Transforming Symbols of Black
Nationalist Myths
By Rudolph Lewis
The Germans have a word for it. "Verharmlosung,"
the conversion of something radical or disturbing
into a harmless symbol or idea. . . . there is no
unified black psyche.—Wilson
Some of the tactics used
by our leaders (black and white) can be indeed
maddening. There are exceedingly few people who are
thinking outside the historic racial box, if they
are indeed thinking at all. The climate of the times
encourages a continuing intellectual retreat. As a
result, I am more frequently suffering bouts of
depression.
Our enemies are on their
toes like Muhammad Ali, dancing slipping punches,
wearing us down, frustrating us; while we remain
flat-footed, plodding along, their jabs blooding and
closing our eyes, as we continue to rely on Joe
Louis hero-worshipping body punches, as we continue
to try to land Frazier like haymaker
ideological hooks of yesteryear. We lack the
intellectual flexibility to keep up with the agility
and cleverness of our opponents.
Richard Wright was once
asked about "black psychology" and he said he knew
of no such animal. I like John Oliver Killens but
he's a better novelist than a political thinker. He
should have known, and I think that he did,
deeply, that the racialism of America is not as
simplistic as he made it in The Black Man's
Burden.
Political rhetoric
always over-simplifies. Only a little thought would
lead us to conclude there is no such thing as a
"white psyche" or a "black psyche." They are easy
political constructs to score easy ideological
points. Maybe those rhetorical constructs were okay
for 60s militancy. Many back in those days mimicked
Malcolm X. And we have too many doing that today
without Malcolm’s footwork and his slipping blows.
Skin color is so
deceptive. It really cannot tell you what is on the
inside. Killens had faith in “Third World”
alliances, as is suggested in the following
statement:
"And now in the middle of the 20th century, I, the
Negro, like my counterparts in Asia and Africa and
South America and on the islands of the many seas,
am refusing to be your 'nigger' any longer. . . . We
refuse to look at ourselves through the eyes of
white America."
As you can see such a
statement is wholly dated. Such a “we” no longer
exists. Indians of the East have gone one way. The
Chinese, another. The Arabs still another. Each
Third World sector makes its own separate deals with
the West—at the expense of injustice everywhere.
Killens might have stated a truth of a militant few
in the 50s and 60s. To industrialize and modernize,
Indians and Chinese, however, want oil and they care
little if it is at the expense of the people of
Darfur.
I just received a couple
of essays from Africans that touch on this issue of
"seeing." One was from a Kenyan sister, Betty
Wamalwa Muragori. She writes:
"Africans sell their past, sending it to the West
without a thought. Most Africans would never
willingly spend money on an old mask or chair,
chests, woven fabrics, crafted by their ancestors
100 years ago. To them these are dirty things that
will mess up their modern living rooms. Even worse
they are to be actively shunned because they remind
Africans of their “primitive” past and are seen as
probably a tribute to Africa’s religious past, which
was really devil worshiping in disguise."
Then there are the
lamentations of a Nigerian brother, Hakeem Babalola.
He writes:
"Look at my sister. She’d rather die than leave her
hair authentic. She prefers to look fake than hold
her identity. She straightens her hair and washes
her body with intoxicating chemical in order to tone
her skin; to hide her identity."
The black consciousness
(“black psyche”) movement of which Killens speaks in
The Black Man's Burden did not take hold
among the masses (in America, the Islands, or
Africa). The West made it into a passing commercial
fad. Here is how the German "Verharmlosung,"
becomes relevant in our times in contending with our
enemies. Symbol making walks hand in hand with
commerce, which bastardizes, fragments, and demeans
all that which comes within its realm.
Yes, they have
"co-opted" Gabriel Prosser, prompted by the
intrigues of the NAACP. They try to make Gabriel a
rebel like Thomas Paine or Thomas Jefferson.
Governor Kaine says, "I recognize Gabriel Prosser
for his courage and devotion to the fundamental
Virginia values of freedom and equality." But those
Virginia values reside in the defense of property,
at all costs. Is that what Gabriel was about? Was he
truly like Berkeley and Washington and Lee. Is that
what his revolt was about? It seems indeed that is
what the NAACP is about.
Our opponents may be
indeed clever and flexible enough in their corporate
mythmaking to accommodate Nat Turner, especially if
we continue our colored non-critical hero worship.
But I suspect Turner in the Southampton forest will
not be so easily digested by corporate cannibalism
and vulture capitalism.
Rudolph Lewis is founder and editor of
ChickenBones: A Journal (www.nathanielturner.com
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