Wednesday, September 4, 2019

Why is it important to understand the Black Experience in America?



More than 30 years ago on the streets of Philadelphia, a Black Revolutionary Movement called MOVE was brutally suppressed by the State of Pennsylvania using terrorist methods to neutralize and kill many members of the organization. I remember as a child many of people around the Black and The Latino community spoke with outrage about the massacre that occurred on May 13th, 1985. MOVE was a Black Revolutionary group that challenged the establishment’s economic and political system within the United States of America. Unfortunately, many members of the MOVE organization were killed when the Mayor at the time Wilson Goode and Police Commissioner George J. Sambor ordered to drop a C-4 Plastic Explosive device from a helicopter on top of the MOVE Organization’s home. On the day of the police’s terrorist attack, many men, women, and children were killed and burned alive. The killing of MOVE was used as an example to silence any dissidents and other Black Liberation Movement that was critical of the way Black Community were being treated.

In my opinion, we must and continue to study, learn and speak about the Black Experience in America with accurate details of the historical context that happened decades and centuries ago.  I feel that we have the lost the way and many blacks and people of color from all religious and ethnic background has been silenced, been miseducated, misinformed, or simply has forgotten about Black Struggle and Revolutionary Movements only what they see in movies.   Though I find many politicians and even so-called scholars’ has simply watered down the black experience history to push their political agenda, many have been complacent to undermining the entire Black Experience History in the US and choose not to speak truth to power to those that continue to oppress the black community.

In the past, we had powerful Black leaders that revolted against all odds to fight against an Imperialist, Oppressive, Racist and Undemocratic Ideology in the United States. Our dear brothers and sisters like Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., Malcolm X, Marcus Garvey, W.E.B Du Bois, Ida B. Wells, Fred Hampton, Stokely Carmichael, Patrice Lumumba, Nelson Mandela, and many other Black Leaders and Revolutionary Figures worldwide are hardly mentioned in mainstream media anymore. This is why we must continue to talk and learn about the black experience to try to understand the circumstances that are occurring today. From Mass Incarceration to the killing of unarmed Black American youth in the streets throughout this nation by racist police officers.

           Malcolm X said it best:
The thing that I would like to impress upon every Afro-American leader is that no kind of action in this country is ever going to bear fruit unless that action is tied in with the overall international struggle. (1)
As we are nearly one year away from the election primaries, we must take into account that politically, black people in the United States has been disenfranchised and voter’s suppression regulations have been in place to push away, black voters. In the past, the Communist Party in the United States were practically the only ones that stood in solidarity with the Black Community.
On the other hand, in their experience with the Communist party in the United States, black people were able to apprehend some of the greatest strengths and weaknesses of black-white alliances in the struggle for justice. (2)

As a Latino, I recognize the importance of learning about the Black Experience not only in this country but all over the world where many have been murdered and their ancestry history wiped off the face of the earth due to European Imperial Conquest. We must understand the current mechanism in this country that constantly tries to push important historical facts aside only for you to purchase a product in the store or online. We must acknowledge the fact that the triumph of spectacles is supreme, and literacy has been marginalized for the last 10 to 15 years.
We are currently living in two society; on one side we have a minority that is aware of the current status we are all facing when it comes to Black History Experience both past and present. The other side, the majority, continues to choose comfort over struggle.


Cesar Omar Sanchez

by César Omar Sánchez. Community organizer, New York/New Jersey Cuba Si Coalition, Advisory Board Member of ProLibertad: Free All Political Prisoners Campaign.


Works Cited
1.      Spellman, A.B. By Any Means Necessary, Malcolm X. New York: Pathfinder Press, 1992
2. Harding, Vincent. Prologue: We the People. The Eyes on the Prize Civil Rights Reader. Penguin Books, 1991

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