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[0] I have such a vivid memory of Forrest Gump.
[1] I had just rented an apartment and there was a local theater and I just went to see whatever movie was playing and it happened to be Forrest Gump.
[2] And it was in a crowded theater.
[3] And I was sitting right in the center because I really liked to have optimal viewing.
[4] And I just thought the film was horrifying from start to finish.
[5] Now, when I was a baby, Mama named me after the great Civil War hero General Nathan Bedford Forrest.
[6] including with the prologue in which Tom Hanks explains that his name is Forrest Gump because he's been named after Nathan Bedford Forrest.
[7] The first Grand Wizard of the Ku Klux Klan.
[8] They'd all dress up in their robes and their bedsheets and act like a bunch of ghosts.
[9] Forrest Gump is a satire almost of, you know, like historical materialism.
[10] It's him passing through the American past, importantly starting with the founding of the clan.
[11] Jenny and me was just like peas and carrots again.
[12] She showed me around and even introduced me to some of her new friends.
[13] Shut that blonde man and get your white ass away from that window.
[14] Don't you know we're in a war here?
[15] It was horrendous in so many levels, but the panther scene to me was just almost unbearable.
[16] Our purpose here is to protect our black leaders from the racial onslaught of the pig who wish to brutalize our black leaders, rape our women, and destroy our black community.
[17] This image of black militants who are rabidly, rabidly anti -white and irrational.
[18] And it contains really all of the myths of the Black Panther Party.
[19] I was so infuriated by it.
[20] I actually got up in this crowded theater after the panther scene and walked out.
[21] And I had to say, excuse me, excuse me, in this super crowded, like, packed theater.
[22] My name is Donna Merch, and I am Associate Professor of History at Rutgers University, New Brunswick.
[23] I teach historical methods in the history department through teaching a class on the Black Panther Party, and I teach it usually once or twice a year.
[24] And I ask the students at the beginning of the semester what they know about the Panthers, Forrest Gump is the thing that they most often cite.
[25] And what that does is it does exactly the opposite of what made the Panthers so powerful.
[26] We said we work with anybody from Polish with anybody that, has revolution on their mind.
[27] We're not a racist organization because we understand that racism is an excuse use of capitalism.
[28] We know that racism is just a byproduct of capitalism.
[29] They were self -identified Marxists.
[30] They believed in class struggle, as well as the right of black people to organize and form their own institutions.
[31] And most importantly, they believed in organizing not only within the black community, but using coalition politics based on anti -capitalism and anti -imperialism.
[32] They're all powers to all people.
[33] They're white powers of white people.
[34] Brown power to brown.
[35] Yellow power to yellow people.
[36] Black powers are black people.
[37] And I honestly think this is why they were so targeted by municipal, county, state, and federal law enforcement.
[38] Because they realized the potential for doing this very broad revolutionary organizing among young people, and being integral to the fight against anti -communism, the Vietnam War, and these kinds of interventionist foreign policy of the U .S. all over the world.
[39] They have to call off the new movements based on racism when the black pamphalists stood up and said that we don't care what anybody said, but we're going to fight with solidarity.
[40] We said we're not going to fight capitalism with black capitalism, but we're going to fight with socialism.
[41] And the students always say to me, the truth is exactly the opposite of what we learned in popular culture.
[42] We're going to fight international international 14thian revolution I'm Ron Tin Arablui.
[43] I'm Randallad del Fetach this week on ThruLine from NPR The Real Black Panthers Both fascinating and infuriating If you're listening as a subscriber to ThruLine Plus, we just want to say thank you and if you're not yet a subscriber and want to learn more about how to listen to the show without any sponsor breaks head over to plus .npr .org slash ThruLine.
[44] Becoming a plus subscriber helps support all of our work at ThruLine.
[45] So we hope you'll join.
[46] Now, back to the show.
[47] Part 1, Survival Pending Revolution.
[48] The history of the Black Panther Party spanned decades and is incredibly complex.
[49] The party varied greatly from chapter to chapter, city to city.
[50] And the fact is some of its members engaged in violence and crime.
[51] but we're not going to provide a definitive history in this episode.
[52] Instead, with Donna Murch's help, we're going to explore the original philosophy and practice of the Black Panther Party.
[53] What were they all about?
[54] Where did they come from?
[55] And why are they still so misunderstood?
[56] To try and answer all of this, we're going to start in 1965, when the seeds of the Black Panther Party were planted.
[57] And no longer are we going to allow police.
[58] police officers to beat us and trample over us and youth officers and vinegar up on us in a corner.
[59] This was a black radical organization that emerges.
[60] We are going to make it necessary for them.
[61] At kind of the height of the Southern Civil Rights Movement.
[62] This evening, Los Angeles remains hot, quiet, tense, and dangerous, and 28 people are dead.
[63] Just after the Watts Rebellion.
[64] Then came summer 1966.
[65] And then the takeoff of the urban rebellion.
[66] The violence struck not just where it was expected in the humid ghettos of the major urban centers in Brooklyn, Chicago, Cleveland.
[67] Americans were stunned to learn the other unexpected date lines of violence from Amityville, New York, to Menlo Park, California.
[68] To Oakland, California, that's where the Black Panther Party was officially founded on...
[69] October 15, 1966.
[70] And it was founded by Huey Newton and Bobby Seal, whom were...
[71] college students at Merritt College, which had previously been known as Oakland City College.
[72] They first became really politicized by a study group called the Afro -American Association.
[73] The Afro -American Association was based on the nearby University of California campus in Berkeley.
[74] It was a black nationalist study group, and it grew out of the convergence of domestic and international developments.
[75] Here is the symbol of the turmoil in the Congo, the late Patrice Lumumba, the left -leaning nationalist agitator, head of the Congolese national movement which catapulted him to the premiership.
[76] In response to speeches that Minister Malcolm X was giving, we never initiate any violence upon anyone.
[77] And the murder of Patrice Lumumba in Congo.
[78] But if anyone attacks us, we reserve the right to defend ourselves.
[79] They decided to invite Malcolm X to campus because they wanted a new form of black politics.
[80] and even using the word black was new.
[81] So to accuse us of being violence is like accusing a man who is being lynched simply because he struggles vigorously against his lyncher.
[82] There were really the first generation of black college attendees in any large numbers.
[83] You didn't have Jim Crow in California, but you did have informal segregation.
[84] And so there were just a handful of black students.
[85] And among the black students who were there, many were.
[86] Actually, African students coming from newly decolonized countries like Kenya and Ghana.
[87] So there was a whole kind of culture of radical decolonization.
[88] And, you know, Berkeley became this amazing seed bed.
[89] But a seed bed without that many seeds.
[90] Growing the Afro -American Association was a challenge on the Berkeley campus because there just weren't that many black students.
[91] So they started recruiting on the...
[92] local community college campuses.
[93] And one of the closest was Merrick College.
[94] It was 15 minutes south of UC Berkeley's campus.
[95] And that's how the Afro -American Association began to recruit Bobby Seal.
[96] Bobby Seal was in his late 20s, an Air Force veteran, who grew up in Oakland.
[97] You know, I met Huey Newton.
[98] Huey Newton, who also grew up in Oakland, was a few years younger than Bobby Seal.
[99] And he told me that he first learned how to read real good, come out.
[100] out of high school.
[101] One of these counselors in school told me he couldn't be college material.
[102] In this period, higher education is free in California.
[103] And it's a time where part of the worldwide global revolution of 1968 had to do with this unprecedented access to the university.
[104] And so you're getting all these people whose parents didn't go to college who in some ways are much more talented than traditional elites.
[105] And just like people that have been excluded that suddenly gained access to a resource.
[106] They used it in ways that others hadn't.
[107] So Huey got mad.
[108] He didn't like no white man telling him what he couldn't do.
[109] And Huey learned how to read.
[110] And Huey went to Oakland City College, and I went right there with him, and Huey got a 4 .0, that's an A in sociology, psychology, psychology, political science, Law.
[111] They were different than many of the students at Berkeley, much more working class.
[112] Many of them were migrants from the rural South.
[113] Huey Newton's family was from rural Louisiana, Bobby Seal, from East Texas.
[114] Children of what became known as the second great migration.
[115] They brought with them a different kind of sensibility.
[116] They, one, were acquainted with armed self -defense.
[117] So a lot of people are coming from rural areas.
[118] So being armed is part of a militant tradition in the South, the ways that people fought the clan and white supremacy.
[119] And they ended up in California cities where their children could attend high school.
[120] Many people in the South didn't even have the opportunity to attend high school.
[121] So for their parents, California represented this incredible land of opportunity.
[122] Today, California's fourth largest city is a booming center of industry, commerce, art, and culture.
[123] And all those people looking for opportunity changed.
[124] places like Oakland, California.
[125] In 1940, Oakland's black population was about 3%.
[126] By 1960, it had risen to about 23%.
[127] The number would keep going up until the 1980 census when Oakland would become majority black.
[128] But Oakland's new glamour and prosperity are not shared equally by all of its citizens.
[129] Nearly half of the city's population is non -white and many are poor.
[130] They do not hold their share of the jobs created by Oakland's new industry, port, and transportation facilities.
[131] Their children grew up really feeling surveillance of the police, housing discrimination, violence in schools.
[132] And the Panther Party was a direct reflection of that experience.
[133] And that experience for a young black person in the mid -1960s was a man. matter of life and death.
[134] When the party is first formed, they call themselves heirs of Malcolm X. I do believe that the black man in the United States and any human being anywhere is well within his right to do whatever is necessary by any means necessary to protect his life and property, especially in a country where the federal government itself has proven that it is either unable or unwilling to protect the lives and property of those human beings.
[135] It's an important thing to understand about the Panthers that they're influenced by Malcolm X, but Malcolm X is killed in February 1965, and the Panthers aren't formed until October 1966.
[136] So it's in this period during the Black Power Movement that people are trying to imagine what would Malcolm have done had he lived.
[137] So they called themselves the Black Panther Party for self -defense.
[138] When we first started, we had a police alert patrol, and we would control the community If we saw the police brew life to anyone, we put an end to this.
[139] Usually the police wouldn't brew life anyone if we were on hand, if we were armed.
[140] Armed struggle, and this is where you have the formation of police patrols that would drive around the city in Oakland and San Francisco Bay Area.
[141] And whenever they saw a black person being stopped by the police or being harassed, they would drive up and they were carrying loaded unconcealed weapons, which was legal at the time, and then they would read to them from a California law book to inform them what their rights were.
[142] A direct approach to stopping police brutality.
[143] For the first Black Panthers, it was a rational response, a rational strategy.
[144] But it also became a source of misconceptions for the general public.
[145] Young, angry, irrational black people with guns.
[146] It is the image of the Black Panthers from Forrest Gump that made Donna Murch escape to theater all those years later.
[147] And it's the image that lasts until this day.
[148] And that's part of the catalytic spark of the Panthers.
[149] then it spreads across the rest of the country.
[150] And they do this largely through negative publicity.
[151] The patrols were part of a larger effort to catch the attention of people everywhere.
[152] Their style, their stance, and their symbolism were all intentional, confrontational, unflinching.
[153] And some would call it simple.
[154] Donna Merch sees it differently.
[155] Actually, I wouldn't call it simple.
[156] I would call it clear.
[157] Those two things are not the same.
[158] Real intellectuals, radical intellectuals, they don't make things complicated.
[159] They make them clear.
[160] But to do that is actually very hard.
[161] Do you distinguish between blacks and whites on the police force?
[162] Are they all the blacks of people?
[163] That question's asked a lot of times.
[164] So we put it like this.
[165] See, a pig is a pig as a pig, black, green, yellow, poke it out of orange.
[166] That word, pig, it has become iconic.
[167] But it's easy to mistake it for a flippant insult.
[168] It was not.
[169] It was a carefully selected word.
[170] They figured out a language to delegitimize power.
[171] And in Huey Newton's autobiography, he talks about having read Nietzsche, because he was trying to understand how people that have historically been powerless, given the incredible differential of power, the U .S. at this time, is the Cold War hegemon in the entire world.
[172] So how did teenagers mobilize their own community and pit themselves against?
[173] this imperial power.
[174] And so his idea was that he who controls language also controls power.
[175] So they had a newspaper, and they were very concerned with making ideas legible.
[176] Some of their parents and grandparents had been illiterate.
[177] So one of the core things is they did start to call the police pigs.
[178] And this was a self -conscious project of showing that police are not legitimate.
[179] They were trying to undo all of the accumulated history.
[180] of law and order, but they did it in a vernacular that was understood by their own families, right?
[181] These are southern rural migrants, and so pigs were associated with being unclean.
[182] See, a pig is a pig is a pig, black, green, yellow, folk without an orange.
[183] This attempt to make complicated ideas legible didn't stop with the characterization of the police.
[184] The Black Panther Party also had a carefully thought out political platform.
[185] They drafted a 10 -point program.
[186] Just basic.
[187] We don't want to go real elaborate with all these essays and dissertations and all this stuff, because the brother going to look at that and he'll say, man, I ain't got time for that.
[188] I got to go see what I can do for myself.
[189] It's just a basic platform that the mothers who struggle hard to raise us, that the fathers who worked hard, that the young brothers in school who come out of school semi -literate.
[190] We just want a basic platform to outline black people's basic political desires and needs, first.
[191] We believe of the right of the black community to self -determination.
[192] We want power to determine the destiny of our black community.
[193] Very standard black nationalist demand.
[194] But then they folded in things and language that were taken from the Declaration of Independence.
[195] They demanded a right to full employment, to housing, you know, traditional socialist demands.
[196] Indication that teaches us our true history and our role in the present -day society.
[197] We want all black men to be exempt from military service.
[198] We want freedom for all black men held in federal, state, county, jail, city, prisons.
[199] We want an immediate end to police, police brutality, and murder of black peace.
[200] And then a plebiscite of the black colony in the United Nations.
[201] In other words, representation at the UN.
[202] The Black Panthers also demanded a right to fair trials and an end to predatory capitalism.
[203] And at the very basic level, they just wanted peace.
[204] It's the basic platform, in case you never knew it or not.
[205] So from the very beginning, they were bringing together these black power, black nationalist impulses with socialism, and then wedding that to this black radical internationalism of Malcolm X. By 1966, 67, 68, dozens and dozens of countries like Ghana, Indonesia, Nigeria, and India, had fought and won independence from their colonial rule.
[206] In a very short time, people in what we now call the global South had drastically altered international politics.
[207] Suddenly, a successful revolution led by black and brown people in California didn't seem so far -fetched if you saw yourself as part of a bigger world.
[208] You cease to see yourself as a kind of domestic minority and instead understand yourself as part of a global majority in the context of anti -colonialism.
[209] If you look at Panther art, you have lots of revolutionary images, especially influenced from Cuba, also coming from Angola and Mozambique, you know, of essentially women carrying babies and holding rifles.
[210] The Panthers had fused international revolutionary politics, self -defense, and bold imagery.
[211] And then, the party goes through a transformation.
[212] Given the fact that authorities were beginning to target many of the male leaders in the party, women stepped into leadership roles.
[213] And I don't think it's an accident that as you begin to have a transition from this kind of police patrol's explicit iconography of armed struggle, you also see the party functions begin to shift.
[214] Survival pending revolution.
[215] Survival pending revolution.
[216] In other words, the party recognized that armed revolution would be suicide, at least in that moment.
[217] So a practical strategy would be to wait, buy their time, build the community, and prepare the ground.
[218] Survival pending revolution.
[219] Leaders take people into situations where the people can be massacred, and they call that revolution.
[220] There's nothing but child's play.
[221] It's folly, and it's criminal because people can be hurt.
[222] We say that they're doing exactly what the pigs want them to do, play around, and the pigs are prepared for this, and they'll wipe all of those young people out.
[223] When we come back, the U .S. fights a war on two fronts.
[224] This is Catherine Gabriel Jones of calling from Rockland, Maine, and you're listening to ThruLine from NPR.
[225] Part 2.
[226] The Last Are First.
[227] In 1966, the year the Black Panther Party was founded, the United States was in the midst of the hottest part of the Cold War.
[228] I am hopeful, and I will try best I can with everything I've got to end this battle and to return our sons to their desires.
[229] The U .S. military was fighting a bloody war in Vietnam to oppose the expansion of communism.
[230] Still, communism's influence was spreading to countries throughout the world, including to the Caribbean and South America.
[231] Yet as long as others will challenge America's security and test the dearness of our beliefs with fire and steel, and we must stand or see the promise of two centuries tremble.
[232] How do you ask a man to be the last man to die in Vietnam?
[233] And we are asking Americans to think about that.
[234] How do you ask a man to be the last man to die for a mistake?
[235] A massive anti -war movement started in the United States.
[236] Tensions were rising in cities across the country.
[237] And as the Black Panther Party was a lot of war.
[238] organizing and growing in Oakland, they also turned their attention to the war.
[239] One of the most famous panther political cartoons was a picture of a pig, dressed in the same uniform carrying a billy club that said napalm.
[240] And the first image was local police.
[241] The next image was National Guard.
[242] And then the third image was U .S. Marines.
[243] In America, black people are treated very much as the Vietnamese people or any other colonized people because we're used, we're brutalized, the police and our community occupy area, our community of the foreign troop occupies territory.
[244] That was Huey P. Newton.
[245] So this is an example of how they were able to bridge the connections between anti -imperialism, anti -communist foreign policy, and then connect and essentially to say, you being killed by the police is directly analogous.
[246] to what's happening in Vietnam with the millions of Vietnamese people that are being killed.
[247] And the police are there not to promote our welfare or for our security and our safety, but they're there to contain us, to brutalize us and murder us.
[248] Just as the soldiers in Vietnam have their orders to destroy the Vietnamese people.
[249] So that kind of radical internationalism and anti -communist politics was, it was terrifying, I think, to cold warriors.
[250] Although maybe that's being too generous.
[251] If you look at the size of the Panthers, at their very largest, they were 5 ,000 people.
[252] These were largely teenagers.
[253] Many of whom were just friends of the founders like Huey P. Newton and Bobby Seal.
[254] And the reality is, during the first few years of the Black Panther Party, their numbers were probably in the hundreds.
[255] And yet...
[256] It's this organization that J. Edgar Hoover says is the greatest threat to the internal security of the...
[257] United States.
[258] The Black Panther Party, without question, represents the greatest threat to the internal security of the country.
[259] This is from an actual memo, Jay Edgar Hoover wrote, to FBI agents.
[260] Leaders and representatives of the Black Panther Party travel extensively all over the United States, preaching their gospel of hate and violence, not only to ghetto residents, but to students in colleges, universities, and high schools as well.
[261] Okay, so at this point, you might be asking, why?
[262] Why was the FBI director, Jay Edgar Hoover, so concerned about this small group of radical black college students and teenagers?
[263] Was it that they were black and armed?
[264] According to Donna Merch, yes.
[265] But there was something else, something that you wouldn't know if Forrest Gump was your only exposure to the Black Panther Party.
[266] It was their ability, not that they were anti -white.
[267] It's that they were able to organize with whites.
[268] When the man walks up and says that we were.
[269] Annie White.
[270] He says, well, I mean you hate white people.
[271] I say, me, hate a white person?
[272] That's your game.
[273] That's the Blue Club Clans game.
[274] I say, I wouldn't murder a person or brutalize to color skin.
[275] I say, yeah, we hate something all right.
[276] We hate the oppression that we live in.
[277] We hate cops beating black people over their heads and murder them.
[278] That's what we hate.
[279] So I think today people often think of it as identity versus class.
[280] This is not how the Panthers understand it.
[281] They were interested in how Marxism, especially as it had been adapted in the global south, in Cuba, in Vietnam, in China, and parts of Africa.
[282] They wanted a global South interpretation of Marxism.
[283] And because of that, they thought it was natural to allie with other groups that had the same points of view.
[284] All power to all people.
[285] Wasn't that their like call?
[286] All power to all people.
[287] Yes.
[288] And so, So the people that they saw as part of their coalition were the Red Guard Party.
[289] Which was a Chinese -American youth radical group.
[290] The Brown Berets, so kind of radical Chicano, leftists and communists.
[291] And in an era where open anti -gay or anti -queer sentiment was common, the Black Panther Party.
[292] Really in contrast to many of the other radical organizations of the period, they had an explicit alliance with both the feminist and what were at that time called gay radicals.
[293] Homosexuals are human beings, and they're oppressed because of the bourgeois mentality that tries to legislate sexual activity.
[294] I don't think that the homosexuals should be harassed and badgered and brutalized because of their desire to have a sexual relationship that's not popular at this time.
[295] And they had an alliance with a group of white Appalachians who flew the Confederate flag.
[296] I'm going to repeat that, the Confederate flag.
[297] They were called the Young Patriot Association.
[298] Everybody knows that all the people don't have liberties, all the people don't have freedom, all the people don't have justice, and all the people don't have power, so that means none of us do.
[299] We plan in the future to make sure that we're, have solidarity with all oppressed people.
[300] Even though today the Black Panther Party is largely remembered in the popular imagination as gun -toting militants, in the late 1960s, that's not the reason the FBI targeted them.
[301] Donna Merch says it was the fact that they had a vision to organize workers across all racial and ethnic groups in the same way Marxists had done in Cuba or China or Vietnam.
[302] Even though there had been labor organizing and socialist parties in the United States, the Black Panthers had a unique vision.
[303] A vision that could serve as a point of unification, trying to knit together these disadvantaged groups inside the United States to oppose capitalism and expose U .S. expansionism.
[304] This was a vision that placed the United States in the rest of the world and tried to use the internal domestic divisions of the United States as an analogy for understanding the United States.
[305] States as colonizing presence around the world, and it made sense.
[306] The workers need to start to begin to learn that their job is to struggle against the bosses.
[307] And until they do this, then struggle.
[308] It's incorrect.
[309] It's like no struggle at all.
[310] We said that if you don't struggle correctly, you shouldn't struggle, but you should struggle.
[311] We said, dare to struggle and you dare to win, dare not to struggle, and you don't deserve the win.
[312] I think the thing that made them the most dangerous was the way that they went cross -racial organizing with explicit anti -imperialist Marxist politics.
[313] All of our thoughts, each of our actions should lead us to one goal, the emptying of the ship that fills the bounds of this country.
[314] We can no longer allow the senselessness of anarchy and arbitrary destruction.
[315] We need no more impulsive opportunistic movements, groups, or political parties that endure on socialistic rhetoric.
[316] We need socialism in practice.
[317] Come on, end up, brothers.
[318] Remember that quote to sit down and get something to eat?
[319] It happens to start on you.
[320] Remember that quote from J. Edgar Hoover about the Black Panther Party being the biggest threat to U .S. internal security?
[321] It happens at just the moment that the Panthers begin to start creating liberation schools and free breakfast programs.
[322] That's good for your teeth, man. It makes your teeth strong.
[323] Who else?
[324] Who left this milk on?
[325] They created liberation schools so that the, you know, children could be instructed during the day, and they started inviting neighborhood children, and they realized that many of the children were hungry.
[326] In any program, the revolutionaries, an advanced program, revolution has changed, honey, and they just keep on changing.
[327] That's what we do.
[328] And in response to that, they started breakfast programs where they essentially would invite any and all children to come to Panther headquarters, and they would provide their children with free breakfast.
[329] in there and take them through those changes, and before you know it, they are, in fact, not only knowing what socialism is, they do not know what they're endorsing and they're participating in their observing and they're supporting socialism.
[330] If you go back and you look at the FBI documents, one of the things they were most afraid of is that they were going to create kind of self -perpetuating institutions that could have a much larger base in community.
[331] You know, we have all kinds of philanthropic and, you know, sororal and fraternal, volunteerist efforts.
[332] But this was a way of, number one, shaming the state and saying, we're teenagers and people in our early 20s and we're finding ways to feed our community.
[333] And we see all the flaws in very, very limited social welfare provision.
[334] So the hammer came down on them very, very quickly.
[335] That hammer came in the form of the FBI program, Co -Intel Pro, or count Honor Intelligence Program.
[336] The program started in 1956, and after the assassination of Martin Luther King, Jr., the program focused its attention on stopping the Black Panther Party.
[337] The FBI's own documents, which you can easily find online, show that of the 295 direct actions taken against black radical groups, 233 were directed at the Black Panther Party.
[338] You have the outright blatant police attacks, then you have the police infiltration and this infiltration is on many levels don't you think it's not?
[339] People have talked about that the Panthers suffered such repression because they believed in armed self -defense.
[340] We have the images of them marching on Sacramento in 1967 and it's the image of a panther with a gun.
[341] But what's interesting about the campaign of repression is that it actually accelerates as the party begins to move away from armed self -defense and to embrace survival pending revolution.
[342] So within a year, the party face this enormous, enormous repression.
[343] And it's in that context that they're also thinking about the survival of the people and the survival of the party.
[344] And then they feel that in order for the party to survive, it has to move closer back to the people.
[345] And how do you move closer to the people?
[346] You move closer to the people by providing them their most essential needs.
[347] We know about Bobby Seale and Erica Huggins and Uwey Newton and Leotis Johnson.
[348] And I could go on and on and on.
[349] The list is endless.
[350] we know that they were arrested on criminal charges as an excuse for removing them from their revolutionary work and activity among the people.
[351] When we come back, the Black Panthers move closer to the people and authorities move closer to the Black Panther Party.
[352] This is Anise calling from San Francisco, California.
[353] You're listening to Thru Line from NPR.
[354] Part 3.
[355] The Southside Messiah.
[356] Just a few years into its existence, chapters of the Black Panther Party were popping up all over the country in cities like New York City, New Haven, and Chicago.
[357] The organization had a central command in Oakland, but each chapter varied a lot.
[358] There were definitely tensions and rivalries between chapters.
[359] And on top of those problems, the party had a, let's just say, difficult relationship with many mainstream.
[360] civil rights leaders.
[361] The Panthers had a different vision of black politics.
[362] They were very critical of people that they saw as problematic black leadership.
[363] Nonviolence is a very non -functional approach in a society that's based entirely on organized force and violence.
[364] This is Kathleen Cleaver, who served as a communications secretary for the Black Panthers.
[365] The country was created in violence, land was taken in violence, society that's perpetuating itself through violence.
[366] So in their newspaper, they had something called the Boot Lickers Gallery, and they put inside the bootlickers gallery all these black political figures that had been elevated as kind of the fruit of the civil rights movement.
[367] So the person they hated the most was the head of the NAACP.
[368] They hated him because he had capitulated to Lyndon Johnson.
[369] in supporting the Vietnam War.
[370] I'm saying there's never going to be a time when you're totally in control.
[371] Why not?
[372] Is a constant struggle.
[373] I don't see why black people can't be totally in control of their destiny?
[374] But you got to fight with your head as well as with your fist or with your guns.
[375] I think that all wars involve fighting on every level.
[376] You see, politics is warfare without bloodshed and warfare is politics with bloodshed.
[377] Also in the bootlickers gallery, was Thurgood Marshall, and they opposed Thurgood Marshall for similar reasons, that they felt that this whole generation of Black Democratic leaders had embraced Cold War politics.
[378] This position invited criticism for many civil rights leaders and isolated the party.
[379] Imagine that Black Panthers were simultaneously characterized as anti -white, anti -civil rights movement, and anti -American, all while experiencing the pains of growing as an organization.
[380] They were increasingly on their back foot, and the FBI seized on that.
[381] I mean, they literally were manufacturing false documents, not only correspondence between panther leaders, but also, you know, as we've talked about, the Panthers are producing newspapers and pamphlets, a bunch of literature is produced by the organization.
[382] The FBI crafted its own fake coloring book, which was filled with these, like, anti -white images.
[383] This was a frequent tactic by the FBI.
[384] They made fake propaganda that would create friction between the Black Panther Party and other organizations, or just make them look anti -white.
[385] Some of the images that were crafted in the San Diego chapter were explicitly anxieties around interracial sex.
[386] So there was an image that was supposed to come of the panthers of a white woman lying on a bed with a black panther with a t -shirt that said BPP and a giant Afro, lunging, kind of leaning over her in the bed.
[387] And this was their way to try to represent interracial coalition, that at its core, this was a continuation, once again, of black violence about using the rape narrative of black men's sexual violence against white women as a way to represent that's what was really driving the Panthers interracial politics.
[388] How does this continue kind of, because throughout American history, when there has been cross -racial rebellion or organizing, whoever is in charge of, the country at the time, whoever's in charge of the police force, has come down really hard on that.
[389] Do you think this was a continuation of that kind of fear going all the way back to, you know, the rebellions in the 17th, 18th century?
[390] Yeah, like Bacon's Rebellion.
[391] Yeah.
[392] Yes, absolutely.
[393] The purpose of this new counterintelligence endeavor is to expose, disrupt, misdirect, discredit, or otherwise neutralize the activities of black nationalists, hate -touchings, organizations and groupings, their leadership, spokesmen, membership, and supporters.
[394] The FBI caused rifts between Black Panther Party leaders, jailed members at all levels, and attempted to stop their community building efforts.
[395] But what Jay Edgar Hoover was truly obsessed with was the possible emergence of what he called a Messiah.
[396] March 4, 1968, prevent the rise of a Messiah who could unify and electrify the militant black nationalist movement.
[397] They can do the thing they want to do us.
[398] We might not be back.
[399] I might be in jail.
[400] I might be anywhere.
[401] But when I leave, you can remember my said with the last words on my lips.
[402] And I am a revolutionary.
[403] Fred Hampton as a leader, he in many ways had that potential, the greatest potential.
[404] I think even more so than the Oakland leadership, who were the founders, to create a mass movement.
[405] And that was because of how he was able to organize people.
[406] Fred Hampton was a leader of the Illinois chapter of the Black Panther Party based in Chicago.
[407] He was the child of migrants from Louisiana.
[408] He started as an NAACP organizer, a really effective one.
[409] It was his voice you heard at the top of this episode, and you're about to hear again.
[410] You're going to have to say that I am a proletarian.
[411] I'm big.
[412] You've got to make a decision.
[413] He was known as chairman, Fred, by his lawyer.
[414] comrades, and his speeches are incredibly powerful.
[415] And the people are going to have to attack the feed.
[416] The people are going to have to stand up against the feed.
[417] That's what the parents are doing.
[418] That's what the parents are doing all over the way.
[419] He orchestrated the first Rainbow Coalition, which was a bringing together of different gangs in Chicago.
[420] Which included black, Chicano, Puerto Rican, and white gangs to fight police brutality.
[421] So he is almost the embodiment of that community.
[422] based impulse of providing for one's community and in doing so being able to build a larger and larger platform for the party with, you know, reaching deeper into the black community and other communities.
[423] As a matter what color you are, you're just on the two classes.
[424] And that's saying there's a class over here and there's a class over there.
[425] This is the oppressor.
[426] This is the oppressor.
[427] This is the exploiter.
[428] This is the exploiter.
[429] And these people in this class have divided themselves.
[430] He said, I'm black and I hate white people.
[431] I'm white and I hate black.
[432] I'm Latin America and I hate Hillbitties.
[433] I'm here a bit.
[434] I hate him.
[435] So we fight amongst each other.
[436] And why?
[437] Because they want to keep you to believe him that I'm your enemy.
[438] He was a brilliant organizer at doing that.
[439] This is why he was seen as such a threat.
[440] See, the black pan of the party, a lot of people say we're violent.
[441] We're a self -defense organization that believes that the people should be educated at what's going on.
[442] Yes, we do defend our offices, and we do defend our homes.
[443] This is a constitutional right.
[444] Everybody has nothing funny about that.
[445] The only reason they get mad at the Black Panther Party when they do it is for the simple reason that we're political.
[446] We're an organization that understands that politics is nothing but war without bloodshed and war is nothing but politics with bloodshed.
[447] But Donna Merch warned us about buying into the great man theory of history, where historical events can be boiled down to the heroic actions of a single individual.
[448] She pointed out that despite all his town, as a leader, part of what made Fred Hampton appear to be the Messiah J. Edgar Hoover feared was that, unlike his Oakland colleagues, he was working out of a major U .S. city, Chicago, with a very large black population.
[449] Because it's not only about Fred Hampton, it's understanding Fred Hampton, the political geography of why he was dangerous.
[450] So it's his talent, but it's also his proximity to the enormous south side of Chicago.
[451] Chicago was really one of the largest black population concentration in the United States then.
[452] It's not an accident that our first black president came out of Chicago.
[453] And remember, he went to Chicago because Barack Obama was nothing, if not a brilliant, you know, strategist.
[454] So the idea of having this very talented organizer, but again, proximate.
[455] So it's not just a great man history, but proximate to the center of black political power made, it provided the possibility of a much larger movement than what you saw in Oakland.
[456] So I think that, you know, both local law enforcement partnering with federal law enforcement saw the major cities as major battlegrounds.
[457] States Attorney's Police arrived at Fred Hampton's Westside apartment half a block from Panther headquarters at 445 this morning.
[458] They had a search warrant authorizing them to look for illegal weapons.
[459] The state's attorney's office says its men were fired upon after identifying themselves at the door and that Hampton and another man were killed in the 15 -minute gun battle which followed.
[460] Fred Hampton was killed by Chicago police on December 4th, 1969.
[461] He was 21 years old.
[462] Hampton's body was found in bed.
[463] Panther Bobby Rush charges it was the raiding party, not the Panthers, who did the shooting.
[464] Murder.
[465] The pigs murdered.
[466] Deputy Chairman Fred Hampton while he lay in bed.
[467] I approve it.
[468] I approve it to the world that Fred Hampton was murdered by the pigs and cold blood as he lay in his bed asleep.
[469] The immediate, violent criminal reaction of the occupants in shooting at announced police officers emphasizes the extreme viciousness of the Black Panther Party.
[470] Investigations later determined all but one bullet in the shootout in Fred Hampton's apartment was fired by police.
[471] One of Fred Hampton's trusted fellow Panthers was an FBI informant who slipped them a sedative the evening before the attack and allegedly provided a floor plan of Hampton's home to the FBI.
[472] One of the lessons I learned as a Panther historian is that repression works.
[473] We can kid ourselves and say that it doesn't, but repression does work.
[474] The killing of Fred Hampton represented a devastating blow for the Black Panther Party.
[475] One of its youngest and brightest members was gone, just like that.
[476] Even though the party would continue to exist all the way into the 1980s, local law enforcement, along with the FBI campaign, successfully splintered the group and killed or jailed much of its leadership.
[477] I said repression works because just the number of political assassinations in the United States against black leaders, it's hard to understand the trajectory of black politics without that.
[478] And it's especially important in thinking about the 1960s.
[479] And there were two different wings of the movement.
[480] there was a wing that became the electoral wing so that fought for having black mayors, black city councilmen, black elected officials.
[481] But there is also a parallel movement.
[482] And this was the movement of the black radical tradition.
[483] And largely that movement was attacked through incarceration of its leaders and also the broader criminalization and incarceration of the entire black population in its aftermath.
[484] So that is the history of political.
[485] prisoners.
[486] And so these in some ways grew out of the same tree, right?
[487] The tree of Black liberation.
[488] The struggle, we're going to have to struggle relentlessly to bring about some peace because of the people that we acted.
[489] That's it for this week's show.
[490] I'm Randab del Fetat.
[491] I'm Ramtin Arablui, and you've been listening to ThruLine from NPR.
[492] This episode was produced by me. And me and Jamie York.
[493] Lawrence Wu.
[494] Lane Kaplan Levinson.
[495] Julie Kane.
[496] Victor Ivea.
[497] is Parth Shah.
[498] Fact -checking for this episode was done by Kevin Vocal.
[499] Thank you to Yolanda Sanguini and Anya Goodman.
[500] And a special thanks to scholar and writer Jules Boykoff for helping with the background research for this episode.
[501] Our music was composed by Ramtin and his band Drop Electric, which includes...
[502] Navid Marvi, show Fujiwara.
[503] Anya Mizani.
[504] Also, we would love to hear from you.
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[511] Thanks for listening.