages to follow.
It was also during this time, 1956-58, that Clarke furthered his African-centered
historical writing and organization building. Todd Boroughs, in his short work on Clarke
explains that by the time of Clarke’s return from military service in 1945 “it was well
established that Black America’s most prestigious newspapers were forums for
intellectual discussion.”205 By the 1940s the Pittsburgh Courier had the largest
circulation among African American newspapers and Clarke was soon to be involved.
He wrote a series of articles on African leadership for the Courier where he continued the
training he had received during his early years in the Harlem History club. This series on
Great African Chiefs showed Clarke expanding upon his discovery of the North and West
African civilizations and his early characterization of these nations as being inspired by
African thought as opposed to that of Arabs or Islam.
204 Parenti, Empire, 15. 205 Todd Boroughs, “’African-Centered Scholarly Journalist’: John Henrik Clarke and Freedomways,” 11.
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He also began assisting Stanford Griffith in establishing the New School for
Social Research where they incorporated the Center for African Studies. This work
brought Clarke in contact with another of his mentors William Leo Hansberry. Clarke
would often remark that it is from Hansberry that he learned the “philosophical meaning
of history” and in a letter dated June, 27th 1958 Hansberry made Clarke aware of his
value to the elder as a student. Hansberry wrote:
Although I have previously expressed as much to you personally and directly, I am taking this opportunity to place on permanent record in writing my deep appreciation first, for your clear and comprehensive understanding of the character, import and intent of my efforts; and second, my genuine thanks for your valuable contribution towards the collective effort of the class to assist me in making the findings of my research activities available to the general public.206 Hansberry was in effect thanking Clarke for his role in aiding the passing of the
tradition which he and so many others had so feverishly worked to preserve. Hansberry
furthered the connection between the early historical societies called for by Martin
Delany and put in practice by the likes of Alexander Crummell and the ANA. Hansberry,
another of the early 20th century African migrants from the south (Atlanta, Georgia by
way of Mississippi) to the north (Cambridge, Massachusetts) looking for educational
advancement began his trek specifically because he had read the aforementioned The
Negro by former ANA member W.E.B. DuBois. Hansberry took himself to Harvard
University in 1916 in order to read every book suggested by DuBois in his classic work.
Just as Clarke would read “The Negro Digs Up His Past,” by yet another ANA member,
Arthur Schomburg, and be moved to begin his quest for information concerning African
people, Hansberry would be equally affected by DuBois’ The Negro. As Kwame Wes
206 William Leo Hansberry, letter to John Henrik Clarke, 6/27/1958, Schomburg Collection.
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Alford explains, DuBois’ work gave Hansberry a sense of freedom from “a state of
psychological bondage.”207 Hansberry had this to say about DuBois’ The Negro:
Its 240 pages were packed not only with innumerable facts not only about Ancient Kush and Old Ethiopia but about a whole series of kingdoms and empires which had flourished elsewhere in Black Africa… my immediate and major objective- though I kept strictly silent about the matter- was to read the books on Dr. DuBois’s list; and pick up one or two Harvard degrees along the way if possible!208 Alford contends that Hansberry developed his paradigm for the study of African
and world history from not only DuBois’ work but the militant framework and the,
“tradition of resistance and black nationalism in the African American community in
Mississippi,” Hansberry’s place of birth.209 This very southern tradition affected
Hansberry as it would Clarke in preparing them for their solidly African-centered
approach to study. Alford explains that the conditions in Mississippi created a strong
base of African resistance with such leaders as Robert Charles, said to be the “first fully
self-conscious black militant in the United States” and Ida B. Wells whose vitriolic
attacks against lynching placed her among the strongest influences on African radical
thought of the time.210
Hansberry is yet another to advance the tradition being spoken of here as he
sought to use a pan-African styled education to advance the condition of the African
community in America. He became an admirer of Blyden, whose work Christianity,
Islam and the Negro Race became a central piece of Hansberry’s collection and frame of
reference development. He used Leo Frobenius and his work The Voice of Africa to
207 Kwame Wes Alford, “The early Intellectual Growth and Development of William Leo Hansberry and the Birth of African Studies,” Journal of Black Studies, January, 2000, 1. 208 Alford, 5. 209 Alford, 1. 210 Alford, 2.
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increase his awareness of Africa’s glorious past and its interruption by Arabs and
Christians. This recognition of Arabic destruction of African civilization that pre-dated
and eased the subsequent European invasion along with Hansberry’s attention to the
West’s colonization of not only people but information would later become central foci
of Clarke showing clearly the influence of the former on the latter.
Hansberry, like Clarke, at an early age was given a sense of connection to a larger
African community, resulting from each one’s early rural southern upbringing.
Hansberry, also like Clarke, was determined at an early age to learn and then teach the
role of African people in world history and thus became one of the earliest promulgators
of African Studies. Continuing his own connection to the tradition Hansberry sought his
first teaching job at the division of Social Science at Straight University in New Orleans.
His decision to select this particular university where he would establish a
department of “Negro History within the Social Science division,” and his connection to
the earliest beginnings of the tradition are found in the history of that university. Straight
University saw itself as the keepers of a “fervor of Africa consciousness, Black
nationalism, and internationalism {that} existed in New Orleans {and} remained intact in
the African American community since the 1790s.” It was during the 1790s that Africans
escaping from Haitian enslavement after the revolution settled in this region and as part
of the “Jacobin Terror” fomented a consciousness that Hansberry would help pass to his
students and community. 211
Moreover, what Alford’s work on Hansberry addresses is the issue of form of
struggle which was largely being debated at this time. Despite modern impressions of the
non-violent direct action portion of the African American Civil Rights struggle from
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1945-1965 there was no succinct and total acceptance of non-violence. What Alford and
scholars such as Timothy B. Tyson express in their discussions of the southern African
population is that notions of Black non-violence, particularly in the southern United
States, are erroneous at best. They suggest that the using non-violence as a strategy, one
that was largely popularized under the leadership of Martin Luther King, was contrary to
“a long-standing tradition of armed self-defense in the rural deep South.”212 One example
who would become prominent in the lives of African people during this time, including
Clarke himself, and who was also heavily influenced by this southern African resistance
culture was Robert Williams.
Among lesser known figures of the Civil Rights Movement (CRM) such as Ella
Baker, and countless others, Williams has had himself written out of history despite being
one of America’s most identifiable African liberation fighters. Monroe, North Carolina
became for Williams what Mississippi had become for Hansberry and for what Alabama
and Georgia had become for Clarke, an incubator for African consciousness and
resistance. Williams, like Clarke, had been among those who would return from the
second World War with a stronger sense of confidence and commitment to freedom and
was engulfed in the long-standing “traditions of freedom and citizenship” that were
extant in an African south and had been “born in the crucible of Reconstruction {that}
sustained communities of resistance.”213
As Williams’ program for liberation moved beyond his early NAACP boundaries
into areas of armed self-defense and interaction with the Socialist Workers Party he
found himself welcomed by the radical Harlem community including Malcolm X, Clarke,
211 Alford, 11. 212 Timothy B. Tyson, “Robert Williams…”. 2.
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Killens and Julian Mayfield. Williams was met, not only by those mentioned, but more
importantly, by the larger tradition. He would exchange with those who had carried the
tradition to the Harlem street corners and those meeting in small study groups. Williams
met the tradition at places like Louis Michaux’s National Memorial African Bookstore as
many others would at Young’s Book Exchange or Moore’s Frederick Douglass Book
Center. There he engaged with the legacies and carriers of the tradition planted in Harlem
by Harrison, Garvey, Randolph, DuBois, etc., who had established and left the
triumvirate of African radical thought; pan-Africanism, socialism, and nationalism.
While Civil Rights and NAACP members from King to Marshall denounced
Williams’ radicalism and supported FBI investigations of him as associating with
communists,214 the tradition welcomed him. Pan-Africanist and socialist leaders such as
C.L.R. James, nationalists and pan-Africanists such as Malcolm X, Clarke, Carlos Cooks
and others all supported Williams’ efforts. James, holding true to the course others had
traveled and abandoned (i.e., Harrison, Randolph, Clarke) pushed the Socialists to place
race on equal footing with class in their analysis and was therefore able see the value in
supporting Williams. As far back as 1939 James had been discussing these and other
issues with the most prominent European Socialists, including none other than Leon
Trotsky. Though James did not support African American nationalism, as opposed to
Trotsky, he did recognize that if Africans in America wanted it the Socialist Workers
Party must adhere to their wishes. He explained:
The Negro must be won for socialism. There is no other way out for him in America or elsewhere. But he must be won on the basis of his own experience and his own activity. If he wanted self-determination, then however reactionary it might be in every other respect, it would be the business of the revolutionary
213 T. Tyson, 3. 214 T. Tyson, 10.
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party to raise that slogan. If after the revolution he insisted on carrying out that slogan and forming his own state, the revolutionary party would have to stand by its promises and (similarly to its treatment of large masses of peasantry) patiently trust to economic development and education to achieve an integration. But the Negro, fortunately for socialism, does not want self-determination.215
James’ last statement claiming that Africans in America did not want self-determination
clearly comes from his own lack of experience with American African radicalism.
However, it also shows his adherence to Lenin’s own belief in supporting it if the people
called for it, thus allowing for him to be supportive of the efforts of a Robert Williams
some twenty years later.
Williams, meanwhile, would internationalize his efforts as he fled the United
States to avoid fabricated kidnapping charges as a result of government repression. His
militancy and fervent belief in self-defense (which he felt led to peace as those prone to
violence would be less likely to follow through knowing equal resistance would meet
them) became instant inspiration to many. Williams’ thoughts and policies led the
leaders of the Deacons for Defense and Justice, a Louisiana-based organization that
prided itself on the armed self-defense of civil rights workers that would in turn inspire
several northern nationalist groups, to credit Williams with inspiration.
Williams’ book Negroes With Guns, written while in Cuba in 1962, became a
major influence on Huey P. Newton who would later credit Williams and Malcolm X as
the two to most influence the Black Panther Party. In this book Williams outlines his
belief in armed self-defense and his respectful differences with King over the use of non-
violence as a tactic/strategy not a philosophy. He wrote, “when our people become
fighters our leaders will be able to sit at the conference table as equals, not dependent on
215 Leon Trotsky on Black Nationalism and Self-Determination, 34-35.
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the whim and generosity of the oppressors.”216 Later Kwame Ture and Charles Hamilton
would take up a similar thesis in their Black Power.
Williams, despite developing friendships with revolutionaries Che Guevara and
Fidel Castro, would later leave Cuba, claiming that in terms of race relations the Stalinists
were “getting worse than the crackers in Monroe.” He went on to visit another former
Blyden Society member Ho Chi Min in Vietnam and eventually settled in China where he
remained until the early 1990s when he returned to the US until his death in 1996. While
away though he had become in many eyes the heir to Malcolm X’s leadership and was
made president-in exile-of the Revolutionary Action Movement (RAM), which according
to the CIA was “the most dangerous” of all nationalists groups and the Republic of New
Africa.217 In other words, though not his sole influence, the tradition as met directly and
indirectly through the Harlem African community helped to mold another of the radical
giants of the times.
In a sense, and again parenthetically, the example of Williams also shows, in
microcosm, the course of the macro CRM, circa 1945-1965, as it rose and evolved into
the Black Power/Consciousness Movement (BPCM) circa 1966-1975. That is, that
Williams initially began as a member (albeit the lone Monroe member!) of the NAACP.
Upon increasing its Monroe membership and seeking to engage active resistance to
oppression Williams began to feel not only the massive resistance to simple attempts at
integration but NAACP reluctance to increase efforts for change. This led to his own
reevaluation of what strategies were needed thus leading to his more militant positions.
216 Robert Williams, Negroes With Guns, 41. 217 Tyson, 15.
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Williams’ own progressions mirrored the larger evolution of African American
radicalism. We will revisit this reality shortly.
In 1958, one year after independence and nearly five decades after having his
“three deities” instilled in him a consciousness and connection to both African people in
America and the continent, after nearly three decades of initial historical training by
Schomburg and those in the Blyden Society, and after early study, writing and organizing
around the concept of African unity, Clarke was able to make his first visit to the
continent. The importance of such a trip for Clarke and the African world is described by
Ronald Walters. He explains that, “because of Kwame Nkrumah’s leadership, Ghana had
become the hub of Pan African activity, and as such the country was a symbol of the
aspirations of many peoples of African descent for the future viability of the
continent.”218 Interestingly, it is a short story with a long history that provided Clarke
with much of what he needed to get to Ghana.
Clarke had years earlier published short story “The Boy Who Painted Christ
Black,” based loosely on a true story of a young boy who paints Christ black and is
summarily punished for presenting it to his school, had been published and reprinted in
Drum magazine in South Africa. The story, clearly also inspired by John Jackson’s work
on the history of the Christ myth and Christianity, had touched its readers one of whom,
James Kotey of Ghana, would write and invite Clarke to stay with him in Jamestown in
Accra. While staying with Kotey, in what is to this day considered among the worst
areas of Ghana to live, Clarke retells the story of how Nkrumah, passing by in a
motorcade, saw Clarke stopped and asked amusingly, “what are you doing in my
218 Walters, 101.
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country?” Clarke told him he was visiting, that he had little money and told Nkrumah of
his residence in the poorer section of Accra.
Nkrumah upon hearing of his friend’s accommodations said, again amusingly,
“you must really love Africa!” Nkrumah would give a job to Clarke writing for the
Ghana Evening News in order that his old friend from Harlem might support himself and
be able to afford his return to America. Greg Carr has noted that it was here, writing for
a former British colony, that Clarke truly learned the English language, where better than
from a one-time British colony?219
Clarke’s stay in Ghana benefited him not only through his ability to gain valuable
writing knowledge and experience, but also seeing first hand the struggles of a newly
“independent” nation struggling to correct the ravages of centuries of enslavement and
colonialism. As discussed in the African American context, since the Russian Revolution
in 1917 European radicalism had become an enormous influence. This was certainly true
of American radicalism, both in its African and European manifestations, but also on the
continent of African and throughout the world. Nkrumah’s brand of socialism, one
devoid of African traditionalism, became (and still is) a great source of debate. Among
Nkrumah’s critics was Joseph P. Danquah. Danquah had been a young activist under the
leadership of Casely Hayford whose efforts to bring about the return of exiled Ghanian
kings in 1931 turned into a fully developed struggle for Ghanian independence. Clarke
says of him that Hayford, “fathered modern Ghanian politics.”220 Clarke was able to learn
219 Greg Carr, video. 220 Clarke, Notes, 17.
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from and witness first-hand this reality, and as he says, Clarke noticed Nkrumah’s
dismissal of traditional thought immediately during his stay in 1958.221
Without engaging in the debate over scientific socialism and African
traditionalism, as this is outside the scope of the current work, two points need to be
made here. One, Clarke had by 1958 been introduced to an African communal society
(rural Alabama and Georgia), been given a certain African consciousness from his family
and then a more sophisticated one through his training with Schomburg, Huggins,
Jackson and Hansberry, and had also become versed in the policies/beliefs of
American/European socialism and communism through his work with the Young
Communists League and the Harlem radicals of the times. Secondly, in what may prove
a sophomoric defense/explanation of Nkrumah’s reconciliation of African traditionalism
(read: communalism) and scientific socialism a brief excerpt from his Consciencism may
be of value:
Capitalism is a development by refinement from feudalism, just as feudalism is a development by refinement of slavery… Whereas capitalism is a development by refinement from slavery and feudalism, socialism is obviously not a development from capitalism. In order that socialism should be a development from capitalism, it needs to share a fundamental principle, that of exploitation, with capitalism… If one seeks the social-political ancestor of socialism, one must go to communalism. Socialism stands to communalism as capitalism stands to slavery. In socialism, the principles underlying communalism are given expression in modern terms… {“modern” meaning} a technical society where sophisticated means of production are at hand.222
That said, while Clarke was seeking to remove African policy/decision making from a
Eurocentric paradigm, i.e. capitalism vs. socialism, Nkrumah also with his African-
221 Adams, Master Teacher, 92. 222 Nkrumah, Consciencism, 72-73.
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centered Harlem History Club background and pan-Africanist outlook, was seeking a
pragmatic answer to his country’s problems.
The African world was moving, more organization, more meetings, more
planning for the overthrow of European/American hegemony over nations, people and
learning were taking place. Greg Carr has mentioned that the 1960s were Clarke’s
“period of radicalization,”223 and this author would only like to add that this
radicalization process was in concert with the rest of the African world. In 1962 Clarke
attended the second international Congress of Africanists in Dakar, Senegal where he
would meet Cheikh Anta Diop.
Diop, by the time of his meeting with Clarke, had already established himself as
one of the African world’s finest scholar/activists. Born in Diourbel, Senegal in 1923
Diop had published essays and books covering Africa’s cultural unity, contribution and
been involved in organizing as he created the first post- World War II student Pan-
African political congress in 1951. In a posthumously published book called Towards the
African Renaissance: Cheikh Anta Diop Essays in Culture and Development his work
from 1948 (the year of his first publications) to 1960 are given display showing the
length of time dedicated to an African-centered multidisciplinary body of work.
This book shows all the work that led to Diop’s later brilliant contributions
African Origins of Civilization: Myth or Reality, The Cultural Unity of Black Africa, Pre-
Colonial Africa and Civilization or Barbarism. In Renaissance readers are shown why
Clarke felt that such a meeting was so valuable and what would later make Clarke take an
instrumental lead in having Diop’s work published in English and in America. As the
essays show, Diop, who would publish in 1960 Black Africa: The Economic and Cultural
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Basis for a Federated State, had already made a strong case for the African origins of
Egypt, the civilizing influence of Africa on Europe and Asia, the need for a united
African Federated State and the pan-African implications of such thought. His command
of various disciplines from linguistics, to astrology, to history, to chemistry for the
expressed purpose of uniting and liberating African people is summed up best by Diop
himself who explained, “In a country where everything is yet to be done, polyvalency can
only be productive.”224
Clarke’s experiences in Africa, traveling first to Ghana, Nigeria and Togo, then to
Senegal would invigorate him and help prepare him for his next set of endeavors. Upon
his return he would take on a position as editor and writer for Freedomways magazine, a
new publication describing itself as, “the voice of the freedom and civil rights movements
in America.”225
Freedomways came out of the culture of African newspaper writing in America.
DuBois, who along with Carter G. Woodson, is considered as Boroughs says, “the dean
of 20th century African-American scholars and black commentary writers,” had begun
writing a column called “Pan-Africa” for a Harlem-based newspaper called The People’s
Voice. This paper had been established by, among others, Adam Clayton Powell, Jr.,
who had by this time become Harlem’s undisputed leader. DuBois, of course, had long
since been writing columns as far back as 1910 with the inauguration of The Crisis. J.A.
Rogers had been publishing a column entitled “History Shows…” in the Courier since
the 1950s and another of Clarke’s mentors Willis N. Huggins had been doing the same
223 Carr, video. 224 Cheikh Anta Diop, Towards the African Renaissance, 139. 225 Todd Boroughs audio taped interview with John Henrik Clarke.
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for The Chicago Defender where he had used this vehicle for his coverage of the League
of Nations meetings during the 1930s.
Further, as mentioned, Freedomways became the ideological heir of both The
Harlem Quarterly (1949-1950) and of Paul Robeson’s Freedom magazine (1951-1955)
but as Boroughs explains, “was more militant {than the Quarterly} and in line with the
New Left and Civil Rights movements.” Clarke’s involvement as editor and staff writer
would bring a paradigm that, “would later find currency in the political and intellectual
mainstream of America during the Black Power and Black Consciousness movements…
and the drive for Black Studies.”226
From 1961 until the end of his relationship with the magazine in 1982
(Freedomways published its last issue in 1985) Clarke was, in terms of an African-
centered outlook, the primary source of information gathering, writing, and article
solicitation. In the first five years of the publication Clarke helped shape the perspective
of the magazine adding an African-centered approach to an otherwise communist/leftist
dominated African American publication. Under the leadership of Esther Jackson and
Shirley Graham (DuBois, after her marriage to W.E.B. in 1951) a group of African
American scholars and activists sought out to create a new organ of activism. Jackson
and her husband, who was at the time a leading intellectual in the Communist Party, were
examples of the communist ties to the magazine which as Harold Cruse argued left
Freedomways with little “independent political or cultural” thought.227
However, this does not, in the end, support claims by Cruse and others who would
use this as a means to color Clarke as a communist rather than an African-centered
226 Boroughs, 14. 227 Cruse, 242.
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thinker strongly set in the tradition of which we now speak. One clue that sheds some
light on Clarke’s perspective is his continued relationship with a former CP member and
Harlem community leader Richard Moore.
During the same early 1960s period that Clarke joins Freedomways he can be
found joining Moore’s Committee to Present the Truth About the Name “Negro.” In a
1960 speech Moore explained the origins of the Committee and gives a pan-African
contextual explanation as to why he would never use the word “Negro” again. His point
was to explain the psychological relationship to a people’s proper name and their
subsequent action. He, in the grandest form of the tradition, explained that during a
recent lecture for “Negro History Week” he heard a woman begin her lecture by
explaining “Negro” history with the arrival of the first slave ship. Upon his turn to speak
Moore rose and exclaimed,
our history goes back into antiquity, into the earliest development of the broad and highly structured human cultures of Egypt and Ethiopia and other areas of Africa. My subject then, will be, “The Role of Africans in World History.228
A survey of the articles and book reviews written by Clarke for Freedomways from 1961-
1982/3 clearly indicate a man writing within the tradition illustrated by his relationship to
Moore and those of the tradition being discussed herein.
Though his first contribution to the magazine in 1961 was a supportive piece on
the Cuban Revolution this does not disavow him of his allegiance to an African-centered
discourse. However, it reads as a piece supporting the virtues of Fidel Castro who was
preaching a return of land control to the people, a large percentage of whom were (and
are) of African descent. Also in 1961, Clarke submitted an article on Black Nationalism
228 Richard B. Moore, “The Name ‘Negro’ –Its Origin and Evil Use,” Richard B. Moore: Caribbean Militant in Harlem, 224.
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five years before this concept is re-popularized in the African American wing of the
African world struggle, i.e. the Civil Rights/Black Power Movements. This article is
very telling of where Clarke’s frame of reference was. He begins by talking about an
African world hero from the Congo, Patrice Lumumba who Clarke says had “become a
martyr to Afro-American nationalists because he was the symbol of the black man’s
humanity struggling for recognition.”229 This is an important pan-African message
showing, again, Clarke’s tradition training as he never divorced African American
struggle from that of other Africans in the world.
Clarke then goes on to give a summary of the leading nationalist organizations of
that time, the Nation of Islam where he talks with the rising leader Malcolm X, the
Muslim Brotherhood, United African Nationalist Movement and so on. Furthermore,
owing to the tradition, Clarke connects these movements, specifically the Nation of
Islam, to the movements of the past, in particular the Garvey movement. This, along
with his discussion of the African religious practices involved in some nationalists
movements such as the Yoruba Temple of New Oyo (Harlem), shows his tradition
training giving broad historical context and attention to African cultural contributions.
The article also shows Clarke’s early belief and support of African cultural
continuity and the importance of understanding one’s history and culture. Here he quotes
Saunders Redding who provided Clarke with an axiom that would remain a staple in his
speeches for decades to come, “a people’s relation to their culture is the same as the
relation of a child to its mother’s breast.”230
229 Clarke, “New Afro-American Nationalism,” Freedomways, fall 1961, 286. 230 Clarke, “New Afro,” 292.
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Subsequent articles from Clarke, particularly in the issues he made sure were
dedicated to his favorite topics, Harlem, Africa, the Caribbean, and a tribute to Paul
Robeson and W.E.B. DuBois, show his continued support of a global African diaspora
viewpoint. He was able to use his growing popularity in the African world community to
solicit articles from Nkrumah and Jomo Kenyatta. Clarke also made sure to find
magazine space for his mentors J.A. Rogers, Richard B. Moore and William Leo
Hansberry.
As time passed the old guard of the CRM was having an increasingly hard time
denying the younger generation its rightful place as leaders. We have mentioned that
when World War II ended the upsurge of African, Asian, Latin American and Caribbean
people moving towards liberation from European/American domination was
unprecedented. In addition, Rod Bush explains that the post-1940s period saw Africans
in America consistently barred from unions and relegated to a position of unprotected
surplus labor similar to America’s post-Reconstruction days.231 These causes led to
further efforts of Africans in America to achieve freedom, justice and equality.
The American response to this was a series of legislative concessions made by the
US government to assuage a growing militancy. As early as 1946 president Harry S.
Truman began the process of protecting America’s “civil rights record” by calling for
civil rights legislation in order to guard American global economic interests threatened by
a world watching a repressive United States at work against its own citizens.232
In 1954, despite the landmark Brown Supreme Court decision, schools were not
desegregating nor of course were segregated African American schools being given
231 Rod Bush, 156. 232 Zinn, 440.
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necessary funding to make them equal. The 1963 March On Washington, coinciding in
irony with the death of DuBois and the birth of the Organization of African Unity (OAU),
brought many Africans to the realization that these gatherings meant little to the material
condition of most African Americans. Malcolm X’s response to the march as being a
“farce on Washington,” that had been controlled and quelled by White leadership seemed
more true as African American poverty, abuse, and imprisonment did not decline. In
addition, Malcolm’s statements were supported by the killing of three organizers in
Mississippi James Chaney, Andrew Goodman and Michael Schwerner one summer later
and only twelve days after an appeal had been made and summarily denied by the White
House for protection.233
Similarly, the 1964 Civil Rights Act and a 1965 Voting Rights Act may have
brought about a decline in organized outward protest234 but they certainly did nothing to
address African poverty and African people in America were not at all satisfied or
showing signs of relenting. In a brief sullen anecdote Louis notes that, “on July 2nd
{1964}, President Johnson signed the Civil Rights Act into law, and one minute later
thirteen-year old black Mississippian Gene Young was refused service at the Hotel
Muelbach barbershop in Kansas City, MO.”235
These events and the growing realization that not only was the United States
engaged in a game of minor reform for purposes of pacification but that those in power
were linked to an international power struggle over land, people and natural resources. It
is this American resistance to legitimate change, along with the movements throughout
233 Zinn, 449. 234 Debbie Louis notes in And We Are Not Yet Saved that , “with the Voting Rights Act, the southern {Civil Rights} movement dissolved,” 190. 235 Debbie Louis, 145.
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the global African diaspora that resulted in the eventual shift in strategy, previously
mentioned, employed by those demanding liberation.
Even the often-misrepresented Martin Luther King was clear about this reality
recognizing that there were in fact “phases” to the struggle for freedom. In a discussion
with the leadership of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC) King asked
his fellow leadership to be aware that “a court can only declare rights: it does not always
necessarily deliver them.” Continuing he explained, “these legislative and judicial
victories did very little to improve the lot of the millions of Negroes in the teeming
ghettos of the North,” that legislation does nothing against the “practice of White
supremacy” or “the monster of racism… {whose} ultimate logic is genocide.” King
began calling for a “guaranteed annual income,” and warned his listeners that, “we are
treading on difficult waters because it really means that we are saying that something is
wrong with the economic system of our nation.”236 And though he differed with those
calling for Black Power he recognized that the first “phase” of the Civil Rights
Movement had only addressed the White Americans need to “treat Negroes with a degree
of decency, not of equality.”237
These realizations among many in the African American community brought
about a change in strategy as those opposing these forces sought ways to truly improve
the lot of oppressed people. A growing consciousness of the situation began to appear in
the slogans of “Black Power,” and the establishment and practice of colonial models for
the study of African people’s relationship to the United States and Europe. Variances of
land and economic nationalism, Marxism, and armed resistance became personified in
236 Martin Luther King, Jr. SCLC Leadership Meeting, 11/14/1966, 3-19. 237 Martin Luther King, Jr. Where Do We Go, 4.
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the actions and words of Malcolm X, Robert Williams, Ella Baker, Kwame Ture, The
Black Panther Party, the Revolutionary Action Movement, and others.
Again, Clarke was right there, tradition ready for use. As a member of Malcolm
X’s historical cabinet he was there to and able to aid in the construction of Malcolm’s
Organization of Afro-American Unity (OAAU) in 1964 which embodied many of the
new developments in the African freedom struggle in America. Though never claiming
to be the primary author of the mission statement or the leader of the OAAU, Clarke’s
presence assured that there would be present a solid understanding of African world
history and the need for an international, pan-African outlook.
William Sales, Jr. in his work on the subject explains some of the lesser-known
aspects of the OAAU. Included in these were its pan-African orientation, which Sales
says came directly out of what he says were, “street corner ideological debates… between
the likes of {Malcolm and} Elombe Brath, Ahmed Basheer, Carlos Cooks, George Reed,
and others,” what we are simply calling “the tradition.” Also, the OAAU was to be also a
front organization and cover for armed guerilla warfare groups who following the lead of
the struggles being wages throughout the so-called “Third World” were being prepared
for action in America.238
In Freedomways Clarke maintained a consistent authorship of articles on various
aspects of African world history, writing countless book reviews on every aspect of
African life and history. As a clear sign of the times, in 1967, the same year as the
publication of Black Power by Kwame Ture and Charles V. Hamilton, Clarke echoes
their premise that Africans in America exist in a colonial relationship with the United
States not unlike those residing in other parts of the so-called "Third World.”
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He wrote:
The black ghettos are small colonies whose various economic, political and social institutions are controlled by absentee forces more interested in containment of the restless populace within the ghetto than in curing its social ills.239
It is this awareness that roughly four years earlier demanded he join Kenneth B. Clark in
his attempt to “cure the social ills” of his Harlem community. Clark’s goal was to create
a program that dealt with, “the personality and emotional problems of the bulk of the
youth of the Harlem ghetto {and that understood these problems} in terms of the
pervasive pathology which characterizes our society and makes the ghetto possible.”240
The tradition demanded that Clarke make it accessible to those in the African community,
particularly those in the one African community that not only nurtured Clarke but the
tradition itself, Harlem.
The roots of anti-poverty programs can be traced back to the efforts of President
Franklin D. Roosevelt who, in the 1930s, established programs meant to stimulate
consumer spending to reverse the trends of America’s Great Depression. The New Deal
of Roosevelt produced an earlier war on poverty and resulted in several programs such as
Emergency Relief, the National Youth Administration (NYA), Civilian Conservation
Corps (CCC camps) and the aforementioned Works Project Administration (WPA).
Continuing from the days of Roosevelt, John F. Kennedy added the President’s
Committee on Juvenile Delinquency (PCJD) which as Clark explains became the,
“foundation for the national anti-poverty program.”241 It was Kennedy’s PCJD, that in
1962, allotted funds for Clark to produce a Harlem Youth Unlimited (HARYOU) study
238 William W. Sales, Jr., From Civil Rights to Black Liberation, 104-132. 239 Clarke, Freedomways, vol. Number 1, 1967,34. 240 Kenneth B. Clark, “HARYOU: An Experiment,” Harlem, U.S.A., ed. John Henrik Clarke, 212.
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on juvenile delinquency. The final product of this was HARYOU’s Youth in the Ghetto.
It was here that Clark and HARYOU gave a detailed analysis on the economic and social
conditions of poverty and ways in which a poor community could itself engage in an anti-
poverty struggle.
In 1964, because of the efforts of Congressman Adam Clayton Powell, Jr.,
president Lyndon Baines Johnson signed the War on Poverty Bill which in writing called
for the dispersal of millions of dollars to aid America’s poverty problem. This, along
with the Equal Opportunity Act of 1964, was meant for the “stimulation and incentive for
urban and rural communities to mobilize their resources, public and private, to combat
poverty through community action programs.”242 Out of this came the funding necessary
to implement the ideas discussed in Youth in the Ghetto.
Adam Clayton Powell, Jr., who had been a leader in what Clarke had called “a
political renaissance in Harlem,”243 during the years of struggle to make Harlem a
congressional district and becoming its first congressman, would seek involvement in
HARYOU. In June, 1964, the fledgling HARYOU and its Mobilization for Youth action
programs, came under fire as they were given, at least, partial blame for that months
Harlem uprising. The Harlem community in response to poverty, the larger Civil Rights
struggle and ultimately to the police killing of a young boy, rose up in protest. This was
seen as a failure of HARYOU and Powell then sought increased involvement.
Powell and his group used his influence as the beloved congressman and AME
Baptist church leader, not to mention his congressional power as head of the House
Education and Labor Committee who oversaw Powell’s anti-poverty legislation and
241 Kenneth B. Clark, A Relevant War Against Poverty, 4. 242 Kenneth B. Clark, A Relevant War Against Poverty, 22.
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funding for such programs to assume leadership of HARYOU. This brought about a
merger between HARYOU and Powell’s ACT group to form HARYOU-ACT. Clark
claims that this move proved detrimental to the overall goal of aiding the poor. He
explained:
The controversy for control of the HARYOU program and the resolution of that controversy with victory for Powell forces effectively blocked any systematic and serious work with or organization of the poor in Harlem. The poor were fought about and not for, another instance of the pathos of the poor. The poor were hostages, instruments to other peoples’ profit and power.244
Powell and his team simply felt that HARYOU needed leadership that would
prevent further uprising and disruption in the Harlem community and in fact used a lack
of such action in the following summer of 1965 as example of their own success.245
However, Powell also noted that his legislation for funding of these programs was never
followed, and that his law was in fact being broken. Powell wrote in his legislation that
no more than 20% of government funding could be used for salaries in these programs.
According to Powell this rule was consistently broken as salaries accounted for over 70%
of the use of funds for HARYOU-ACT and other anti-poverty programs. Ultimately,
Powell would say:
Should not the primary thrust of the whole anti-poverty program effort be on jobs? To the extent we ignore the creation of a viable national employment program to that same extent we prostitute the war on poverty. {Program leadership in cities like New York and Washington, DC} the executive directors are Black people but there are no other Black people at the top. This sorry racial tokenism has been merchandized by an unholy alliance of Black Uncle Toms and insensistive upper class Whites… I have said I had nothing to do with HARYOU-ACT at all thank God. We found there weren’t any poor involved in HARYOU-ACT with the policy making board. Too much of the money… was going for
243 John Henrik Clarke, “The Early Years of Adam Powell,” Freedomways, Summer 1967, vol.7 no.3, 211. 244 Clark, 221. 245 Clark, 220.
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salaries, nice sounding programs and pretty offices. In HARYOU-ACT the amount of money going for salaries is something like 77%, this is ridiculous. 246
Whatever the abuses of the program may have been, it should not be seen in
anyway as a complete failure or as having been without successes or purpose. Out of the
HARYOU-ACT outline, proposal and Community Action Institute (CAI) programs
strong efforts and progress was made. Clarke, for example, was enlisted to help with the
cultural/heritage aspects of HARYOU. James Baldwin summarized the need for such an
aspect of HARYOU:
A black child, born in this country… discovers two terrifying things. First of all he discovers that he does not exist in it, no matter what he looks like—by which I mean books, magazines, movies—there is no reflection of himself anywhere.. (if) he finds anything which looks like him, he is authoritatively assured that this is a savage, or a comedian who has never contributed anything to civilization.247
This undoubtedly resonated with Clarke who would have remembered his own youthful
search for Black angels in the Bible or an accurate representation of African people in
literature and the like. Clarke’s involvement sought to address the void left for African
youth in terms of historical continuity, cultural linkages and paradigm setting in
preparation for leadership and community development towards liberation.
A 1964 copy of the minutes of a CAI meeting show some of the problems Clarke
and others were seeking to address. Note one discusses the need for “massive
education… in the Harlem community,” that would address the goals mentioned in note
two that, “the focal thrust of HARYOU-ACT is to ‘energize the people to take their own
destiny in their hands.” Clarke’s role was to teach four classes, 20 hours a week, on
246 Powell, Gil Nobles Special video. 247 Clark, Youth in the Ghetto, 504.
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training workshops that were initially meant to increase leadership skills for the staff and
then the larger community.248
Vicky Gholson had met Clarke in 1963 as a young college-age Harlem youth and
has made clear the positive and progressive accomplishments of Clarke and HARYOU-
ACT. What she and colleague Barbara Wheeler, who met and worked with Clarke
starting in 1966, explain is that what Clarke began with his efforts in HARYOU-ACT
Heritage Sessions was the “pre-cursor to the Black Studies Movement” that would begin
in the mid to late 60s. In fact, calling him the “father of Black Studies,”249 Gholson and
Wheeler explain that Clarke used the Heritage Sessions to expose youngsters to his
tradition training through his own and guest lectures, including old friends Richard B.
Moore and Yosef ben-Jochannan.
Meeting across the street from the Schomburg Research Center at 175 135th street
these Heritage Session meetings included what Gholson would call a diverse
“experience.”250 There would be historical lectures from those mentioned above and
music from jazz notables such as Max Roach and Oscar Brown, Jr. Also influence from
those fresh from the civil rights struggles in the South came from the likes of Bob Moses
and gave an overall exposure to historical and cultural links for the African community in
Harlem. Also included was singing from activist Abby Lincoln who Clarke had
interviewed in 1961 as part of his piece on nationalism for Freedomways. She was a
singer, no doubt, but her views were well documented by Clarke as she explained in 1961
that, “we Afro-Americans will be heard by any means you make it necessary for us to
248 Community Action Institute Staff Minutes, December 8th, 1964, Schomburg Collection. 249 Interview with Drs. Barbara Wheeler and Vicky Gholson. 250 IBID.
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use,” further attacking the “crumb-crunching, cocktail-sipping Uncle Tom leadership
paid by colonialists.”251
Clarke’s own contributions, aside from assembling such notable teachers,
included his passing of the tradition onto those in Harlem. A survey of his lecutre notes
and outlines for HARYOU-ACT lectures clearly shows this. Included were discussions
of the antiquity of African people and civilization, African origins of Egypt and
subsequent Egyptian influence on Europe and Asia and historically contextualized studies
of contemporary leadership. In a “Fact Sheet” from a HARYOU-ACT Heritage Program
as part of the CAI Clarke shows this in a lecture given on “The New Black Radicals and
Black Power.” In it Clarke links modern leaders such as King, Carmichael, Wilkins,
Young and McKissick to 19th century leaders such as Garnet and Delany. Here the
tradition is shown to be in use, saying that the concept of Black Power is “old hat.”252
This use of historical context, including the use of ancient African history as a
tool to awaken the consciousness of African youth in America, was a clear demonstration
of the tradition in practice. Bringing in lecturers and musicians extolling the virtues of
Africanness in history, music, etc. brought about cultural awareness that was (and is)
sorely needed particularly among the youth and future leaders. In fact, predating much of
the discussion of cultural nationalism that would eventually play a major role in African
American organizational development, Clarke brought that aspect of knowledge-building
to those in HARYOU-ACT. As Wheeler notes, Clarke from 1964-1968, was involved in
the developing Black Consciousness Movement and used these years to increase
251 Clarke, “New Nationalism,” Freedomways, fall 1961, 287. 252 Fact Sheet, HARYOU-ACT Heritage Program, CAI, 7/18/66.
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consciousness among the African community. From 1968 on he would engage with
others in institution building in order that said consciousness would be perpetuated.
Furthermore, and as mentioned, the efforts of Clarke were seen by many as the
beginnings of the movement to increase in both abundance and accuracy the discussion
of African people and history in schools and universities. Actually, it would be more
accurate to categorize what began to happen in the mid to late 1960s in terms of Black
Studies a re-birth or continuance of the struggles of DuBois, Woodson, Hansberry,
Jackson, Huggins and others. A student movement, largely led by the Student
Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC), had begun as leaders such a Stokely
Carmichael were engaging activists like Malcolm X as early as 1962.
As Wheeler and Gholson explain, many of the young students who would
eventually enter colleges during the late 60s had been influenced by the Civil and Human
Rights movements, the Black Power and Consciousness Movements in America and
abroad, as well as, the experience of the Heritage Sessions in HARYOU-ACT. The latter
exposed youngsters to an inclusive world history and once it was seen that such inclusion
did not exist in universities they were prepared and anxious to demand them. From here
Clarke and other would seek to expand on the tradition and consciousness raising through
institution building.
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---RICHARD MOORE--- DIOP --- ---Civil to Black Power--- (including influence overseas, Biko, etc.) ---Freedomways – African-centered- no explicit Marxism ---Black Studies push--- end there- next chapter institutionalization of tradition
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-USE ALL OF THIS FOR HARLEM CHAPTER- NEXT -ALSO INCLUDE WRITINGS AND ORGANIZATIONAL DEVELOPMENT FROM TIMELINE- DUBOIS “THE NEGRO” AND AS WALTERS SAID THIS INFLUENCE ON JHC AND OTHERS .- R.WALTERS AND COMPARISON OF MIGRATION TO COLONIAL AFRICANS GOING TO EUROPEAN METROPOLES -COME BACK TO LOCKE AND HIS NEW NEGRO THAT PUBLISHED THE SCHOMBURG ESSAY THAT LAUNCHED CLARKE’S DIRECTION -BRING CHP 3 IN WITH A REURN TO SCHOMBURG AND TRADITION PASSING THROUGH HHC, ETC. -HARRISON CONNECTION TO AFRICAN ANTIQUITY AND CIVILZATION WHEN HE AND POLSTON ATTACK EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION AS BEING A COVER FOR DOMINATION -NOTE ALSO THE 1925 BIRTHS OF THE PAN-AFRICAN PANTHEON OF MALCOLM, FANON, AND LUMUMBA -CHECK DUBOIS READER FOR HIS THOUGHTS OF THIS ERA AND SOCIALISM, PAN AFRICANISM, NATIONALISM, ETC.
ADD TO NEXT CHAPTER INTRO: “Man, when I stepped off that train in Harlem for the first time… hoo wee… it
was like being in heaven!” - Anonymous Woman253
253 I Remember Harlem, video.
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