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Revision as of 20:42, 11 January 2006
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- "Black Panthers" redirects here. For the Israeli group called the "Black Panthers", see HaPanterim HaSHkhorim.
KKK
how the KKK kicks ass
The Black Panther Party (originally called the Black Panther Party for Self-Defense) was a revolutionary, Black nationalist organization in the United States founded by Huey P. Newton, Bobby Seale, and Richard Aoki. Forming in October 1966, the party grew to national prominence in the United States and is an iconic representative of the counterculture revolutions of the 1960s. The group was founded on the principles of its "Ten-Point Program", which called for greater autonomy of black Americans and justice for many real and perceived slights against blacks. The groups political goals are often overshadowed by the violent episodes which constantly dogged them, violence which is due to the aggressive attitude of both the police and Black Panther Party Members. The group fell apart in the early 1970s due to a combination of internal problems and suppression by state actors, especially the Federal Bureau of Investigation (whose methods included arrests, stirring-up of factional rivalries via infiltration and, allegedly, assassination ).
Formation and foundations
The core of the organization at its inception in 1966 were close friends Huey P. Newton, Bobby Seale, and Richard Aoki in the city of Oakland, California. The three had been witness to a radical ferment in the Bay Area and the United States, taking part in protests against the Vietnam War and having an interest in the American Civil Rights Movement.
Like many people of color of their generation, Newton and Seale had been frustrated by the doctrine of nonviolence as espoused by mainstream civil rights leaders such as the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., as well as the inaction of the white-dominated radical groups. They looked instead to the black nationalism of Malcolm X as well as the discipline shown by its paramilitary organization, Fruit of Islam. They also looked to proponents of armed self-defense within the civil rights movement, such as the Deacons for Defense and Justice as well as exiled former NAACP chapter president Robert F. Williams for example, and they were particularly inspired by Williams's book Negroes with Guns.
Contemporaneous to this rise in America's domestic radicalism was an interest in Marxist-Leninist Third World liberation movements, across Africa, Asia, and Latin America. Seale, Newton, and Aoki held a great interest in the philosophies and writings of Mao Tse-Tung, Ho Chi Minh, Frantz Fanon, Che Guevara, and Steve Biko.
After doing a stint in prison for assault, Huey Newton returned to the campus of Oakland City College where he had matriculated. He became fed up with the intertia of the Afro-American Association, the student group to which he and Seale belonged. Seale and Newton discussed the need for militancy in the face of an oppressive system. The two came to an agreement over the specifics, and the 10 Point Program and Platform was born.
Origin of the name
A number of explanations for the origin of the name "Black Panthers" have been suggested. The most authoritative and likely version is that it came through Stokely Carmichael, then of SNCC. At the time of the Black Panther Party's formation in Oakland, Carmichael had been organizing a voter registration drive in the African American community of Lowndes County, Alabama. Following the success of the Mississippi Freedom Party, the organizers worked to create the Lowndes County Freedom Organization as an independent party.
Alabama law required that all parties have a visual emblem for illiterate voters. Courtland Cox contacted a designer in Atlanta for a design. The designer originally came back with a dove, but the SNCC organizers in Lowndes thought it was too gentle, so the designer suggested the white panther, the mascot of Clark College in Atlanta. The Lowndes County Freedom Organization became the Black Panther party, and soon there were Black Panther parties sprouting up around the nation. Many were unconnected with the SNCC, and the Black Panther Party for Self-Defense was not officially connected to any of the other parties or to SNCC.
According to David Hilliard, Bobby Seale learned of the Lowndes County Black Panther Party, in October 1966 through a mailing from a Mississippi black freedom group. After showing it to Newton, the two agreed that the symbol was right for their own as-yet-unnamed group.
Ten-Point Program and Platform
The Party's main organizational document was its Ten-Point Program and Platform. This was a list of the Party's demands for both the survival and advancement of blacks in the United States, provided alongside an explanatory text. The distribution and popularization of the Ten Point Program and Platform in black population centers was considered by the Party to be a major component of its propaganda, education and recruitment efforts.
The first Black Panther Ten-Point Program and Platform is dated to October 1966. It subsequently underwent revision, and a second version was adopted in March 1972. On its website, the Black Panther History Project at Stanford University places the texts of both versions side-by-side for comparison .
The Ten-Point Program and Platform became an inspiration to contemporary leftist groups. The White Panther Party, Young Lords Party, I Wor Kuen, and the Brown Berets each released their own programs in much the same style and tone.
Theory
The party was created to further the revolutionary movement for black liberation, which had been growing steadily throughout the sixties thanks to the prominent civil rights movement, and the work of people like Malcolm X and Martin Luther King, Jr.. The party rejected the integrationist stance of King, and made it clear from the beginning that it sought no compromise with the "white power structure". The party similarly rejected King's 'nonviolent' creed, and specifically chose to organize around a platform of self-defense (which became part of the party's original name, "Black Panther Party for Self-Defense").
As a Marxist-Leninist party, the Black Panthers focused their rhetoric on revolutionary class struggle. However, the party did not agree with Karl Marx's analysis of the massed of lower class humanity, or as Marx called them, the lumpenproletariat. Marx felt that this class was not sufficiently politically conscious to be counted upon during a revolution. Newton's reading of post-colonial theorist Frantz Fanon inspired him to believe that this class was of utmost importance, saying about these "Brothers off the block", "If you did't relate to these cat's, the power structure would organize these cat's against you." However, the party did turn to Marxism to inform its opposition to racism, sexism, and the class society, considering themselves to be a vanguard organization "commited to organizing support for a socialist revolution."
Although the party was characterized by varying degrees of black nationalism, Newton and Seale rejected cultural nationalists as "black racists." Contrary to popular perception, the BPP were not a totally black-separatist organization, and Newton was willing to work in coalition with white activists (for example, California's Peace and Freedom Party, and the paramilitary Irish Republican Army). Indicative of this was the BPP's use of the slogan "All Power to the People!", which represents a more internationalist (and Marxist) perspective than the famous slogan, "Black Power!".
In Huey P. Newton's "Speech at Boston College 1970" he characterized the Black Panther Party as "Intercommunalist". That is to say that the Party recognized that all over the world there were "oppressed communities", many of whom shared a common oppressor. That these communities should be united across national boundaries to overthrow that common oppressor.
Bobby Seale in his book "Sieze the Time" speak directly to the evolution of the Panther's politics, saying that "At first we were Black Nationalists...". He goes on to point how that upon realizing that more than blacks were oppressed they became Internationalist, etc. Demonstrating how the Party evolved as their understanding of the geo-political world grew.
Action
Self-defense
One of the central aims of the BPP was to stop the rampant abuse perpetrated by racist elements within local police departments. When the party was founded in 1966, only 16 of the 661 Oakland Police Department officers assigned to black neighborhoods were African American. This situation was not unique to Oakland, California. The 1965 Watts Riot occurred due to the brutality of the predominantly-white Los Angeles Police Department and several southern cities such as Birmingham, Alabama had police forces that openly worked with the white-supremacist Ku Klux Klan. Throughout the 1960s, race riots broke out in impoverished African American communities subject to policing by disproportionately white police departments.
The BPP sought to oppose police brutality through neighborhood patrols (see also Copwatch). Police officers were frequently followed by armed Black Panthers who sought at times to aid African American victims of brutality and perceived racial prejudice.
Both Panthers and police often died as a result of violent confrontations. By 1970, 34 Panthers had died as a result of police raids, shoot-outs and internal conflict.
Between 1966-1972 when the party was most active, several departments hired significantly more African American police officers. Ironically, some of these black officers played prominent roles in shutting down the Panther's activities. In Chicago in 1969 for example, Panthers Mark Clark and Fred Hampton were both killed as they slept by Sergeant James Davis, an African American police officer in the Chicago Police Department. In cities such as New York City, black police were used to infiltrate Panther meetings. By the party's 1972 disbanding, almost every major police department was fully integrated.
Survival programs
Inspired by Mao Tse-Tung's advice to revolutionaries in the The Little Red Book, Newton called on the Panthers to "serve the people," and to make "Survival programs" a priority within its Branches. The most famous and successful of their programs was the Free Breakfast for Children Program, initially run out of a San Francisco church. This program fed thousands of children throughout the party's history.
Other Survival programs included free services including the distribution of clothing, classes on politics and economics, medical clinics, lessons on self-defense and first aid, transportation to upstate prisons for family members of inmates, an emergency response ambulance program, drug and alcohol abuse rehabilitation, and testing for sickle-cell disease. The Panthers tested more than 500,000 African-Americans for this disease before it was recognized by medical establishments as one that affected the black community almost exclusively.
Political activities
The Party briefly merged with the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee, headed by the fiery Stokely Carmichael (later Kwame Toure).
In 1967 the party organized a march on the California state capitol to protest the state's attempt to outlaw carrying loaded weapons in public. Participants in the march carried rifles.
In 1968 BPP Minister of Information, Eldridge Cleaver ran for Presidential office on the Peace and Freedom Party ticket with child psychologist Dr. Benjamin Spock as his running mate.
COINTELPRO & conflict with law enforcement
In August 1967, the FBI initiated COINTELPRO was created to “neutralize” what the FBI called “Black Nationalist Hate Groups”. The goals of the program were to prevent the unification of militant Black Nationalist groups and to weaken the power of their leaders in order to reduce that probability, as well as discredit the groups to reduce their support and growth. The initial targets included the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee, the Revolutionary Action Movement, and the Nation of Islam. Leaders who were targeted included Martin Luther King, Jr., Stokely Carmichael, H. Rap Brown, Maxwell Stanford, and Elijah Muhammad.
In September of 1968, FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover described the Black Panthers as “The greatest threat to the internal security of the country,” and within the year the Black Panther Party had become the primary focus of COINTELPRO, becoming the target of 233 out of a total of 295 authorized "Black Nationalist" COINTELPRO actions.
Although COINTELPRO was commissioned to prevent violence, many of the tactics of the FBI organization were intended to foster violence. The most telling example was the FBI’s efforts to “Intensify the degree of animosity” between the Black Panthers and the Chicago gang, the Blackstone Rangers. These included sending an anonymous letter to the Ranger’s gang leader claiming that the Panthers were threatening his life, a letter with the stated intent to induce “reprisals” against Panther leadership. In Southern California similar actions were taken to exacerbate what was characterized as a “gang war” between the Black Panther Party and an organization called the United Slaves. Shootings and beatings involving these two groups led to the deaths of at least four Black Panther Party members, and FBI agents claimed credit for some of the violence between the two groups.
It should be noted that James Adams, Deputy Associate Director of the FBI's Intelligence Division, claimed that COINTELPRO operations did not intend to foster violence nor to harm individual members of the organizations targeted. However the final report of Senate “Church Committee” which investigated the actions of COINTELPRO in 1975 and 1976 did not agree with Adams, and purported to demonstrate that the FBI “itself engaged in lawless tactics and responded to deep-seated social problems by fomenting violence and unrest.”
On January 17, 1969, Los Angeles Panther Captain Bunchy Carter and Deputy Minister John Huggins were killed in Campbell Hall on the UCLA campus, in a gun battle with members of United Slaves, a rival black nationalist group, stemming from a dispute over who would control UCLA's black studies program. Another shootout between the two groups on March 17 led to further injuries. It was alleged that the FBI had made contacts with US in an alliance against the Panthers.
One of the most notorious of such actions involved a Chicago Police raid of the home of talented and charismatic Panther organizer Fred Hampton on December 4, 1969. The raid had been orchestrated by the police in conjunction with the FBI, and the FBI was complicit in many of the actions involved. The people inside the home had been drugged by an FBI informant, William O'Neal, and were all asleep at the time of the raid. Hampton was shot and killed, as was the guard, Mark Clark. The others in the home were then dragged into the street and beaten and subsequently charged with assault. These charges were later dropped.
In May 1969, Alex Rackley, a twenty-four year old member of the New York chapter of the Black Panther party, was tortured and murdered because party members suspected him of being a police informant. A number of party members had taken part, and three party officers eventually admitted guilt. Party supporters alleged that George Sams, the man who identified Rackley as an informer and subsequently ordered his execution, was acting in fact an agent provocateur in the employment of the FBI. This speculation has been echoed by subsequent activist scholars such as Ward Churchill.
Political and Legal Support
Support for the Panthers became widespread and was characterized by the now famous clenched-fist salute at the 1968 Olympics by two medalists during the playing of the American national anthem.
The Black Panthers attracted a wide variety of left-wing revolutionaries and political activists. Among others, the party was supported by former Ramparts Magazine editor, David Horowitz, before he renounced socialism and gradually drifted to the political right. Decades later, upon the death of Huey Newton (who died in a shoot-out with rival gangsters), he would remark, "He (Newton) killed a lot of people." According to Horowitz, the Black Panthers once murdered a young, white female activist named Betty van Patten, whom he had introduced to the Party and who was representing it. After raping her, Horowitz claims, the members beat the woman to death with baseball bats.
Decay and disintegration
While part of the organization was already participating in local government and social services, another group was in constant conflict with the police. For some of the Party's supporters, the separation between political action, criminal activity, social services, access to power, and grass-roots identity became confusing and contradictory as the Panther's political momentum was bogged down in the criminal justice system.
A significant split in the BPP occurred over disagreements within the Panther leadership about how to confront these challenges. Some Panther leaders such as Huey Newton and David Hilliard favored a focus on community service coupled with self-defense while others, such as Eldridge Cleaver, embraced a more confrontational strategy. A schism was made inevitable when Cleaver publicly criticized the Party as adopting a "reformist" rather than "revolutionary" agenda and called for Hilliard's removal. Cleaver was expelled from the Central Committee but went on to lead a splinter group, the Black Liberation Army, which had previously existed as an underground paramilitary wing of the Party.
The Party eventually fell apart due to rising legal costs and internal disputes exacerbated by COINTELPRO.
In 1989, a group calling themselves the New Black Panther Party (NBPP) was formed in Dallas, TX. Ten years later, the NBPP became home to many former National of Islam members when the chairmanship was taken by Khalid Abdul Muhammad. Members of the original Black Panther Party have been publicly and adamantly critical of the 'new' party. For example, the Dr. Huey P. Newton Foundation insists that there "is no new Black Panther Party". A new National Alliance of Black Panthers was formed on July 31, 2004, inspired by the grassroots activism of the original orgainization, but not otherwise related. Its chairwoman is Shazza Nzingha.
Famous Black Panther Party members
- Mumia Abu-Jamal, Lieutenant Minister of Information, Philadelphia chapter
- Ashanti Alston
- Elaine Brown, Chairman, Minister of Defense (mid 1970s)
- H. Rap Brown, Justice Minister
- Stokely Carmichael, Honorary Prime Minister
- Bunchy Carter, Deputy Minister of Defense, Southern California chapter
- Mark Clark, Defense Captain, Illinois chapter
- Eldridge Cleaver, Minister of Information
- Kathleen Neal Cleaver
- James Cromwell
- Angela Y. Davis, Marxist Professor at UCLA, and lecturer at Harvard University and San Francisco, currently teaching at Santa Cruz. Acquitted of providing weapons during murder trial in infamous court shoot-out case.
- Gregory Despres
- Mark Essex
- Lorenzo Komboa Ervin
- Danny Glover, veteran actor, best known for "Lethal Weapon" fame
- Eddie Griffin Spent 12 years in prison for kidnapping, bank robbery, and hijacking. Now living in Fort Worth, TX.
- Fred Hampton, Deputy Chairman, Illinois chapter; shot to death in police raid by a tactical arm of the Chicago police and FBI.
- Tina Harris
- David Hilliard
- Bobby Hutton, Treasurer; fatally wounded in shoot-out with Oakland police.
- George Jackson, killed in California prison
- Huey P. Newton, Minister of Defense
- Pete O'Neal, Chairman, Kansas City chapter
- Geronimo Pratt, Deputy Minister of Defense
- Nile Rodgers
- Bobby Seale, Chairman and co-founder of the Black Panthers
- Assata Shakur
- Afeni Shakur, mother of rapper Tupac Shakur
- Mutulu Shakur
- Karen Tustin
- Bobby Rush, Deputy Minister of Defense, Illinois chapter
- Jamal Joseph
- Toni Watkins
- Eric Gershman
- Dwight York, founder of Nuwaubian Nation of Moors
See also
- Yellow Peril, Asian-American equal rights activist group, and supporters of the Black Panthers
- White Panther Party, Caucasian-American supporters of the Black Panthers
- The Patriot Party
- Young Lords
- Weather Underground
- I Wor Kuen
- Red Guards
- Brown Berets
- Students for a Democratic Society
- Nation of Islam
- Nuwaubianism
- Black anarchism
- Gray Panthers
- Rice/Poindexter Case
External links
- UC Berkeley Social Activism Online Sound Recordings: The Black Panther Party
- The Black Panther Party's Struggle for Social Change
- The Bobby Seale Homepage
- The Dr. Huey P. Newton Foundation
- Marxists Internet Archive: The Black Panther Party
- 10-point program of the Black Panther Party
- Assata Speaks!
- Hartford Web Publishing collection of BPP documents
- Libcom.org/history: The Black Panther Party for Self Defence
- Maoist Internationalist Movement: Black Panther Newspaper Collection
- All Power to the People - a documentary about the Black Power movement in the US
- Radical Chic, a book by Tom Wolfe describing the courting of the Black Panthers by New York's social elite
- "Enslaved by Dogma" Brief analysis of COINTELPRO launched against Black Panthers
References
- The Angela Y. Davis Reader on page 11 says "police, assisted by federal agents, had killed or assasinated over twenty black revolutionaries in the Black Panther Party." She cites on page 23 (citation # 26) Joanne Grant, Ward Churchill and Jim Van der Wall (see below), and Clayborne Carson. (Davis, Angela Yves. The Angela Y. Davis Reader Blackwell Publishers (1998))
- Liberation, Imagination and the Black Panther Party: A New Look at the Black Panthers and their Legacy. edited by Kathleen Cleaver, George N Katsiaficas. Routledge UK (2001) page 29
- Bobby Seale, Seize the Time. Black Classic Press; Reprint edition (September, 1997) p. 23, 256, 383.
- Frank E. Smith, The Sixties and Seventies from Berkeley to Woodstock (1998)
- The Black Panthers by Jessica McElrath, published as a part of afroamhistory.about.com, accessed on December 17, 2005.
- from an interview with Kathleen Cleaver on May 7, 2002 published by the PBS program P.O.V. and being published in Introduction to Black Panther 1968: Photographs by Ruth-Marion Baruch and Pirkle Jones, (Greybull Press).
- The Senate "Church Committee" of 1975 and 1976 investigated COINTELPRO, and they discussed the FBI's actions with regards to the BPP quite a bit. COINTELPRO actions against the Black Panther Party are discussed in "Book III: Supplementary Detailed Staff Reports on Intelligence Activities and the Rights of Americans" of that report from pages 185-223 and can be found here. The information in this section is largely taken from the introduction of the section of that report called "The FBI's Covert Action Program to Destroy The Black Panther Party" (pages 186-189).
- The FBI's involvement is mentioned in the afore discussed Church Committee Report on page 223. A fully description of the nights events can be found in Rod Bush, We Are Not What We Seem: Black Nationalism and Class Struggle in the American Century. New York University Press (March, 2000) p. 216
- David Horowitz's claim about van Patten's death is often discussed on blogs, and is mentioned in an American Enterprise Institute for Public Policy Research book review of Horowitz's Radical Son: A Generational Odyssey called All's Left in the World. Horowitz's credibility as a critic of the left and especially of the Black Panther Party is called into question in Elaine Brown's The Condemnation of Little B: New Age Racism in America. Beacon Press (February 15, 2003) pg. 250-251.
- Edward Jay Epstein, The Black Panthers and the Police: A Pattern of Genocide?. New Yorker (February 13, 1971)
- Ward Churchill and Jim Van der Wall, The Cointelpro Papers: Documents from the FBI's Secret Wars Against Dissent in the United States. South End Press; 2nd edition (July 1, 2002)
- Marxist Internet Archive: The Black Panther Party.
- Elaine Brown, A Taste of Power : A Black Woman's Story, Anchor Books 1993
- Lewis, John. (1998). Walking with the Wind. Simon and Schuster. ISBN 0684810654, pg 353.
- Dooley, Brian. (1998). Black and Green: The Fight for Civil Rights in Northern Ireland and Black America. Pluto Press.