Reviews
Apr 18, 2008 - David Hostetter in H-SAfrica
" Publication of this book comes at a moment when a leading contender for the
American presidency is the offspring of one of the Kenyan students who studied
in the United States through the efforts of the African-American Student
Foundation directed by ACOA activist Cora Weiss. Barack Obama's first foray
into political activism, which he recounts in his autobiography, came when he
spoke at an anti-apartheid demonstration during his undergraduate days. "
Mar 29, 2008 - Wim Bossema in De Volkskrant -
Dutch | English
"Probably more Americans than ever are doing something for Africa. ...
Many African immigrants are active. ... Solidarity between Africa and the United
States is not going away. "
Jan 30, 2008 - Gerald Horne in H-SAfrica
"This is a remarkable and often insightful collection of essays and
reflections ... It belongs in every library in Africa--and, most of all,
in South Africa. Still, in its very strength it exposes an entire
realm of research that has yet to be completed."
Jan 23, 2008 - Gerry Canavan in Independent Weekly
"Most of all the book is a testament not to the influence of politicians or
nation-states but to the power of individuals themselves, to the everyday
activists and nongovernmental organizations who made and continue to make
an impact in the struggle for liberation across the globe."
Winter 2007/2008 - Bill Bigelow in Rethinking Schools
"Unearths a too-often-neglected history of grassroots U.S. solidarity and
anti-racist activism. Short sections that focus on individual activists are
easily excerpted for classroom use."
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Review
H-NET BOOK REVIEW
Published by H-SAfrica@h-net.msu.edu (January 2008)
William Minter, Gail Hovey, and Charles Cobb Jr., eds. _No Easy Victories:
African Liberation and American Activists over a Half Century, 1950-2000_.
Trenton: Africa World Press, 2008. xvii + 248 pp. Illustrations, maps,
notes, index. $29.95 (paper), ISBN 1592215750.
Reviewed for H-SAfrica (http://www.h-net.org/~safrica)
by Gerald Horne, Department of History, University
of Houston
Solidarity Forever?
This is a remarkable and often insightful collection of essays and
reflections, many of which have been penned by those who played leading
roles in the dramatic story of how a conservative hegemon--the United
States--was compelled to retreat somewhat in its support for colonialism
and apartheid during the second half of the twentieth century. The
numerous photographs alone make this book well worth the price and
underscores how this book, inter alia, is a valuable document.
It is because of this book that I came to discover that a man I have known
as a friend--Robert Van Lierop, the attorney and filmmaker who produced the
wonderful documentary, "A Luta Continua" (1971)--had a grandfather who had
participated in the so-called Boer War over one century ago in South
Africa, while his father, who was a merchant seaman, visited there. The
Van Lierops, who are of Surinamese descent, are worthy of a book all their
own, yet for the time being his contribution to this worthy volume must
suffice.
In her finely crafted essay in the book, Lisa Brock reminds us of the
legacy bequeathed to us by the Council on African Affairs, which, beginning
in the 1930s until its unfortunate and untimely demise in the 1950s hounded
out of existence by the bloodhounds of the Red Scare, held high the banner
of anticolonialism in Africa. Their leader, Paul Robeson, once shared a
London flat with Kenya's Jomo Kenyatta, while their intellectual
inspiration, W. E. B. Du Bois, was invited to settle in Ghana by his pupil,
Kwame Nkrumah.
It is because of this book that I was made to recall the enormous
contributions that figures like Harry Belafonte and Peter and Cora Weiss
have made to the cause of progressive humanity for decades. Belafonte, who
is still active at a time when lesser mortals have chosen comfortable
retirement, helped to make Martin Luther King Jr. the icon he is today and,
likewise, contributed heavily to the success of Hugh Masekela and Miriam
Makeba. The Weisses helped to bring attention to nations like Mozambique
and Guinea-Bissau--and not least their leaders Eduoardo Mondlane and
Amilcar Cabral--at a time when, sadly, many of their compatriots could find
neither on a map. Peter Weiss, in addition to being a major philanthropist
for African causes, also has been a pioneering lawyer, creatively applying
international human rights standards in notoriously parochial U.S.
courts. Cora Weiss, in addition to her humanitarian efforts, has been a
stalwart of the movement against nuclear weapons.
It is because of this book that I was reacquainted with old friends like
Gay McDougall, who still bestrides the planet like a Colossus and who was
standing alongside Nelson Mandela when he cast his first vote. This book
also reminds us of the gargantuan contributions of Randall Robinson, who
built TransAfrica into a major force in Washington, D.C., and continues to
write best-selling books that force us to engage with issues that some
would prefer to forget, such as reparations for the ravages of slavery and
colonialism.
This book also reminded me of figures I had forgotten--sadly enough--such
as the late Congressman Charles Diggs, who was a legislative lion in
opposition to apartheid, and Goler Butcher, who before her tragic death,
was one of the most skilled international lawyers in the United
States. And, this book also made me recollect the pivotal role played by
Julius Nyerere, who at immense cost to his nation and his own security,
opened wide the doors of Tanzania not only to opponents of colonialism in
Africa but also to opponents of white supremacy in the United States, a
group that included a host of Black Panthers who continue to reside in
southeast Africa. The priceless memories of the African American activist
Sylvia Hill, recalling in this book the Pan-African Congress that took
place in Dar es Salaam in 1974, will provide an important building block
for the fortunate historian who chooses to write about this important
ideological turning point in the history of Pan-Africanism.
This book compels us to recall connections that still need to be
contemplated, for example, that between Namibians and the Lutheran Church,
and the critical role played by the union of stevedores, headquartered in
San Francisco, whose reluctance to move cargo headed for the land of
apartheid was a turning point in U.S. labor's engagement with Africa. This
book also has considerable information on the all-important "divestment"
movement that swept U.S. campuses from the 1960s through the 1990s. This
decentralized movement involved students protesting the fact that colleges
routinely included in their endowments investments in corporations that had
holdings in apartheid South Africa. Forcing them to "divest" was a mighty
blow on behalf of liberation and was also a model of how to galvanize a
national movement in a vast and conservative nation that stretches three
thousand miles from the Atlantic to the Pacific--then two thousand miles
more to encompass Hawaii and hundreds of miles more to ensnare Alaska.
Still, as U.S. imperialism continues to play an outsized role in Africa,
magnetically pushing states away from public sector remedies to deep-seated
problems for fear of angering Washington which has converted privatization
and the mythical "market" into a latter-day god, it remains important to
provide a critical examination, even of those who so heroically have
opposed Washington's policies. Thus, members of this list should be alert
to the fact that the title notwithstanding, this book focuses heavily and
disproportionately on the anti-apartheid struggle in South
Africa. Zimbabwe receives short shrift, for example. This may be part of
an inadvertent process of creating a historic narrative of this topic and
this period with Mandela on one side of the Atlantic, coupled majestically
with George Houser--a Euro-American founder and leader of the American
Committee on Africa (ACOA)--on the other side. A problem with this story
is that it does not frontally engage the sharp ideological and political
combat that determined the final outcome.
During the time of the liberation struggle in Zimbabwe, for example, the
party of Robert Mugabe, now the Zimbabwe African National Union-Patriotic
Front (ZANU-PF), received substantial support not only from a critical mass
of U.S.-based Black Nationalists, but also from many of the Euro-American
left who were heartened by its closeness to China; concomitantly, many of
these same forces were not particularly fond of Joshua Nkomo's the Zimbabwe
African People's Union (ZAPU), because of the perception that it was overly
close to the former Soviet Union. I recall vividly a planning meeting in
early 1980 to plan a fundraising concert for Zimbabwe just before the first
democratic elections. There was sharp contestation with a considerable
number of people demanding that all the proceeds go to ZANU (the eventual
decision was a 50-50 split between this party and ZAPU). Inevitably, the
perception that ZANU was close to China and represented "true" Black
Nationalism proved decisive in the minds of some. Similarly, before these
elections, "activists" of a different sort--Euro-American
mercenaries--flocked to the then Rhodesia in the hundreds (perhaps the
thousands) to combat African liberation. As private sector mercenary
firms, such as "Blackwater," capture headlines because of their
depredations in Iraq, it would have been informative if this volume had
noted their historical predecessors.
As we now know, Mugabe and Co. emerged triumphant in these 1980 elections,
as did China in its struggle with the Soviet Union, which has
disappeared. Zimbabwe's present political stance has attracted numerous
foes in the North Atlantic with Mugabe's presence almost wrecking a summit
between the African Union and the European Union (EU) in Lisbon in December
2007. One of the reasons that the EU chose not to pull out of this
gathering despite Mugabe's presence is because of the fear that this
boycott would only serve to deepen Beijing's already ramified ties with the
beleaguered continent of Africa. I think that one of the many reasons that
South Africa has not heeded the cries of many calling for a crackdown on
the Mugabe regime is because of a justifiable apprehension of crossing
swords with the leading regional ally, Zimbabwe, of the planet's rising
power: China. Clearly, China and one of its closest African allies,
Mugabe's Zimbabwe, will be major factors, respectively, globally and in
Southern Africa, for some time to come, and it would have been useful to
have received in this book needed historical background and context on
these pressing matters.
The same holds true for Angola. The authors do make reference to the
mid-1970s crisis in the run-up to independence from Portugal when some in
the United States opposed the ultimately triumphant faction, the MPLA,
which continues to lead the government in Luanda. Again, some U.S.-based
Black Nationalists and others influenced by Beijing opposed the MPLA
(Movimento Popular de Libertacao de Angola) because of its perceived
closeness to Moscow. This contretemps helped to split the then vibrant
African Liberation Support Committee, which had mobilized thousands,
particularly in New York City and Washington, D.C.
Yet, the most lengthy and comprehensive essay in this estimable collection
chastises the "Angolan government" since it "made little or no effort to
reach out to U.S. civil society or even to Africa activists" (p.
47). Likewise, it is asserted that "the Angolan government never
established a working relationship with its potential supporters in the
United States" (p. 35). First of all, Luanda may have had justifiable
suspicion of "U.S. civil society," since a considerable portion of this
amorphous entity backed Angola's mortal domestic opponents on grounds that,
in retrospect, seem either shady or specious. A little digging would have
revealed that Holden Roberto, one of the key leaders of these vigorous
anticommunist forces in Angola and responsible for the slayings of
countless MPLA cadre, had enjoyed a long history with "U.S. civil society,"
including some who are otherwise treated heroically in these pages.
Moreover, I should mention that a casual browser in the collections of the
New York Public Library will find a pamphlet I edited in solidarity with
the MPLA during these tumultuous times--entitled "The Facts on
Angola"--which was intended to bolster this party in its struggle against
U.S. imperialism, apartheid, Roberto (and Jonas Savimbi), and, of course,
Maoist China. I had no problem gaining access to the MPLA representative
at the United Nations at that juncture, Elisio de Figueiredo, who emerged
as his nation's first ambassador to the United States.
Of course, I did this political work in conjunction with the awkwardly
named National Anti-Imperialist Movement in Solidarity with African
Liberation, which was similarly perceived as being overly close to the
Communist Party in the United States. This organization, which maintained
a special relationship to those viewed as allied to Moscow--which, as it
turns out, were most of the leading forces in Southern Africa--goes
unmentioned in these pages. Similarly, I recall a well-attended meeting in
Harlem in the 1980s to hear an address by South African Communist Party
leader, Moses Mabhida. Likewise, I recall hosting South African Communist
leader Chris Hani during a visit to Los Angeles in the early 1990s. (In
retrospect, it seems that the event in which I hosted Hani was spied on
illicitly by a so-called "rogue" San Francisco police officer working in
tandem with right-wing forces; this was the subject of major litigation
that I trust South African investigators will note if ever Hani's
assassination is accorded a proper investigation.) There is no mention of
the epochal 1981 solidarity conference at Manhattan's Riverside Church,
perhaps because U.S. Communists were perceived as playing a leading role,
though, in fact, there was a broad constellation of forces at work led by
the exceedingly competent Trinidadian-American lawyer, Lennox Hinds, who
went on to play a leading role in Mandela's post-1990 rhapsodically
received visit to the United States.
Neither Mabhida nor Hani are mentioned in these pages (nor is Hinds), which
is fair enough--the book states clearly that it is not meant to be
comprehensive--but it fudges the issue by sniping at previous histories for
not being comprehensive. The editors assert early on, "when we began
working on this project, we were motivated in large part by our
dissatisfaction with existing accounts of the period" (p. x). However, for
those seeking to understand contemporary reality--which is part of the
purpose of reading history like this in the first place--one can close this
book unprepared to comprehend how, for example, Communist-influenced forces
played a pivotal role in December 2007 in dislodging a sitting president,
Thabo Mbeki, as leader of the African National Congress. Or, for that
matter, one is unprepared to comprehend how Mbeki and his challenger, Jacob
Zuma, are both former Communists trained in the former Soviet Union with
the latter's Russian reportedly being quite fluent. Charlene Mitchell, an
African American Communist, is highlighted, but African solidarity was not
her primary portfolio (though it would have been useful if, in the pages
devoted to her, she had been asked about a journey she made to
Congo-Brazzaville during the height of the Cold War when this nation was
going through a Marxist phase of leadership; indeed, attention to so-called
Francophone Africa is scant in these pages). The contemporary Russian
scholar, Vladimir Shubin, has written at length about Moscow's considerable
support for African liberation (for instance in his _ANC: a view from
Moscow_ (Bellville, South Africa: Mayibuye, 1999), and, again, as Moscow
revives once more under the leadership of Vladmir Putin and seems destined
to continue playing a major role in global affairs, it would have been
helpful to readers to provide the relevant historical background for Soviet
initiatives in Africa.
Yet, the activist who receives the fullest treatment in these pages, George
Houser, acknowledges his anticommunism, and to the credit of this volume,
it is pointed out that his organization--the ACOA--was propelled into
existence not least as an outgrowth of the fierce governmental assault on
the Council on African Affairs, led by the prodigious leftists, Paul
Robeson and W. B. E. Du Bois. Unfortunately, the reader does not receive
much assistance in comprehending how it was that socialist-oriented
organizations in Africa came to receive considerable support in the citadel
of anticommunism, the United States. Part of the answer rests in the fact
that African Americans--who were not as captivated by conservatism--were
the bulwark of the movement in solidarity with Africa.
Again, unfortunately, this volume underestimates the support that the
anticolonial resistance in Kenya received during the most frigid period of
the Cold War, the 1950s. We are told that with rare exception there "was
virtually no analysis or criticism of the war" in East Africa (p. 19). This
is simply not true. The Kenyan labor leader, Tom Mboya, first visited the
United States in 1956 at a time when the Suez crisis marked the beginning
of the end of British colonial rule, as Moscow was threatening to rain
rockets down on London. Subsequently, Mboya appeared on U.S. national
television--perhaps the first African to do so--and was on the cover of the
major newsweeklies, rubbed shoulders with both John F. Kennedy (from whom
he was able to obtain considerable sums for an airlift of students to
matriculate at U.S. universities, one of whom was his Luo comrade, Barack
Obama Sr.) and Richard M. Nixon, and received maximum financial support
from the U.S. labor movement. Mboya also spoke eloquently and at length
about Africans' outrage at the maltreatment of African Americans--a factor
that separates him conspicuously from the bulk of his Southern African
counterparts who, too often, were notoriously silent on this bedrock
issue. This synergistic relationship between Africans and African
Americans redounded to the benefit of both, a fact that too should have
received more attention in these pages.
It is evident that another factor which spurred the existence of the ACOA
was the apocalyptic reaction to "Mau Mau" in the North Atlantic
community. There was a real fear that it might signify a final reckoning
when the myriads of sins committed over the centuries by white supremacy
and colonialism, including the slave trade and land expropriation, were
finally meeting the retribution they so richly deserved. As things turned
out, thousands of Africans were slain--and a few dozen Europeans (as they
were termed accurately then)--but that reality should not be allowed to
obscure the real hysteria that put colonialism and white supremacy
decisively on the back foot.
One cannot separate the popularity of the Swahili language in black
America--including the manufactured holiday that is Kwanzaa--from the
resonance struck by Kenya beginning in the 1950s. Likewise, the confluence
of the Suez crisis with "Mau Mau" led to more attention to the chief victim
of the joint British-French-Israeli aggression: Egypt. This, in turn, gave
a boost to the Nation of Islam in the United States, an indigenous
nationalist-oriented religious formation that was born decades earlier but
only began to gain traction when the organized left (Robeson, Du Bois, and
others) were in retreat. Similarly, the U.S.-born philosophy known as
"Afro-centrism" could easily be termed "Egypt-centrism," which is a direct
manifestation of this growing fascination with Cairo. "Mau Mau" was
studied extensively by Medgar Evers, a leading African American martyr of
the movement for whom a college in New York City is named; he named one of
his children after Kenyatta, Kenya's leader, and along with his brother,
contemplated the founding of a "Mau Mau" in Mississippi, the heart of
darkness where he was born. Malcolm X, who was catapulted to prominence as
a result of his association with the Nation of Islam, had called for a "Mau
Mau" in Harlem.
How African militancy inspired the same militancy in Black America is
largely an untold story in these pages. In part, it stems from the
orientation, which emphasizes the ACOA, students, and religious elements,
and does not give sufficient attention to, for example, Black Nationalists
and Marxists of various stripes. Thus, when Patrice Lumumba was slain, a
group of African Americans invaded the inner sanctum of the United Nations
in protest. The gripping film, _The Battle of Algiers_ (1965), is still a
staple in Black America and inspired the Black Panther Party, which
established an outpost in Algeria and continues to have members exiled in
Tanzania.
It would have been worthwhile, as well, if this book had pointed out one of
the major problems with the solidarity organizations based in Washington,
D.C. (as opposed to New York City): their often problematic relationship to
the political establishment. At times, activists joked that instead of
these organizations lobbying on our behalf in Washington, D.C., they
lobbied us on behalf of Washington, D.C.--that is, as if to say, "Congress
will not simply accept your demands, please accept half a loaf." Most of
the time, they would be ignored and would be sent back to Congress with
renewed instructions, but at times, this "reverse lobbying" prevailed.
Another weakness of this trans-Atlantic movement was that when movements
came to power, instead of tending to and nurturing solidarity movements
that boosted them, they instead abandoned them, discarding them as if they
were soiled paper napkins, thereby weakening these newly founded
governments' attempt to influence Washington. This was a strategic blunder
of monumental proportion to the extent that it merits an intensive study
grounded in multiple archives.
Nevertheless, the words with which I opened this review should be
emphasized--this is a highly valuable volume--and any reservations
expressed here are far outweighed by this fact. It belongs in every
library in Africa--and, most of all, in South Africa. Still, in its very
strength it exposes an entire realm of research that has yet to be completed.
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