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NEWS & LETTERS, March 2002 

Column: Black-Red View by John Alan

Marx and Black freedom

Martin Luther King Jr. closed his famous 1963 "I have a dream" speech by saying: "Free at last! Thank God Almighty, we are free at last." It seemed that African Americans had won a victory over racism and a new period in American history had begun. But the struggle against racism, poverty and police brutality goes on. Thus, many African Americans are ambivalent about President Bush's "war on terrorism."

The NAACP's board of directors has expressed this ambivalence in a statement published in the November/December 2001 issue of THE CRISIS. They say that while they fully support their country against the attack of an enemy, "the struggle to eradicate racial injustice from our society [and]...the goal of a truly just country is still so painfully far out of reach that literally millions of Black lives are disintegrating this very minute under the weight of discrimination, cruel and incompetent institutions and greedy racist indifference to suffering."

The "greedy racist" and "cruel and incompetent institutions" that the NAACP board so passionately condemn comprises nothing less than American civil society where racism, individual egoism and the exploitation of labor reign. The NAACP and other African-American organizations have, for eons, gone to the courts and pressured Congress to legally purge racism from this society. They have won cases, but essentially racism has only been modified and remains intact.

African Americans have always been moved by the idea of freedom. During slavery they destroyed the objects of their labor, killed their masters and built an underground railroad to escape. This opposition to slavery was the foundation upon which the white abolitionists built their movement. Marx played a role in the abolitionist movement as part of the labor movement in England. He fought against the British government jumping into the U.S. Civil War on the side of the South.

From the start Marx saw the question of slavery as integral to world capitalist development as well as to the emancipation of labor. In 1847 he wrote: "Direct slavery is the pivot of our industrialism today as much as machinery, credit, etc. Without slavery, you have no cotton, without cotton you have no modern industry. It is slavery that has given value to the colonies; it was the colonies that created world trade; it is world trade that is the necessary condition for large-scale machine industry. Also, before the slave-trade in Negroes, the colonies supplied the Old World with but very few products and did not visibly change the face of the earth. Slavery is thus an economic category of the highest importance."

Ending slavery was a crucial dimension to opening a new epoch of human liberation. Marx closely followed events in America like John Brown's slave uprising in 1859. These events coincided with the anti-serfdom agitation in Russia. Marx wrote to Engels on Jan. 11, 1860 that the movement of these slaves, Black and white, in such widely separated parts of the globe marked the beginning of the emancipation of the working class and was "the biggest thing now happening in the world." In his greatest theoretical work, Capital, Marx brought in the struggle for the normal working day and its phenomenal spread throughout the U.S. after the Civil War as the first fruits of the victory over slavery.

 Where Marx saw the crucial role of Blacks in the emancipation of labor, there has been a great deal of confusion among post-Marx Marxists on what is the meaning of the African-American movement after the Civil War. Socialists in general put it as a side issue detracting from the emancipation of labor. A new chapter was opened with Lenin and the Russian Revolution. He saw the independent struggle of African Americans as a new manifestation of the national liberation which would not detract from, but enhance, the revolutionary struggle. The U.S. Communist Party (CP) had over 70 years of various theoretical/political positions on the African-American problem. At no time were these political positions directly answering the instinctive striving of African Americans for freedom.

The CP was to be the teacher and the Black masses were the pupils. The glaring contradiction in this is that the independent action of African Americans did not often coincide with the shifting policies of the CP and the Soviet Union. Thus, the American CP opposed the 1943 March on Washington for equality and jobs during World War II because Germany broke the Hitler/Stalin Pact and invaded Russia. Russia was now an ally of the United States.

The CP had a position at one point that there should be a separate Black nation declared out of the five Southern states, a kind of "Tajikistan for Blacks" in the U.S. What they didn't comprehend is that the self-movement of the Black masses has its own trajectory.

 It was hard for post-Marx Marxists of all stripes to grasp both the independence of the Black movement as well as its vanguard nature in the struggle for liberation from American capitalism. African Americans need to play an independent role in starting the struggle. But that independent role does not separate them from the general movement to emancipate labor and all oppressed groups. It was the slave revolts that brought the Abolitionist movement into being as well as the women's movement.

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