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America's Struggle in Context

by: Dr. Wilmer J. Leon III, t r u t h o u t | Perspective

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(Artwork: The New Yorker)

    With the election of Illinois Sen. Barack Obama as the 44th president of the United States, Americans have taken a giant leap forward. It has taken this country 219 years to elect its first African-American president (George Washington was elected in 1789). It is imperative that this historic moment always be viewed within its proper historic context.

    Since the United States of America was established with the signing of the Declaration of Independence on July 4, 1776, America has been a country in conflict. Americans have struggled to live up to the fundamental precepts upon which America was founded.

    "We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness."

    People of color have struggled for their self-evident equality and unalienable rights since the first "20 & Odd" Blacks arrived on the shores of Jamestown, Virginia, in August of 1619. Those individuals were traded and/or sold into servitude for food and other supplies.

    As I think about President-elect Obama and this historic event, my thoughts go to Mt. Vernon, Virginia, the home of the first president of the United States of America, George Washington. I wonder what it must have been like to live at Mt. Vernon in the 18th century. Not in Mt. Vernon as George or Martha, but at Mt. Vernon as one of their slaves. I don't think about the owner of Mt. Vernon; I think about the owned.

    While the Washingtons lived there, they extracted from those enslaved people, those human beings, every ounce of effort and energy that they could. This allowed the Washingtons and those who looked like them to eat a little more, stay a little warmer, and enjoy themselves just a little bit more. Can the tortured souls of those slaves now rest a little easier with the success of a President-elect Obama?

    As I think about President-elect Obama and this historic event, my thoughts go to the Constitution of this country and three specific provisions. First, Article 1, Section 2, which reads:

    "Representatives and direct Taxes shall be apportioned among the several States which may be included within this Union, according to their respective Numbers, which shall be determined by adding to the whole Number of free Persons, including those bound to Service for a Term of Years, and excluding Indians not taxed, three fifths of all other Persons."

    This was better known as the Three-Fifths Compromise and was the law of the land until it was removed by the ratification of the 14th Amendment in 1868.

    Second, Article 1, Section 9, which reads:

    "The Migration or Importation of such Persons as any of the States now existing shall think proper to admit, shall not be prohibited by the Congress prior to the Year one thousand eight hundred and eight, but a tax or duty may be imposed on such Importation, not exceeding ten dollars for each Person."

    This provision was included in the Constitution as a compromise to the slave-holding states. The logic being, after 21 years the slave population would be sustainable by natural birth rates and the importation of slaves would no longer be necessary.

    Third, Article 4, Section 2, which reads:

    "No Person held to Service or Labour in one State, under the Laws thereof, escaping into another, shall, in Consequence of any Law or Regulation therein, be discharged from such Service or Labour, But shall be delivered up on Claim of the Party to whom such Service or Labour may be due."

    This was better known as the Fugitive Slave Clause and was the law of the land until it was removed by the ratification of the 13th Amendment in 1865.

    These constitutional provisions come to mind since they were the legal and conceptual foundations of the oppression that Africans in America, and later African-Americans, have been subjected to since the founding of this nation.

    As I think about President-elect Obama's defeat of Senator John McCain and bask in the comfort of this historic event, I must also fear its backlash. History tells us that white supremacy dies hard in America and its proponents will not take America's victory lying down.

    I think back to 1908 and Jack Johnson's defeat of Tommy Burns to become the first African-American boxing heavyweight champion of the world. This led to the search for the "Great White Hope," James Jackson Jefferies. Before Johnson fought Jefferies on July 4, 1910, the crowd chanted, "Kill the nigger." Johnson's defeat of Jefferies ignited numerous incidents of white violence against African-Americans. It set off some of the worst racial violence in American history.

    As I think about President-elect Obama's victory in these depressed economic times, I reflect upon the Red Summer of 1919. There were 26 separate riots in communities and cities across the United States where African-Americans were the victims of physical attacks. The riots were sparked by postwar tensions of racism, unemployment, inflation and violence by radical political groups. I think about the Tulsa, Oklahoma, Race Riot of 1921; the burning of the Rosewood, Florida, community in 1923 and so much of the racial violence that was unleashed upon African-Americans from 1917 to 1923. America finds itself today in similar circumstances with wars on two fronts, historic housing foreclosures and record job loss.

    As I think about President-elect Obama and this historic event, I remember Dr. King, Medgar Evers, President Kennedy, Bobby Kennedy and Malcolm X. I reflect upon Emmett Till, Goodman, Schwerner, Chaney; and Carol Robertson, Cynthia Wesler, Addie Mae Collins and Denise McNair, the four little girls who were killed September 15, 1963, when the Ku Klux Klan bombed the 16th Street Baptist Church in Birmingham, Alabama. All martyrs, who gave their lives as America struggled to live up to the fundamental precepts upon which America was founded. All martyrs, who gave their lives as America struggled to finally elect its first African-American president.

    As America celebrates a crowning achievement, the election of its first African-American president in 219 years, it is important to recognize that this did not take place in a vacuum. History is very important. It is a branch of knowledge that records and explains past events. We can not lose site of the history as we celebrate this historic event.

    On August 10, 2008, The New York Times published an article by Matt Bai entitled "Is Obama the End of Black Politics?" What a ridiculous question. The popular vote was almost too close to call. In spite of all of the success that America has made in the context of race, Senator Obama ran a deracialized campaign for a reason. There are still miles to go before we sleep.

    --------

    Dr. Wilmer Leon is the producer/host of the nationally broadcast call-in talk radio program "On With Leon," a regular guest on CNN's "Lou Dobbs Tonight," and a teaching associate in the Department of Political Science at Howard University in Washington, DC. Go to www.wilmerleon.com or email: wjl3us@yahoo.com.

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Comments

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While we absorb and

While we absorb and celebrate our sweet victory, we do indeed have miles to go before we sleep. And we must also remian vigilant.

It's always two steps

It's always two steps forward and one step back in the story of human progress. I am an elections inspector. Yesterday we had almost double the registered voters in our district than we'd ever had before- an octogenarian coworker who'd been there 30 years told me that- and of that number, fully 80% turned up to vote. Obama garnered half again as many votes as McCain- this in an old-school die hard Italian American rural area. While human beings can create zillions of reasons and artificial classifications about why we are different on any given day depending on the weather and our moods, there are a few things that make us all the same in very good ways. The first thing is that we all have the capacity to love, and when we are brave enough to indulge that peculiar human function, all sorts of wonderful things happen both for us and for the people around us. The second thing is that we have a drive to be honorable. When we're honorable, we are intent on pursuing the Truth [yes, capital T] and allowing the distortions and petty inventions of our lesser demons to fall away. And the third thing is that we have an amazing capacity to adapt to change. When we let go of fear and allow ourselves to go with the flow, we can fly. As for those of us who can't allow themselves to be brave or honorable, or loving, all we can do is pity them for keeping themselves so small, and protect one another from the actions that their fears and ignorance might engender by standing up to them. We have no choice right now but to keep the bullies at bay while we get the work done.

I agreed with Marian Wright

I agreed with Marian Wright Edelman that Obama should focus on children's needs, especially in the area of urban education, since No Child Left Behind had not worked in the Harlem school where I was a school psychologist for 26 years.

I appreciate a glance

I appreciate a glance backwards to create context for the election of Obama. Today we have an amazing opportunity to measure where we are as a country in the struggle to acknowledge and then shed our conscious and unconscious racism. As Dr. Leon points out, this was a "deracialized campaign." Let's be honest, Obama is not even close to what our white supremicist cultural consciousness fears most about people of color. He's light skinned, and was raised by white grandparents after spending 9 months in the belly of a white woman. How could the complacent racists not find comfort in that? I think about the "one drop rule" which made declared somebody with 1% african blood to be 100% marginalized. We have now declared that somebody with 50% African blood is fit to be president - a 49 point gain. I hope it doesn't take another 400 years to convince 50% of voters that somebody with 2 black parents can be president. Much work remains to be done.

Racism might be dying a slow

Racism might be dying a slow death, but it IS dying out. I'm not going to look for signs of life, I'm going to look for signs of freedom. That will be when any American can look at me and see just another Countryman, and not a potential oppressor, and when I feel no tension in a room filled with all colors. THAT is the day I look forward to, and when it arrives, I will be glad to no longer look behind.

Dear Wilmer: I was awaiting

Dear Wilmer: I was awaiting your point of view. I think the bright spot is that Obama has indeed shattered a psycholoogical barrier. Here in Belgium a friend of Afican origin called me and told me it made it easier to tell his son that everything is possible. Obama is such a figure that he is indeed not quite viewed as black by many. I've read somewhere of the notion of racists for Obama. Indeed, there can be a lingering fear of the other person, of the different colored person, but even if that fear lingers in oneself, more or less deep inside, one can certainly judge an individual to be perfectly capable/lovable/etc; or in this case the better candidate. So it is both a huge step and a small step. Indeed for a long time we will remain fearful of the other, or even disdainful, or even a little racist. But this fear of other will not necessarily relate to color as much as before. When we meet someone we interact with favorably, color will not matter. However social status, behavior, different points of view, differences in education will continue to matter (unfortunately, but understandably). Finally, Obama has such character, is so inspiring, that although it is difficult to imagine him physically different, I believe that were he any color or ethnicity he would have made it.

Don't look away... "This

Don't look away... "This allowed the Washingtons and those who looked like them to eat a little more, stay a little warmer, and enjoy themselves just a little bit more. Can the tortured souls of those slaves..." This is happening today, right now, and it's called GLOBALIZATION. Slave wages and despotic regimes exploit labor all around the world, with the full acceptance and cheerleading of US rulers (like Obama?), and an amoral (immoral?) public that is very cozy keeping the savages pliant at the barrel of a gun. http://crimesofthestate.blogspot.com/

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