Malcolm X Was Right About
America
By Chris Hedges
February 02, 2015 "ICH"
- "Truthdig"
-NEW YORK—Malcolm
X, unlike Martin Luther King Jr., did
not believe America had a conscience. For
him there was no great tension between the
lofty ideals of the nation—which he said
were a sham—and the failure to deliver
justice to blacks. He, perhaps better than
King, understood the inner workings of
empire. He had no hope that those who
managed empire would ever get in touch with
their better selves to build a country free
of exploitation and injustice. He argued
that from the arrival of the first slave
ship to the appearance of our vast
archipelago of prisons and our squalid,
urban internal colonies where the poor are
trapped and abused, the American empire was
unrelentingly hostile to those
Frantz Fanon called “the wretched of the
earth.” This, Malcolm knew, would not change
until the empire was destroyed.
“It is impossible for
capitalism to survive, primarily because the
system of capitalism needs some blood to
suck,” Malcolm said. “Capitalism used to be
like an eagle, but now it’s more like a
vulture. It used to be strong enough to go
and suck anybody’s blood whether they were
strong or not. But now it has become more
cowardly, like the vulture, and it can only
suck the blood of the helpless. As the
nations of the world free themselves, then
capitalism has less victims, less to suck,
and it becomes weaker and weaker. It’s only
a matter of time in my opinion before it
will collapse completely.”
King was able to achieve a
legal victory through the civil rights
movement, portrayed in the new film “Selma.”
But he failed to bring about economic
justice and thwart the rapacious appetite of
the war machine that he was acutely aware
was responsible for empire’s abuse of the
oppressed at home and abroad. And 50 years
after Malcolm X was
assassinated in the Audubon Ballroom in
Harlem by hit men from the Nation of Islam,
it is clear that he, not King, was right. We
are the nation Malcolm knew us to be. Human
beings can be redeemed. Empires cannot. Our
refusal to face the truth about empire, our
refusal to defy the multitudinous crimes and
atrocities of empire, has brought about the
nightmare Malcolm predicted. And as the
Digital Age and our post-literate society
implant a terrifying historical amnesia,
these crimes are erased as swiftly as they
are committed.
“Sometimes, I have dared to
dream … that one day, history may even say
that my voice—which disturbed the white
man’s smugness, and his arrogance, and his
complacency—that my voice helped to save
America from a grave, possibly even fatal
catastrophe,” Malcolm wrote.
The integration of elites of
color, including Barack Obama, into the
upper echelons of institutional and
political structures has done nothing to
blunt the predatory nature of empire.
Identity and gender politics—we are about to
be sold a woman president in the form of
Hillary Clinton—have fostered, as Malcolm
understood, fraud and theft by Wall Street,
the evisceration of our civil liberties, the
misery of an underclass in which half of all
public school children live in poverty, the
expansion of our imperial wars and the deep
and perhaps fatal exploitation of the
ecosystem. And until we heed Malcolm X,
until we grapple with the truth about the
self-destruction that lies at the heart of
empire, the victims, at home and abroad,
will mount. Malcolm, like
James Baldwin, understood that only by
facing the truth about who we are as members
of an imperial power can people of color,
along with whites, be liberated. This truth
is bitter and painful. It requires an
acknowledgment of our capacity for evil,
injustice and exploitation, and it demands
repentance. But we cling like giddy children
to the lies we tell ourselves about
ourselves. We refuse to grow up. And because
of these lies, perpetrated across the
cultural and political spectrum, liberation
has not taken place. Empire devours us all.
“We’re anti-evil,
anti-oppression, anti-lynching,” Malcolm
said. “You can’t be anti- those things
unless you’re also anti- the oppressor and
the lyncher. You can’t be anti-slavery and
pro-slavemaster; you can’t be anti-crime and
pro-criminal. In fact,
Mr. Muhammad teaches that if the present
generation of whites would study their own
race in the light of true history, they
would be anti-white themselves.”
Malcolm once said that,
had he been a middle-class black who was
encouraged to go to law school, rather than
a poor child in a detention home who dropped
out of school at 15, “I would today probably
be among some city’s professional black
bourgeoisie, sipping cocktails and palming
myself off as a community spokesman for and
leader of the suffering black masses, while
my primary concern would be to grab a few
more crumbs from the groaning board of the
two-faced whites with whom they’re begging
to ‘integrate.’ ”
Malcolm’s family,
struggling and poor, was callously ripped
apart by state agencies in a pattern that
remains unchanged. The courts, substandard
schooling, roach-filled apartments, fear,
humiliation, despair, poverty, greedy
bankers, abusive employers, police, jails
and probation officers did their work then
as they do it now. Malcolm saw racial
integration as a politically sterile game,
one played by a black middle class anxious
to sell its soul as an enabler of empire and
capitalism. “The man who tosses worms in the
river,” Malcolm said, “isn’t necessarily a
friend of the fish. All the fish who take
him for a friend, who think the worm’s got
no hook on it, usually end up in the frying
pan.” He related to the apocalyptic battles
in the Book of Revelation where the
persecuted rise up in revolt against the
wicked.
“Martin [Luther King Jr.]
doesn’t have the revolutionary fire that
Malcolm had until the very end of his life,”
Cornel West says in his book with
Christa Buschendorf,
“Black Prophetic Fire.” “And by
revolutionary fire I mean understanding the
system under which we live, the capitalist
system, the imperial tentacles, the American
empire, the disregard for life, the
willingness to violate law, be it
international law or domestic law. Malcolm
understood that from very early on, and it
hit Martin so hard that he does become a
revolutionary in his own moral way later in
his short life, whereas Malcolm had the
revolutionary fire so early in his life.”
There are three great
books on Malcolm X: “The Autobiography of
Malcolm X: As Told to Alex Haley,” “The
Death and Life of Malcolm X” by Peter
Goldman and “Martin & Malcolm & America: A
Dream or a Nightmare” by James H. Cone.
On Friday I met
Goldman—who as a reporter for a St. Louis
newspaper and later for Newsweek knew and
covered Malcolm—in a New York City cafe.
Goldman was part of a tiny circle of white
reporters Malcolm respected, including
Charles Silberman of Fortune and M.S. “Mike”
Handler of The New York Times, who Malcolm
once said had “none of the usual prejudices
or sentimentalities about black people.”
Goldman and his wife, Helen
Dudar, who also was a reporter, first met
Malcolm in 1962 at the Shabazz Frosti Kreem,
a Black Muslim luncheonette in St. Louis’
north-side ghetto. At that meeting Malcolm
poured some cream into his coffee. “Coffee
is the only thing I liked integrated,” he
commented. He went on: “The average Negro
doesn’t even let another Negro know what he
thinks, he’s so mistrusting. He’s an
acrobat. He had to be to survive in this
civilization. But by me being a Muslim, I’m
black first—my sympathies are black, my
allegiance is black, my whole objectives are
black. By me being a Muslim, I’m not
interested in being American, because
America has never been interested in me.”
He told Goldman and Dudar:
“We don’t hate. The white man has a guilt
complex—he knows he’s done wrong. He knows
that if he had undergone at our hands what
we have undergone at his, he would hate us.”
When Goldman told Malcolm he believed in a
single society in which race did not matter
Malcolm said sharply: “You’re dealing in
fantasy. You’ve got to deal in facts.”
Goldman remembered, “He
was the messenger who brought us the bad
news, and nobody wanted to hear it.” Despite
the “bad news” at that first meeting,
Goldman would go on to have several more
interviews with him, interviews that often
lasted two or three hours. The writer now
credits Malcolm for his “re-education.”
Goldman was struck from
the beginning by Malcolm’s unfailing
courtesy, his dazzling smile, his moral
probity, his courage and, surprisingly, his
gentleness. Goldman mentions the day that
psychologist and writer
Kenneth B. Clark and his wife escorted a
group of high school students, most of them
white, to meet Malcolm. They arrived to find
him surrounded by reporters. Mrs. Clark,
feeling that meeting with reporters was
probably more important, told Malcolm the
teenagers would wait. “The important thing
is these kids,” Malcolm said to the Clarks
as he called the students forward. “He
didn’t see a difference between white kids
and kids,” Kenneth Clark is quoted as
saying in Goldman’s book.
James Baldwin too wrote of
Malcolm’s deep sensitivity. He and Malcolm
were on a radio program in 1961 with a young
civil rights activist who had just returned
from the South. “If you are an American
citizen,” Baldwin remembered Malcolm asking
the young man, “why have you got to fight
for your rights as a citizen? To be a
citizen means that you have the rights of a
citizen. If you haven’t got the rights of a
citizen, then you’re not a citizen.” “It’s
not as simple as that,” the young man
answered. “Why not?” Malcolm asked.
During the exchange,
Baldwin wrote, “Malcolm understood that
child and talked to him as though he was
talking to a younger brother, and with that
same watchful attention. What most struck me
was that he was not at all trying to
proselytize the child: he was trying to make
him think. ... I will never forget Malcolm
and that child facing each other, and
Malcolm’s extraordinary gentleness. And
that’s the truth about Malcolm: he was one
of the gentlest people I have ever met.”
“One of Malcolm’s many
lines that I liked was ‘I am the man you
think you are,’ ” Goldman said. “What he
meant by that was if you hit me I would hit
you back. But over the period of my
acquaintance with him I came to believe it
also meant if you respect me I will respect
you back.”
Cone amplifies this point
in “Martin & Malcolm & America”:
Malcolm X is the best
medicine against genocide. He showed us
by example and prophetic preaching that
one does not have to stay in the mud. We
can wake up; we can stand up; and we can
take that long walk toward freedom.
Freedom is first and foremost an inner
recognition of self-respect, a knowledge
that one was not put on this earth to be
a nobody. Using drugs and killing each
other are the worst forms of nobodyness.
Our forefathers fought against great
odds (slavery, lynching, and
segregation), but they did not
self-destruct. Some died fighting, and
others, inspired by their example, kept
moving toward the promised land of
freedom, singing ‘we ain’t gonna let
nobody turn us around.’
African-Americans can do the same today.
We can fight for our dignity and
self-respect. To be proud to be black
does not mean being against white
people, unless whites are against
respecting the humanity of blacks.
Malcolm was not against whites; he was
for blacks and against their
exploitation.
Goldman lamented the loss
of voices such as Malcolm’s, voices steeped
in an understanding of our historical and
cultural truths and endowed with the courage
to speak these truths in public.
“We don’t read anymore,”
Goldman said. “We don’t learn anymore.
History is disappearing. People talk about
living in the moment as if it is a virtue.
It is a horrible vice. Between the
twitterverse and the 24-hour cable news
cycle our history keeps disappearing.
History is something boring that you had to
endure in high school and then you are rid
of it. Then you go to college and study
finance, accounting, business management or
computer science. There are damn few liberal
arts majors left. And this has erased our
history. The larger figure in the ’60s was,
of course, King. But what the huge majority
of Americans know about King is [only] that
he made a speech where he said ‘I have a
dream’ and that his name is attached to a
day off.”Malcolm,
like King, understood the cost of being a
prophet. The two men daily faced down this
cost.
Malcolm, as Goldman
writes, met with the reporter Claude Lewis
not long before his Feb. 21, 1965, murder.
He had already experienced several attempts
on his life.
“This is an era of
hypocrisy,” he told Lewis. “When white folks
pretend that they want Negroes to be free,
and Negroes pretend to white folks that they
really believe that white folks want ’em to
be free, it’s an era of hypocrisy, brother.
You fool me and I fool you. You pretend that
you’re my brother, and I pretend that I
really believe you believe you’re my
brother.”
He told Lewis he would
never reach old age. “If you read, you’ll
find that very few people who think like I
think live long enough to get old. When I
say by any means necessary, I mean it with
all my heart, my mind and my soul. A black
man should give his life to be free, and he
should also be able, be willing to take the
life of those who want to take his. When you
really think like that, you don’t live
long.”
Lewis asked him how he
wanted to be remembered. “Sincere,” Malcolm
said. “In whatever I did or do. Even if I
made mistakes, they were made in sincerity.
If I’m wrong, I’m wrong in sincerity. I
think that the best thing that a person can
be is sincere.”
“The price of freedom,”
Malcolm said shortly before he was killed,
“is death.”
Chris Hedges previously
spent nearly two decades as a foreign
correspondent in Central America, the Middle
East, Africa and the Balkans. He has
reported from more than 50 countries and has
worked for The Christian Science Monitor,
National Public Radio, The Dallas Morning
News and The New York Times, for which he
was a foreign correspondent for 15 years.