MARCUS GARVEY –
PHILOSOPHY AND OPINIONS OF MARCUS GARVEY – EDITED BY AMY JACQUES-GARVEY – 1923
This old book does not represent
a constructed and well balanced
presentation of Garvey’s ideas, but rather a selection of many small excerpts,
each one under s small title. Apart from some speeches at the end of the
volume, and we cannot say whether these speeches are unabridged or full,
everything else is tit bits of thinking in any haphazard jumble. We then have
to extract a philosophy out of this patchwork.
These documents all have a unity
in the fact that they are all from the Harlem
period in Marcus Garvey’s life. He arrived in Harlem in 1916, coming from Jamaica. His
problems with justice started as sson as 1922. He will find himself in prison
in 1926 and will be deported back to Jamaica in 1927. He founded with
some others the Universal Negro Improvement Association and organized the First
International Convention of the Negro Peoples of the World that lasted thirty
days in 1920 with a mass rally in Madison
Square Garden
that brought together more than 25,000 people. Internationally he arrived in
Harlem when the USA entered
the War in Europe and moved many blacks from
the south to the north to work in the war industry. Then this period
(1916-1922) covers the end the war and the great changes that occurred in the
world then and just after, particularly the Soviet revolution in 1917 that is
actually referred to in the volume as being led by Lenin and Trotsky.
This mention of Lenin and Trotsky
is important because the very first principle that emerges from this volume is
that he has recuperated his main central concept from the Marxist catechism
that was triumphing in Russia, and he has only replaced the word “class” in
“class struggle” by the word “race” to produce a vision of everything in the
world as being a “race struggle.”
For him there are three races.
·
The whites (this race is specified to be Europe and the west) who exploits the yellow and the
blacks.
·
The yellow (this race is specified only once to
be the Japanese) who exploit the blacks.
·
The blacks (this race is clearly identified as
the Africans and Africa with no distinction whatsoever between North Africa,
and Egypt is part of this Africa that covers all blacks in the world too and is
only identified several times as Ethiopia) who are exploited by everyone.
The blacks are simply confronted
to the simple choice:
1- recapture your autonomy
or
2- accept full extermination.
This choice carries in itself the answer. The problem then
is how is that recapture supposed to happen?
This first principle is extremely
radical and that will bring him a lot of hostility from the officials of the USA, all white
of course, and from the moderate Black leaders and intellectuals, among whom
W.E.B. DuBois is prominent. DuBois accuses him of being “dictatorial,
domineering, inordinately vain and very suspicious,” of having “absolutely no
business sense, no flair for real organization” and of only having “objects . .
. shot through with bombast and exaggeration.” This came shortly after the
period we are considering but is pretty final. Garvey explains this hostility
with jealousy because they are moderate and he is radical and what’s more he
has managed to build a mass movement.
The mass movement is UNIA and the
various branches and organizations he created around this movement: like the
African Legions and the Black Cross, service organizations for the Blacks, and
commercial ventures like the Black Star Line aiming at importing African
products to the USA and West Indies, and the Negroes Factories Corporation to
develop Black business. In 1924, hence outside the period concerned here, he
specified the “Aims and Objects of Movement for Solution of Negro Problem,” as
the president of UNIA.
“The UNIA and African Communities’
League is a social, friendly, humanitarian, charitable, educational,
institutional, constructive and expansive society. . . [the aims are] to
establish a Universal Confraternity among the race; to promote the spirit of
pride and love; to reclaim the fallen; to administer to and assist the needy;
to assist in civilizing the backward tribes of Africa; to assist in the
development of Independent Negro Nations and Communities; to establish a
central nation for the race; to establish Commissionaries or Agencies in the
principal countries and cities of the world for the information of all
Negroes.”
This gives us some more organized
vision of Marcus Garvey’s thinking. The motto of UNIA is “One God! One aim! One
destiny!” that is a clear statement amplifying the quotation often attributed
to Garvey: “Up you mighty race, you can accomplish what you will.”
The first basic element after the
race struggle is the religious reference to and inspiration from Jesus. The
Jews are clearly and very emphatically accused of being responsible for the
crucifixion of Jesus. The ideal attributed to Jesus is systematically presented
in triads of terms like “a life of Love, Charity, Mercy.” “His innocence, His
Love and His Charity” are attributed to Jesus. Africa is reduced to “Egypt, Ethiopia
and Timbuktu.”
God is referred to as being “the Great Omnipotent, the Great Creator, our
Eternal Father.” Jesus is called “our Master, our prince of Peace, our
Redeemer.” He has “conquered death, the grave and hell.” Then “we sing and
shout with the angels, we ring our joy bells; we blow our horns.” These three
ways of sending a message with our voices, our bells and our horns are “in
praise” of Jesus who is “the Jesus, the Christ, the Emanuel to us,” a triad by
the form that is immediately amplified by to titles set apart by their form:
“the Son of Righteousness, the Prince of Peace.” Then the conclusion comes with
another triad that “shout[s] our praises to God for freedom, for liberty, for
life.” Some will say this triad is artificial since freedom and liberty are the
same thing. And yet, are they reality?
Strangely enough Garvey’s racial
approach of the world and religion leads him to alluding to the fact Jesus is
white and he rejects it with a strange argument saying that God created all men
equal in his own image, hence with no racial distinction or discrimination. He
suggests even that Jesus can be seen as the Son of God and thus belonging to
all humanity, to all races. He of course would reject the Mormon explanation
that the black race was created when Cain
was rejected by God and made black as a punishment for his crime. But then his
strong racial approach would imply Jesus belongs to all races, hence can be
seen as white, black or yellow, and this is a no-answer more than an answer. In
fact as we have seen in the objects of UNIA, culture is not taken into account.
Here we are dealing with a strong cultural element that is part of the African
heritage of the Black slaves. Africans are deeply committed to an animistic
vision of the world and life. This transcending vital force present in all
things is connected with a spiritual world beyond the surface of everyday
reality, and evil is not part of this energy but the fact of the existence of
bad spirits and ghosts who are the dead evil men: evil is brought into the
world by man himself. This deeply animistic vision was able to integrate the
Christian approach easily, in fact the Catholic approach, either French or
Spanish. They then became Christians or they developed an African religious
tradition, Vodun, in Louisiana and the West
Indies, with an extreme and morbid form in Haiti with the Tontons Macoutes of
late Duvallier Sr. Note this tradition goes far beyond the blacks since Anne
Rice for one example used it in one of her vampire books and Arthur Miller used
it in The Crucible. This deep
religious African heritage produced a vast Christian movement among American
Blacks that is present in the oration of all black public speakers of any type.
This too is a direct African heritage founded on the rhythmic experiential and
existential capture of life, in fact a polyrhythmic capture that is the other
enormous contribution of African heritage to American culture, and today global
culture. This again is missed by Garvey who does not consider culture as an
objective.
This religious tradition produced
the ideology of “the Everlasting Brotherhood of Man and the Eternal Fatherhood
of God.” There is no surprise in the total absence of women and the mother.
This is both African heritage and loss. Heritage in the capture of women as
being secondary, of society as being dominated by men, but loss in the absence
of the mother because the mother is the real source of the legitimacy of a
blood line and humanity. But his God has no motherly nor feminine dimension, in
pite ogf the fact that he says that God made two people in his image, Adam and
Eve.
Then Marcus Garvey develops a
pan-African approach of his Africanism. The Blacks as a race must regain their
nation and that is Africa, seen and repeated as being a whole and integrating
all the Blacks in the world who have to return to Africa to take part in the “colonizing”
of Africa by the Africans. We have seen he
considers the Africans in Africa to be divided
in tribes within the African nation and these tribes are “backward.” But the
objective of reconstructing Africa when it is liberated from the colonizing
presence of the Europeans, is asserted over and over again and only one center
appears in this racial Africa: Ethiopia.
His dream of decolonizing Africa, the “dream
of an African empire” can go as far as supporting the German Dr Heinrich Schnee
who advocates that:
“America
[should] take over the mandatories of Great Britain
and France in Africa for the colonizing of American Negroes. . . . he
says: ‘As regards the attempt to colonize Africa
with the surplus American colored
population, this would in a long way settle the vexed problem . . . and
simultaneously ease the burden of German reparations which is paralyzing
economic life.’”
This Doctor Schnee suggests this
at a time when all German mandatories in Africa have been seized and shared
between England and France as war reparations: Cameroun was
even cut in two for that purpose. This support is surprising because how could
he trust, even very indirectly, the USA
to do a better job at colonizing Africa than the English or the French, and how
could he believe the USA would
only send their ex-slaves and their descendants to Africa
to do the job. American corporations would certainly think differently and
anyway that would have been at the time running against the “manifest destiny”
of the USA,
a conception that had already been trampled upon with the participation in the first
world war.
His dual vision of reality comes
from the radical opposition between the black race and the white race, the
oppressed and the oppressor, the master and his serf/peon/slave, the master
again and helpless imbeciles, dependent slaves and servants. Deeply inspired
,by slavery, its denunciation and the call to bring down all kinds of servitude
as he is, Garvey clearly describes the sufferings of black slaves and even of
the black victims of segregation, though he does not see how the colonists of
old turned Africans into slaves on the model of what Willie Lynch suggested and
he does not emphasize the resistance of the Africans withçn that frame of extreme
animalization and domestication of this American brand of slavery that had no
equivalent in the West Indies and in French or Spanish colonies in Louisiana
and central or south America. He also contains the germs of the two ways of
solving what comes from these slavery and segregation.
He of course does not call it
Post Traumatic Slave/Slavery Syndrome/Disorder as is done today. But he
contains the germs of the Muslim solution in the recapturing of the inner soul
and value of each black individual in the positive sides, actions and features
of his/her ancestors, including of course as slaves in the past, and
him/herself and his or her fellow blacks. He calls it pride and it is obvious
you cannot recapture your value if you do not reconstruct your personal
positive contribution to life, and that of your ancestors. This can only happen
within a collective organization and action, that will necessarily lead to the
shedding of some blood, of all blacks if possible.
On the other side he is extremely
favorable to the direct accusation of the whites and the demand of the blacks
that the whites make amends and provide reparations. This is more in the line
of the traditional Black Christian approach that will be so well illustrated by
writers like Richard Wright, Ralph Ellison and James Baldwin, among others.
In other words Marcus Garvey in
this book appears as a conscious person who knows about the suffering of his
people, who knows that these people have to recapture power and control, but at
the same time he neglects the tremendous cultural and artistic contribution of
African heritage brought to American by the African slaves. Jazz was just in
the making with the development of the radio in the 1920s and jazz was and
still is a complete turn-around of history in which the slaves or ex-slaves
become the driving cultural force of the USA,
America
and the world. He seems to be conscious of the two approaches we can take as
for solving the black problem, though he does not clearly see that the
enslavement of the slaves was a lot more than just plain physical. It created a
lasting disorder in the psyche of the slaves and their descendents. But he is
trapped by his own radicalism that makes him declare when arrested: “The Negro
Ministry needs purging.” Such declarations could only lead to a de facto
convergence of action between the moderate black intellectuals and the white
police forces and establishment. This split between radicals controlling a mass
movement and moderates controlling the avenues of power no matter how small and
restricted will reproduce the structure of mental dependence long after the end
of slavery till it finally was identified as a Post Traumatic Stress Syndrome.
And even so, the Christian approach and the Muslim approach remain
differentiated. The divide has still not yet been bridged because of the strong
and deep survival of the dual vision of the world cut into two antagonistic
races, just the wame way as ideological and sectarian communism took a long
time to die because of the strong ideological survival of the dual vision of
society cut into two antagonistic classes, a vision that is still quite active
in the minds of many trade-unionists for example.
Duality is stagnation or aimless
erring in history and in any scientific project. Nothing is either A or B. it
has also to be seen as neither A nor B and as both A and B. The second formula
means that there is necessarily other solutions or protagonists than A and B.
Historically this volume is
essential. It contains the germs of the future and at the same time the
shackles that were to hamper the possible developments that were, still are
times and might very well be still in the future blocked by a reductive dual
antagonistic conception of the world and society. It takes a lot more than two
legs to walk with all kinds of sensors in the body, but anyway you need both
legs to simple put one foot in front of the other. Any pair of antagonistic
concepts are just doomed to fail explaining and predicting the past and the
future. That’s what I regret about this book, even if it was composed in 1923.
Dr Jacques COULARDEAU
EXPURGATED VERSION
FOR AMAZON PÖLITICALLY CORRECT BIGOTRY
This old book does not represent
a constructed and well balanced
presentation of Garvey’s ideas, but rather a selection of many small excerpts,
each one under s small title. Apart from some speeches at the end of the
volume, and we cannot say whether these speeches are unabridged or full,
everything else is tit bits of thinking in any haphazard jumble. We then have
to extract a philosophy out of this patchwork.
These documents all have a unity
in the fact that they are all from the Harlem
period in Marcus Garvey’s life. He arrived in Harlem in 1916, coming from Jamaica.
His problems with justice started as sson as 1922. He will find himself in
prison in 1926 and will be deported back to Jamaica in 1927. He founded with
some others the Universal N**** Improvement Association and organized the First
International Convention of the N**** Peoples of the World that lasted thirty
days in 1920 with a mass rally in Madison
Square Garden
that brought together more than 25,000 people. Internationally he arrived in
Harlem when the USA entered
the War in Europe and moved many blacks from
the south to the north to work in the war industry. Then this period
(1916-1922) covers the end the war and the great changes that occurred in the
world then and just after, particularly the Soviet revolution in 1917 that is
actually referred to in the volume as being led by Lenin and Trotsky.
This mention of Lenin and Trotsky
is important because the very first principle that emerges from this volume is
that he has recuperated his main central concept from the Marxist catechism
that was triumphing in Russia, and he has only replaced the word “class” in
“class struggle” by the word “race” to produce a vision of everything in the
world as being a “race struggle.”
For him there are three races.
·
The whites (this race is specified to be Europe and the west) who exploits the yellow and the
blacks.
·
The yellow (this race is specified only once to
be the Japanese) who exploit the blacks.
·
The blacks (this race is clearly identified as
the Africans and Africa with no distinction whatsoever between North Africa,
and Egypt is part of this Africa that covers all blacks in the world too and is
only identified several times as Ethiopia) who are exploited by everyone.
The blacks are simply confronted
to the simple choice:
1- recapture your autonomy
or
2- accept full extermination.
This choice carries in itself the answer. The problem then
is how is that recapture supposed to happen?
This first principle is extremely
radical and that will bring him a lot of hostility from the officials of the USA,
all white of course, and from the moderate Black leaders and intellectuals,
among whom W.E.B. DuBois is prominent. DuBois accuses him of being
“dictatorial, domineering, inordinately vain and very suspicious,” of having
“absolutely no business sense, no flair for real organization” and of only
having “objects . . . shot through with bombast and exaggeration.” This came shortly
after the period we are considering but is pretty final. Garvey explains this
hostility with jealousy because they are moderate and he is radical and what’s
more he has managed to build a mass movement.
The mass movement is UNIA and the
various branches and organizations he created around this movement: like the
African Legions and the Black Cross, service organizations for the Blacks, and
commercial ventures like the Black Star Line aiming at importing African
products to the USA and West Indies, and the N****es Factories Corporation to
develop Black business. In 1924, hence outside the period concerned here, he
specified the “Aims and Objects of Movement for Solution of N**** Problem,” as
the president of UNIA.
“The UNIA and African Communities’
League is a social, friendly, humanitarian, charitable, educational,
institutional, constructive and expansive society. . . [the aims are] to
establish a Universal Confraternity among the race; to promote the spirit of
pride and love; to reclaim the fallen; to administer to and assist the needy;
to assist in civilizing the backward tribes of Africa; to assist in the
development of Independent N**** Nations and Communities; to establish a
central nation for the race; to establish Commissionaries or Agencies in the
principal countries and cities of the world for the information of all N****es.”
This gives us some more organized
vision of Marcus Garvey’s thinking. The motto of UNIA is “One God! One aim! One
destiny!” that is a clear statement amplifying the quotation often attributed
to Garvey: “Up you mighty race, you can accomplish what you will.”
The first basic element after the
race struggle is the religious reference to and inspiration from Jesus. The
Jews are clearly and very emphatically accused of being responsible for the
crucifixion of Jesus. The ideal attributed to Jesus is systematically presented
in triads of terms like “a life of Love, Charity, Mercy.” “His innocence, His
Love and His Charity” are attributed to Jesus. Africa is reduced to “Egypt, Ethiopia
and Timbuktu.”
God is referred to as being “the Great Omnipotent, the Great Creator, our
Eternal Father.” Jesus is called “our Master, our prince of Peace, our
Redeemer.” He has “conquered death, the grave and hell.” Then “we sing and
shout with the angels, we ring our joy bells; we blow our horns.” These three
ways of sending a message with our voices, our bells and our horns are “in
praise” of Jesus who is “the Jesus, the Christ, the Emanuel to us,” a triad by
the form that is immediately amplified by to titles set apart by their form:
“the Son of Righteousness, the Prince of Peace.” Then the conclusion comes with
another triad that “shout[s] our praises to God for freedom, for liberty, for
life.” Some will say this triad is artificial since freedom and liberty are the
same thing. And yet, are they reality?
Strangely enough Garvey’s racial
approach of the world and religion leads him to alluding to the fact Jesus is
white and he rejects it with a strange argument saying that God created all men
equal in his own image, hence with no racial distinction or discrimination. He
suggests even that Jesus can be seen as the Son of God and thus belonging to
all humanity, to all races. He of course would reject the Mormon explanation
that the black race was created when Cain
was rejected by God and made black as a punishment for his crime. But then his
strong racial approach would imply Jesus belongs to all races, hence can be
seen as white, black or yellow, and this is a no-answer more than an answer. In
fact as we have seen in the objects of UNIA, culture is not taken into account.
Here we are dealing with a strong cultural element that is part of the African
heritage of the Black slaves. Africans are deeply committed to an animistic
vision of the world and life. This transcending vital force present in all
things is connected with a spiritual world beyond the surface of everyday
reality, and evil is not part of this energy but the fact of the existence of
bad spirits and ghosts who are the dead evil men: evil is brought into the
world by man himself. This deeply animistic vision was able to integrate the
Christian approach easily, in fact the Catholic approach, either French or
Spanish. They then became Christians or they developed an African religious
tradition, Vodun, in Louisiana and the West
Indies, with an extreme and morbid form in Haiti with the Tontons Macoutes of
late Duvallier Sr. Note this tradition goes far beyond the blacks since Anne
Rice for one example used it in one of her vampire books and Arthur Miller used
it in The Crucible. This deep
religious African heritage produced a vast Christian movement among American
Blacks that is present in the oration of all black public speakers of any type.
This too is a direct African heritage founded on the rhythmic experiential and
existential capture of life, in fact a polyrhythmic capture that is the other
enormous contribution of African heritage to American culture, and today global
culture. This again is missed by Garvey who does not consider culture as an
objective.
This religious tradition produced
the ideology of “the Everlasting Brotherhood of Man and the Eternal Fatherhood
of God.” There is no surprise in the total absence of women and the mother.
This is both African heritage and loss. Heritage in the capture of women as
being secondary, of society as being dominated by men, but loss in the absence
of the mother because the mother is the real source of the legitimacy of a
blood line and humanity. But his God has no motherly nor feminine dimension, in
pite ogf the fact that he says that God made two people in his image, Adam and
Eve.
Then Marcus Garvey develops a
pan-African approach of his Africanism. The Blacks as a race must regain their
nation and that is Africa, seen and repeated as being a whole and integrating
all the Blacks in the world who have to return to Africa to take part in the “colonizing”
of Africa by the Africans. We have seen he
considers the Africans in Africa to be divided
in tribes within the African nation and these tribes are “backward.” But the
objective of reconstructing Africa when it is liberated from the colonizing
presence of the Europeans, is asserted over and over again and only one center
appears in this racial Africa: Ethiopia.
His dream of decolonizing Africa, the “dream
of an African empire” can go as far as supporting the German Dr Heinrich Schnee
who advocates that:
“America
[should] take over the mandatories of Great Britain
and France in Africa for the colonizing of American N****es. . . . he
says: ‘As regards the attempt to colonize Africa
with the surplus American colored
population, this would in a long way settle the vexed problem . . . and
simultaneously ease the burden of German reparations which is paralyzing
economic life.’”
This Doctor Schnee suggests this
at a time when all German mandatories in Africa have been seized and shared
between England and France as war reparations: Cameroun was even cut in two for
that purpose. This support is surprising because how could he trust, even very
indirectly, the USA to do a
better job at colonizing Africa than the English or the French, and how could
he believe the USA would
only send their ex-slaves and their descendants to Africa
to do the job. American corporations would certainly think differently and
anyway that would have been at the time running against the “manifest destiny”
of the USA,
a conception that had already been trampled upon with the participation in the first
world war.
His dual vision of reality comes
from the radical opposition between the black race and the white race, the
oppressed and the oppressor, the master and his serf/peon/slave, the master
again and helpless imbeciles, dependent slaves and servants. Deeply inspired
,by slavery, its denunciation and the call to bring down all kinds of servitude
as he is, Garvey clearly describes the sufferings of black slaves and even of
the black victims of segregation, though he does not see how the colonists of
old turned Africans into slaves on the model of what Willie Lynch suggested and
he does not emphasize the resistance of the Africans withçn that frame of extreme
animalization and domestication of this American brand of slavery that had no
equivalent in the West Indies and in French or Spanish colonies in Louisiana
and central or south America. He also contains the germs of the two ways of
solving what comes from these slavery and segregation.
He of course does not call it
Post Traumatic Slave/Slavery Syndrome/Disorder as is done today. But he
contains the germs of the Muslim solution in the recapturing of the inner soul
and value of each black individual in the positive sides, actions and features
of his/her ancestors, including of course as slaves in the past, and
him/herself and his or her fellow blacks. He calls it pride and it is obvious
you cannot recapture your value if you do not reconstruct your personal
positive contribution to life, and that of your ancestors. This can only happen
within a collective organization and action, that will necessarily lead to the
shedding of some blood, of all blacks if possible.
On the other side he is extremely
favorable to the direct accusation of the whites and the demand of the blacks
that the whites make amends and provide reparations. This is more in the line
of the traditional Black Christian approach that will be so well illustrated by
writers like Richard Wright, Ralph Ellison and James Baldwin, among others.
In other words Marcus Garvey in
this book appears as a conscious person who knows about the suffering of his
people, who knows that these people have to recapture power and control, but at
the same time he neglects the tremendous cultural and artistic contribution of
African heritage brought to American by the African slaves. Jazz was just in
the making with the development of the radio in the 1920s and jazz was and
still is a complete turn-around of history in which the slaves or ex-slaves
become the driving cultural force of the USA,
America
and the world. He seems to be conscious of the two approaches we can take as
for solving the black problem, though he does not clearly see that the
enslavement of the slaves was a lot more than just plain physical. It created a
lasting disorder in the psyche of the slaves and their descendents. But he is
trapped by his own radicalism that makes him declare when arrested: “The N****
Ministry needs purging.” Such declarations could only lead to a de facto
convergence of action between the moderate black intellectuals and the white
police forces and establishment. This split between radicals controlling a mass
movement and moderates controlling the avenues of power no matter how small and
restricted will reproduce the structure of mental dependence long after the end
of slavery till it finally was identified as a Post Traumatic Stress Syndrome.
And even so, the Christian approach and the Muslim approach remain
differentiated. The divide has still not yet been bridged because of the strong
and deep survival of the dual vision of the world cut into two antagonistic
races, just the wame way as ideological and sectarian communism took a long
time to die because of the strong ideological survival of the dual vision of
society cut into two antagonistic classes, a vision that is still quite active
in the minds of many trade-unionists for example.
Duality is stagnation or aimless
erring in history and in any scientific project. Nothing is either A or B. it
has also to be seen as neither A nor B and as both A and B. The second formula
means that there is necessarily other solutions or protagonists than A and B.
Historically this volume is
essential. It contains the germs of the future and at the same time the
shackles that were to hamper the possible developments that were, still are
times and might very well be still in the future blocked by a reductive dual
antagonistic conception of the world and society. It takes a lot more than two
legs to walk with all kinds of sensors in the body, but anyway you need both
legs to simple put one foot in front of the other. Any pair of antagonistic
concepts are just doomed to fail explaining and predicting the past and the
future. That’s what I regret about this book, even if it was composed in 1923.
Dr Jacques COULARDEAU
# posted by Dr. Jacques COULARDEAU @ 4:50 AM