By Howard Zinn
The Rag Blog
Wednesday, Feb 3, 2010
|
Howard Zinn, 1922-2010 |
|
Thomas Cleaver writes:
I met many memorable individuals who stopped by the Oleo Strut coffeehouse in
Killeen to see for themselves what was going on with the GI antiwar movement.
One such was Professor Howard Zinn, the author of A People's History of the United States, who
stopped by one weekend in November 1968. I was fortunate to meet him a few other
times over the following years.
While I am not particularly religious, I
do believe in Saints -- not the kind that get sanctified by priests, but the
kind of people one meets whose life example you use forever after as a measuring
stick for your own moral progress. Howard Zinn was one of those people, and his
writing allows us to remember others who went before us in the struggle for true
justice.
Learning of his death [...] Wednesday, January 27, I was
reminded of a commencement speech he gave at Spelman College in 2005, which
speaks very directly to what it takes to be a Committed Person.
In 1963, historian Howard Zinn was fired from Spelman College in Atlanta GA,
where he was chair of the History Department, because of his civil rights
activities. In 2005, he was invited back to give the commencement address. Here
is the text of that speech, given on May 15, 2005.
---------------------------
|
Historian Howard Zinn, who crossed over January 27 at 87, is shown being arrested at an anti-Vietnam war demonstration in the 1960s. Image from Telegraph, U.K.
|
|
I am deeply
honored to be invited back to Spelman after 42 years. I would like to thank the
faculty and trustees who voted to invite me, and especially your president, Dr.
Beverly Tatum. And it is a special privilege to be here with Diahann Carroll and
Virginia Davis Floyd.
But this is your day -- the
students graduating today. It's a happy day for you and your families. I know
you have your own hopes for the future, so it may be a little presumptuous for
me to tell you what hopes I have for you, but they are exactly the same ones
that I have for my grandchildren.
My first hope is that you will not be
too discouraged by the way the world looks at this moment. It is easy to be
discouraged, because our nation is at war -- still another war, war after war --
and our government seems determined to expand its empire even if it costs the
lives of tens of thousands of human beings.
There is poverty in this
country, and homelessness, and people without health care, and crowded
classrooms, but our government, which has trillions of dollars to spend, is
spending its wealth on war. There are a billion people in Africa, Asia, Latin
America, and the Middle East who need clean water and medicine to deal with
malaria and tuberculosis and AIDS, but our government, which has thousands of
nuclear weapons, is experimenting with even more deadly nuclear weapons. Yes, it
is easy to be discouraged by all that.
But let me tell you why, in spite
of what I have just described, you must not be discouraged.
I want to
remind you that, 50 years ago, racial segregation here in the South was
entrenched as tightly as was apartheid in South Africa. The national government,
even with liberal presidents like Kennedy and Johnson in office, was looking the
other way while Black people were beaten and killed and denied the opportunity
to vote.
So Black people in the South decided they had to do something by
themselves. They boycotted and sat in and picketed and demonstrated, and were
beaten and jailed, and some were killed, but their cries for freedom were soon
heard all over the nation and around the world, and the President and Congress
finally did what they had previously failed to do -- enforce the 14th and 15th
Amendments to the Constitution.
Many people had said: The South will
never change. But it did change. It changed because ordinary people organized
and took risks and challenged the system and would not give up. That's when
democracy came alive.
I want to remind you also that when the war in
Vietnam was going on, and young Americans were dying and coming home paralyzed,
and our government was bombing the villages of Vietnam -- bombing schools and
hospitals and killing ordinary people in huge numbers -- it looked hopeless to
try to stop the war.
But just as in the Southern movement, people began
to protest and soon it caught on. It was a national movement. Soldiers were
coming back and denouncing the war, and young people were refusing to join the
military, and the war had to end.
The lesson of that history is that you
must not despair, that if you are right, and you persist, things will change.
The government may try to deceive the people, and the newspapers and television
may do the same, but the truth has a way of coming out. The truth has a power
greater than a hundred lies.
I know you have practical things to do -- to
get jobs and get married and have children. You may become prosperous and be
considered a success in the way our society defines success, by wealth and
standing and prestige. But that is not enough for a good life.
Remember
Tolstoy's story, "The Death of Ivan Illych." A man on his deathbed reflects on
his life, how he has done everything right, obeyed the rules, become a judge,
married, had children, and is looked upon as a success. Yet, in his last hours,
he wonders why he feels a failure. After becoming a famous novelist, Tolstoy
himself had decided that this was not enough, that he must speak out against the
treatment of the Russian peasants, that he must write against war and
militarism.
My hope is that whatever you do to make a good life for
yourself -- whether you become a teacher, or social worker, or business person,
or lawyer, or poet, or scientist -- you will devote part of your life to making
this a better world for your children, for all children. My hope is that your
generation will demand an end to war, that your generation will do something
that has not yet been done in history and wipe out the national boundaries that
separate us from other human beings on this earth.
Recently I saw a photo
on the front page of the New York Times
which I cannot get out of my mind. It showed ordinary Americans sitting on
chairs on the southern border of Arizona, facing Mexico. They were holding guns
and they were looking for Mexicans who might be trying to cross the border into
the United States.
This was horrifying to me -- the realization that, in
this twenty-first century of what we call "civilization," we have carved up what
we claim is one world into 200 artificially created entities we call "nations"
and are ready to kill anyone who crosses a boundary.
Is not nationalism
-- that devotion to a flag, an anthem, a boundary, so fierce it leads to murder
-- one of the great evils of our time, along with racism, along with religious
hatred? These ways of thinking, cultivated, nurtured, indoctrinated from
childhood on, have been useful to those in power, deadly for those out of
power.
Here in the United States, we are brought up to believe that our
nation is different from others, an exception in the world, uniquely moral; that
we expand into other lands in order to bring civilization, liberty,
democracy.
But if you know some history you know that's not true. If you
know some history, you know we massacred Indians on this continent, invaded
Mexico, sent armies into Cuba, and the Philippines. We killed huge numbers of
people, and we did not bring them democracy or liberty.
We did not go
into Vietnam to bring democracy; we did not invade Panama to stop the drug
trade; we did not invade Afghanistan and Iraq to stop terrorism. Our aims were
the aims of all the other empires of world history -- more profit for
corporations, more power for politicians.
The poets and artists among us
seem to have a clearer understanding of the disease of nationalism. Perhaps the
Black poets especially are less enthralled with the virtues of American
"liberty" and "democracy," their people having enjoyed so little of it. The
great African-American poet Langston Hughes addressed his country as follows:
You really haven't been a virgin for so long.
It's ludicrous to
keep up the pretext.
You've slept with all the big powers
In military
uniforms,
And you've taken the sweet life
Of all the little brown
fellows.
Being one of the world's big vampires,
Why don't you come on
out and say so
Like Japan, and England, and France,
And all the other
nymphomaniacs of power. I am a veteran of the Second World War. That
was considered a "good war," but I have come to the conclusion that war solves
no fundamental problems and only leads to more wars. War poisons the minds of
soldiers, leads them to kill and torture, and poisons the soul of the
nation.
My hope is that your generation will demand that your children be
brought up in a world without war. It we want a world in which the people of all
countries are brothers and sisters, if the children all over the world are
considered as our children, then war -- in which children are always the
greatest casualties -- cannot be accepted as a way of solving problems.
I
was on the faculty of Spelman College for seven years, from 1956 to 1963. It was
a heartwarming time, because the friends we made in those years have remained
our friends all these years. My wife Roslyn and I and our two children lived on
campus. Sometimes when we went into town, white people would ask: How is it to
be living in the Black community? It was hard to explain. But we knew this --
that in downtown Atlanta, we felt as if we were in alien territory, and when we
came back to the Spelman campus, we felt that we were at home.
Those
years at Spelman were the most exciting of my life, the most educational
certainly. I learned more from my students than they learned from me. Those were
the years of the great movement in the South against racial segregation, and I
became involved in that in Atlanta, in Albany, Georgia, in Selma, Alabama, in
Hattiesburg, Mississippi, and Greenwood and Itta Bena and Jackson.
I
learned something about democracy: that it does not come from the government,
from on high, it comes from people getting together and struggling for justice.
I learned about race. I learned something that any intelligent person realizes
at a certain point -- that race is a manufactured thing, an artificial thing,
and while race does matter (as Cornel West has written), it only matters because
certain people want it to matter, just as nationalism is something artificial. I
learned that what really matters is that all of us -- of whatever so-called race
and so-called nationality -- are human beings and should cherish one
another.
I was lucky to be at Spelman at a time when I could watch a
marvelous transformation in my students, who were so polite, so quiet, and then
suddenly they were leaving the campus and going into town, and sitting in, and
being arrested, and then coming out of jail full of fire and rebellion. You can
read all about that in Harry Lefever's book Undaunted By The Fight: Spelman College and the Civil
Rights Movement, 1957-1967.
One day Marian Wright (now Marian
Wright Edelman), who was my student at Spelman, and was one of the first
arrested in the Atlanta sit-ins, came to our house on campus to show us a
petition she was about to put on the bulletin board of her dormitory. The
heading on the petition epitomized the transformation taking place at Spelman
College. Marian had written on top of the petition: "Young Ladies Who Can
Picket, Please Sign Below."
My hope is that you will not be content just
to be successful in the way that our society measures success; that you will not
obey the rules, when the rules are unjust; that you will act out the courage
that I know is in you. There are wonderful people, Black and white, who are
models.
I don't mean African-Americans like Condoleezza Rice, or Colin
Powell, or Clarence Thomas, who have become servants of the rich and powerful. I
mean W.E.B. DuBois and Martin Luther King and Malcolm X and Marian Wright
Edelman, and James Baldwin, and Josephine Baker and good white folk, too, who
defied the Establishment to work for peace and justice.
Another of my
students at Spelman, Alice Walker, who, like Marian, has remained our friend all
these years, came from a tenant farmer's family in Eatonton, Georgia, and became
a famous writer. In one of her first published poems, she wrote:
It is true --
I've always loved
the daring
ones
Like the
Black young
man
Who tried
to crash
All barriers
at
once,
wanted to swim
At a white
beach (in
Alabama)
Nude. I am not suggesting you go that far, but you can
help to break down barriers, of race certainly, but also of nationalism; that
you do what you can -- you don't have to do something heroic, just something, to
join with millions of others who will just do something, because all of those
somethings, at certain points in history, come together, and make the world
better.
That marvelous African-American writer Zora Neale Hurston, who
wouldn't do what white people wanted her to do, who wouldn't do what Black
people wanted her to do, who insisted on being herself, said that her mother
advised her: Leap for the sun -- you may not reach it, but at least you will get
off the ground.
By being here today, you are already standing on your
toes, ready to leap My hope for you is a good life.
Copyright © 2005, Howard Zinn
The Rag Blog
Print This
|