NOTE: It’s a common urban legend that Arsenio got thrown off the air for having Minister Farrakhan on the first incarceration of his show. I know a different version that I remember reading (but not where): In the version I remember, Arsenio’s popularity came from CBS affiliates using him instead of Pat Sajak. When David Letterman signed his now-famous deal, the affiliates let Arsenio know he was going to be kicked off soon. So Arsenio’s show was, in effect, cancelled a year in advance. That gave him the freedom to put Farrakhan on. This article says kinda what I remember reading.
So who was Brother Malcolm to Bailey? “He urged that we strive, not for integration, not for separation, but the kind of group power that would enable us to effectively compete, on every level, with other groups in this group-oriented country. He believed strongly in self-defense as a way by which to curb the white supremacist-driven violence that killed and brutalized so many Black people between 1955 and 1965, the years he was on the public scene; he believed just as strongly in the need for us to develop independent political and collective economic power as instruments for group advancement and defense; he insisted that group cultural power was needed to combat the constant propaganda barrage from films, television programs, magazines, newspapers, textbooks, etc. that supported the ‘divine right’ of people of European descent to control the world; he taught us that we are a world-class people who were/are involved in a struggle for human, not just civil rights.”
In a highly readable, brief book, Bailey recalls and documents his work as a 20-something member of Brother Malcolm’s Organization of Afro-American Unity. He edited what would eventually be called “The Blacklash,” the OAAU’s newsletter. He writes at length about how Brother Malcolm taught him about domestic and international politics.
Historical gems Bailey presents include a never-before-published article that Brother Malcolm submitted for publication in “The Blacklash” the day before he was assassinated, pictures of the front pages of the newsletter, and Bailey’s stream-of-consciousness essay reacting to Brother Malcolm’s assassination hours after it happened.
The author’s emphasis is on Brother Malcolm’s potential impact as an African (-American) internationalist—someone who could organize the Third World versus the Western powers. He quotes now-defunct newspaper articles and now-forgotten-but-then-powerful columnists, Federal Bureau of Investigation files and other sources to show how the powers that be were scared to death of what Brother Malcolm could accomplish as a kind of roving “Black America Ambassador” of Pan-Africanism.
Bailey thankfully brings the story all the up to the present. He humorously recounts his post-assassination encounters with the New York City police and the FBI, both of whom tried to turn him. (Particularly telling is his documentation of the price he and his family paid—and still pay—for his activism, something activists rarely discuss publicly.) He documents an OAAU reunion in 2006, and includes the views of many of his former comrades about Brother Malcolm.
He should be thanked by all concerned African-Americans for this long-overdue, first-hand account. It’s just a small part of the “real” Brother Malcolm, but it’s an important part.
Enjoyed this bit! (Especially :52 to 1:04 and the Colbert show-stopper!) LOL! 🙂
NOTE: I thought his college-professor-giving-out-the-syllabus intro to Middle America below (“I have real, average parents, the Roots is a great house band that can handle Tony Bennett,” etc.) was kinda smart. He needs some of the old audience.
Where has this show been all my life?!? 🙂 I finally gave it a try a couple of weeks ago, and now I’m hooked FOR GOOD!
The Season 3 finale airs tomorrow night! I’ll probably only see part of it then, but will find the repeats during the week before finding all the back episodes online.