Protest Politics and the
Jena Generation:
Lessons for 21st Century
Black Leaders
ByUhuru Hotep, Ed. D.
Kwame Ture Leadership Institute
http://www.ktli.org
Introduction
This essay lays the foundation for
a paradigm shift in Black leadership practice by exposing
the limitations of protest politics and its major tactic,
the mass march. If we are to achieve real power as
a community of African people in 21st century America,
present-day Black leaders must subject even their most
cherished practices, like the mass march, to critical
analysis. Without this critical analysis, future
Black leaders may settle for leading noisy demonstrations
that end up strengthening the powers against whom we
struggle. This we must prevent at all cost. As much
as our tradition is our guide, we must not be blinded by
it. Times and conditions change. What was
yesterday?s solution may be today?s problem. And so
it is with protest politics and the mass march in
particular.
Background
According to historian Peter
Bergman (1969), Africans in the U.S. have been
petitioning the White power structure for redress of our
grievances since 1769. During the first six decades of
the 19th century, Black leaders like Frederick Douglass
and Sojourner Truth organized dozens of rallies, made
hundreds of speeches, and submitted numerous petitions to
White America?s political and religious leaders, North
and South, demanding the abolition of slavery. Their
rallies, speeches and petitions were largely ignored, so
it took a bloody Civil War (1861-65) to end chattel
slavery in this country.
The first series of mass protest
marches held by African Americans were organized during
the period 1919-25 by NAACP activists Ida B. Wells and
W.E.B. DuBois. Designed to pressure Congress into
passing legislation outlawing lynching as a federal
crime, these early efforts at protest politics failed to
achieve their stated goal, though they did succeed in
placing the protest march into our political vocabulary.
Over the past 40 years, the
protest march, perfected during the Civil Rights era
(1955-70), has become our preferred method of voicing our
collective grievances to the White power structure.
Sanctioned by the U.S. Constitution, held in public
spaces and directed at the White political establishment,
the protest march, like a safety valve, has been
extremely effective at siphoning off pent-up Black
frustration and anger, but in a fashion that leaves our
oppressor in tact and empowered.
The Importance of Jena
The September 20, 2007
mobilization that attracted 60,000 Black youth (CNN
reported 15-20,000) and their supporters to the backwater
hamlet of Jena, La, to protest the injustice meted out to
six Black high school students, breathed new life into
our fading protest tradition. Columnist
Steven Ward wrote in the October 10th edition of Black
Agenda Report that many in his generation viewed the
Jena mobilization as a 'rekindling of the spirit of the
civil rights movement' when wide-spread discontent with
institutional racism stirred thousands of ordinary Black
people to behave in extraordinary ways. According
to CNN, both Jesse Jackson and Al Sharpton voiced similar
sentiments. But before we embark upon yet another
round of marching and protesting, let us first review the
strengths and weakness of our protest tradition as
revealed by the Jena 6 mobilization.
Strengths of the Jena
Mobilization
First, in an article published in
the Michigan Citizen, Amber Jefferies, a 7th grade
student from Detroit reported that for her the Jena March
was a 'life-changing' event. Sister Amber speaks
for thousands of Black youth who marched in Jena or who
participated in post-Jena demonstrations. Our
protest tradition is extremely powerful. It often
makes a deep and lasting impact on those who participate
in it. Coming together with tens of thousands of
our people to collectively voice our discontent is heady
stuff. It's euphoric and literally mesmerizing, but
only temporarily.
Our history tells us that planning
and/or participating in a protest march have been an
important Black rite of passage into American political
life since the 1950s. So it?s no surprise that the
Black youth who marched in Jena were deeply moved by our
protest tradition, which can in fact change one?s life.
As a child of the Black Power/Black Consciousness
movement of the late 60s, I too can attest to the
life-changing impact of protest politics.
Second, the Jena mobilization,
supported by key members of the hip hop community, was
the first Internet driven Black youth protest in American
history. National Public Radio's Eric Weiner
reported that African American bloggers, list servers and
chat room junkies, not the mainstream media, were the
driving force publicizing the plight of the Jena 6 and
the March. Others have noted that Black youth
haven?t mobilized against our racial oppression on the
scale of Jena since the Civil Rights movement. As
long as it exists, Black youth must use the Internet as a
tool for creating educational, economic, medical,
political, religious and other institutions to meet their
needs and the needs of African people, both a home and
abroad.
A final benefit of Jena is the
opportunity it provides to begin the emotionally
cumbersome but essential task of bridging the generation
gap. Black activist Dr. Oba T?Shaka in his book The
Integration Trap: The Generation Gap correctly
identifies the 'generation gap' between Black youth and
their elders as 'the most serious internal issue facing
African American communities across the United States.'
If properly used, Jena could be the catalyst for an
intergenerational dialog and then widespread cooperation
between Black youth activists, progressive hip hop
artists, African centered students, and their politically
astute elders. Personally, I?m interested in what made
the plight of the Jena 6 so compelling that it moved
Black students across this country to turn off BET, pull
up their pants, reach into their wallets, and travel to
Jena to defend six of their own.
Weaknesses of the Jena
Mobilization
The Jena March, like all one-day
mobilizations including the 'historic' March on Washington
in 1963 and the Million Man March in 1995, is at best
symbolic and at worst diversionary. We know
that it takes constant, long-term pressure by those, like
Blacks, who lack the organized wealth and high level
influence to make even the smallest change in the
American political system. We also know that
nothing of lasting value can be achieved in American
politics by a one-day protest regardless of the numbers
involved, except that it dupes us into believing that we
have accomplished something concrete and tangible. And
that?s the hidden danger of protest politics.
Even when it's successful, we can
still be manipulated by our psychological need for
recognition from our oppressors, who are masters at
weaving what Minister Louis Farrakhan calls an 'illusion
of inclusion,' in
which symbolic acts are substituted for substantive ones.
In other words, once CNN, BET, NBC, MTV, New York
Times, etc., begins to cover our protest and we are
invited to Washington to meet the president, or downtown
to meet the mayor, we celebrate believing that we have
won them over to our cause and they will soon redress our
grievances, when nothing could be further from the truth.
We have simply fallen victim to the 'illusion of
inclusion' and are confusing symbol with substance.
Furthermore, if we insist on
practicing protest politics, then we must accept that as
long as we restrict ourselves to protesting the actions
of our adversaries, we will never be proactive. Protesting
is not acting; it's reacting, which means that protesting
is basically reactionary. If this weren't enough,
protesting actually plays right into our enemies' hands
because it allows them to strategically manufacture
events they know will stir us to react. And as long
as we are reacting to their initiatives, we are not
acting to further our agenda; and as long as we are
reacting, we are not building. Protest politics, by
its very nature, forces us to play our oppressors' game,
and not our own.
Another major limitation of
protest politics is economic. It's estimated that
the 60,000 youth who marched in Jena on September 20th
dumped at least $3.2 million into the local
White-controlled economy. This means that White-owned
motels, restaurants, fast food joints, grocery stores,
gas stations, etc., made big money from the marchers as
did the White owned airlines and bus companies that
transported them to Jena. The Africans who live in Jena
did not share in this stupendous cash flow because they
own few businesses in which the Jena marchers could spend
their money. To my knowledge, no permanent Black
owned and operated enterprise of any kind was established
in Jena by the March organizers.
Like the Civil Rights activists
who preceded them, the Jena March organizers failed to
consider the economics of mass mobilization. LIB
Radio commentator Keidi Awadu, has leveled the same
criticism at the organizers of the Million Man March, who
unwittingly delivered at least $100 million into the
hands of Washington, DC?s White business community.
These are funds we should have used to buy the farms,
factories, schools and hospitals we desperately need to
truly empower ourselves, not squandered on one day
extravaganzas. Furthermore, as long as our
'protesting' enriches Whites as it did in Jena, they are
in favor of it. But if it stops them from making
money, they will shut it down. One of the critical
lessons Black youth must learn from Jena is that a true
movement for social transformation and change will leave
grassroots institutions ' businesses owned and operated
by our people ' in its wake.
A fourth limitation of protest
politics is its endorsement by the White power structure.
Our right to peacefully assemble and petition the
government to redress our grievances is 'guaranteed' by
the first amendment to the U.S. Constitution. This means
that our protesting and marching are actually sanctioned
by the very people who oppress us: the super-rich
White males who own and operate this nation's political
and economic systems. Why? The answer is simple.
There is no law or power that requires the American
ruling elite and its agents to change how they govern in Jena
or anywhere else because we lead a public protest.
Black youth leaders and
activists must overstand that adopting forms of political
engagement sanctioned by our adversaries will have them
actively participating in their own destruction.
Simply protesting and marching, even voting and winning
public office, will not transform or even reform how this
nation treats Black people. This many of us know from
living in cities governed by Black officials we elected,
naively believing they had the power to change the
quality of our lives.
A fifth and most disturbing
weakness of our protest tradition is psychological.
Protest politics are rooted in what psychologists call an
'external locus of control.' This means that protesting
has us looking outside of ourselves and our community to
our oppressor, the U.S. government and its agents ' the
mayor, the governor, the President, et al ' to solve our
problems under the false belief that they are better
qualified than we to make decisions about our lives.
We foolishly turn our lives over
to the wicked, then we march downtown to their
city-county building, their courthouse, their police
department, or to Washington, DC or Jena, to demand
justice from the very people who created and profit from
our unjust condition in the first place. This is
absolutely insane! It's analogous to a rape victim
turning to her rapist for protection. The Jena
generation must first love themselves, then 'flip the
script' and establish an 'internal' locus of control,
which means their locus or center of power, authority and
legitimacy must reside within their families, our people
and our culture, and not mainstream politicians and
government agencies.
For 21st century Black leaders to
embrace the politics of protest and its tactic of 'mass
mobilization for one-day of demonstration' as its
preferred mode of direct action is dangerous because it
misdirects our energies, finances and other resources
into political activity that is largely symbolic at a
time when our people need secure sources of food,
clothing, shelter and the other essentials of life, not
empty rituals. Consequently, Black leadership must
call a nation-wide moratorium on protest marches while we
shift our political paradigm to embrace new forms of
direct action tailored for Black empowerment in a
post-Katrina America.
The 'new' direct action that I
envision will mobilize millions of us who are
dissatisfied with the status quo, not to nosily march or
loudly protest, but to quietly pool our resources so we
can buy the land, buildings, equipment, and everything
else we need, to exercise sovereign control over the
production, distribution, and consumption of the basic
necessities of life: our food, clothing, shelter,
education, transportation, medication and self-defense. Black
youth must overstand that ethnic groups in 21st century
America who fail to control the production, distribution
and consumption of their basic survival needs will be the
servants of those who do, and no amount of marching and
protesting will change this fact.
Conclusion
African people in the United
States have been practicing protest politics for more
than 250 years with mixed results. Over the past 40
years, the 'mass mobilization for a one-day
demonstration' has become the preferred medium through
which U.S. Black leadership publicly communicates our
grievances to the White power structure. To the
exclusion of other forms of direct action, the mass
protest march, according to our leaders, is the most
effective way to bring attention to our concerns,
demonstrate our group strength and thereby pressure the
ruling class into redressing our grievances. In
keeping with this belief, the Jena March is being
exploited by these same leaders (or should I say
'misleaders'?) to sell what they know is a failed
political strategy to a new generation of Black youth and
their leaders. This must not happen; this we must
challenge; and this we must denounce.
In spite of the fact that protest
politics has won us concessions in the form of federal
legislation, its cost far outweigh its benefits. As
we have seen, it encourages reactionary behavior; it
obscures our need to build independent Black
institutions; it compels us to spend our protest dollars
with non-Africans; it persuades us to surrender control
of our lives to external powers; and it blinds us
to the reality that peaceful mass protest in the American
political system is state-sanctioned and thus of symbolic
value only.
The core political challenge
facing the Jena generation and its leadership is
three-fold. First, they must overstand the symbolic
and diversionary nature of protest politics; next, they
must ignore foul-mouth rappers, media-hungry preachers,
hip hop scholars and anyone else who would suggest that
mobilizing Black people for a one-day protest march is an
intelligent response to institutional racism; and finally
they must devise new and engaging forms of direct action
that generate the emotional appeal of the protest march
while moving us forward toward economic and political
sovereignty.
References
Akinwole-Bandele, L. (October,
2007). ?Jena, Resistance and Self
Defense.? Pambazuka News
323. www.pambazuka.org.
Bergman, P. (1969). The
Chronological History of the Negro in America. New
York:
Harper & Row.
Gray, P. (September, 2007). ?The
Fried Chickens Have Come Home to Roost! We All Live in
Jena.? www.paradisegray@gmail.com.
T?Shaka, O. (2004). The
Integration Trap: The Generation Gap. Oakland, CA:
Pan African Publishers and Distributors.
Ward, S. (October, 2007). ?Living
for Change: The Jena 6 and Black Leadership.? Black
Agenda Report. www.blackagendareport.com.
Weiner, E. (October, 2007). ?Bloggers
a Force Behind Jena Protests? www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyid.
Copyright
? 2007
KTLI
____________________________
Dr. Uhuru Hotep is a consultant to
the Kwame Ture Leadership Institute, host of Kilombo, an
African centered radio talk show, and co-editor of the
best-selling 72 Concepts to Liberate the African Mind.
He is a nationally-recognized authority on academic
and leadership development initiatives for urban youth.
Dr. Hotep can be reached at hotep@duq.edu.
Posted by TheBlackList - http://TheBlackList.net
Creating
A New Future Now.
Books
or Bullets: The Choice is Yours!
The Mission: We believe that we are experiencing not a
generation gap but an information gap and we will work
towards raising the consciousness of the black community,
especially the youth. If we are really serious about
stopping youth violence we must replace bullets with
books.
The Need: We understand that during slavery, black people
were not allowed to read and we are still suffering from
that legacy today. Later, black schools were separate and
unequal giving black children an inferior education. Even
today, black children are taught a Euro-centric education
that downplays the contributions of African people. This
coupled with an entertainment industry that promotes and
glamorizes ignorance is the reason that our youth are in
their current condition. Since information about black
history has been stolen and information about current
events has been hidden, the Books or Bullets Movement
says Stick em up!
The Program:
1) We must return to the each one teach one
principle.
2) We must develop study groups in communities across the
country that will meet regularly to discuss black history
and how it applies to current events.
3) We must aggressively develop a more informed black
community by any means necessary.
How you can help:
1) Make a point to buy at least one book a
month to give to a young person.
2) Clean out your closets and donate your old books
dealing with black history/issues to the Books or Bullets
Movement.
3) Always keep information in your posession that you can
pass on to a young person, whether it be a book, CD, DVD
or a news clip.
4) Develop a syllabus of reading material that you can
give to others either hand to hand or via email.
5) Use http://www.booksorbullets.com
for an information clearing house to post news stories,
book
reviews and announcements about current events.
6) Encourage radio DJs to become involved by
featuring at least a weekly segment discussing a book
that gives the historical basis for current events.
7) Encourage barbershops, beauty salons and other places
where our people gather to have a small library of
conscious reading material
For more information contact (919) 451-8283
info@nowarningshotsfired.com
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