Black Power
In the history of African Americans in this
country, there have been some tremendous movements and images that seem to
capture the mood of the country and the black community at that time. And this one phrase “black power” is without
a doubt one of the most simple and elegant statements of pride and unity in the
black community. But it was also a
phrase that came to represent the more violent and objectionable side of the
struggle for equality in the black community.
And that makes it a controversial phrase then and now.
Probably the greatest image of black power
is the strong hand of a black man, clenched in a black glove and raised in the
air in defiance and pride. Never has
that salute been used so perfectly as it was at the 1968 Olympics when Tommy
Smith and John Carlos raised the black power fist complete with black glove as
they received their medals for their performances at those Olympic Games.
The phrase “black power” was not coined in
a march or riot as might be implied. It
was actually created by Robert Williams, the head of the NAACP in the early
sixties. But it really started becoming
a “street term” when it was adopted by Makasa Dada and Stokely Carmichael,
founders of The Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee which was the
precursor to the famous Black Panther Party.
Sadly the black power movement became
characterized by radical elements that went much further than seeking the goals
of Martin Luther King and the rest of the civil rights movement’s
leadership. These radical elements
sought black separation and social change by violent means. And so in a time when there was tremendous
turmoil in the country because of the violence in Vietnam and on the streets of
America because of that social strife, The Black Panthers and other fringe
groups sewed fear and hatred in response to racism which at times made it more
difficult to achieve long lasting change.
But there is good to be seen even in some
of the darker elements of black history and the leadership who looked to find
the best way forward for African Americans.
Sometimes it is necessary for the radical elements to make themselves
known so reasonable members of a community can know the outer limits and find
compromise. This was a value to the
black power movement because it did charge the discussion, albeit with violence
and made the importance of reasonable Americans to come together to seek
peaceful change all the more important.