A Brief History of the Black Panther Party
and Its Place In the Black Liberation Movement
By Sundiata Acoli
The Black Panther Party
for Self-Defense was founded in October, 1966, in Oakland, California
by Huey P. Newton and Bobby
Seale. The name was shortened to the Black Panther Party (BPP)
and it began spreading eastward through the Black urban ghetto colonies
across country.
In the summer of '68,
David Brothers established a BPP branch in Brooklyn, New York, and
a few months later Lumumba Shakur set up a branch in Harlem, New
York. i joined the Harlem BPP in the fall of '68 and served as its
Finance Officer until arrested on April 2, 1969 in the Panther 21
Conspiracy case which was the opening shot in the government's nationwide
attack on the BPP. Moving westward, Police Departments in each city
made military raids on BPP offices or homes in Philadelphia, Chicago,
Newark, Omaha, Denver, New Haven, San Diego, Los Angeles, and other
cities, murdering some Panthers and arresting others.
After i and most other
Panther 21 members were held in jail and on trial for two years,
We were all acquitted of all charges and released. Most of us returned
to the community and to the BPP but by then COINTELPRO
had taken its toll. The BPP was rife with dissension, both internal
and external. The internal strife, division, intrigue, and paranoia
had become so ingrained that eventually most members drifted or
were driven, away. Some continued the struggle on other fronts and
some basically cooled out altogether. The BPP limped on for several
more years, then died what seemed a natural death.
History will be the ultimate
judge of the BPP's place in the Black Liberation Movement (BLM).
But in these troubled times Afrikan people in the U.S. need to investigate
both the positive and negative aspects of the BPP's history in order
to learn from those hard lessons already paid for in blood. In particular
We need to learn the reasons for the BPP's rapid rise to prominence,
the reason for its ability to move so many Afrikans and other nationalities,
and the reason for its demise during its brief sojourn across the
American scene. It's not possible in this short paper, on short
notice, to provide much of what is necessary, so this paper will
confine itself to pointing out some of the broader aspects of the
BPP's positive and negative contributions to the BLM.
The Positive Aspects of the BPP's
Contributions
1. Self-Defense:
This is one of the fundamental areas in which the BPP contributed
to the BLM. It's also one of the fundamental
things that set the BPP apart from most previous Black organizations
and which attracted members (particularly the youth), mass support,
and a mass following. The concept is not only sound, it's also
common sense. But it must be implemented correctly, otherwise
it can prove more detrimental than beneficial. The self-defense
policies of the BPP need to be analyzed in this light by present
day Afrikan organizations. All history has shown that this government
will bring its police and military powers to bear on any group which
truly seeks to free Afrikan people. Any Black "freedom"
organization which ignores self-defense does so at its own peril.
2. Revolutionary Nationalist
Ideology: The BPP was a nationalist organization. Its main goal
was the national liberation of Afrikan people in the U.S., and it
restricted its membership to Blacks only. It was also revolutionary.
The BPP theories and practices were based on socialist principles.
It was anti-capitalist and struggled for a socialist revolution
of U.S. society. On the national level, the BPP widely disseminated
socialist base programs to the Afrikan masses. Internationally,
it provided Afrikans in the U.S. with a broader understanding of
our relationship to the Afrikan continent, the emerging independent
Afrikan nations, Third World nations, Socialist nations, and all
the Liberation Movements associated with these nations. Overall
the ideology provided Afrikans here with a more concrete way of
looking at and analyzing the world. Heretofore much of Black analysis
of the world, and the society in which We live, was based on making
ourselves acceptable to White society, proving to Whites that We
were human, proving to Whites that We were ready for equality, proving
We were equal to Whites, disproving racist ideas held by Whites,
struggling for integration or equal status with Whites, theories
of "loving the enemy", "hating the enemy", "they're
all devils", spookism, and other fuzzy images of how the real
world worked.
3. Mass Organizing
Techniques: Another fundamental thing that attracted members
and mass support to the BPP was its policy of "serving the
people". This was a policy of going to the masses, living among
them, sharing their burdens, and organizing the masses to implement
their own solutions to the day to day problems that were of great
concern to them. By organizing and implementing the desires of the
masses, the BPP organized community programs ranging from free breakfast
for children, to free health clinics, to rent strikes resulting
in tenant ownership of their buildings, to Liberation School for
grade-schoolers, to free clothing drives, to campaigns for community
control of schools, community control of police, and campaigns to
stop drugs, crime, and police murder and brutality in the various
Black colonies across America. For these reasons, and others, the
influence of the BPP spread far beyond its actual membership. Not
only did the BPP programs teach self-reliance, but years later the
government established similar programs such as free school lunch,
expanded medicare and day care facilities, and liberalized court
procedures for tenant takeovers of poorly maintained housing, partly
if not primarily in order to snuff out the memory of previous similar
BPP programs and the principle of self-reliance.
4. Practice of Women's
Equality: Another positive contribution of the BPP was its advocating
and practice of equality for women throughout all levels of the
organization and in society itself. This occurred at a time when
most Black Nationalist organizations were demanding that the woman's
role be in the home and/or one step behind the Black man, and at
a time when the whole country was going through a great debate on
the woman's liberation issue.
5. Propaganda Techniques:
The BPP made significant contributions to the art of propaganda.
It was very adept at spreading its message and ideas through its
newspaper The Black Panther, mass rallies, speaking tours, slogans,
posters, leaflets, cartoons, buttons, symbols (i.e., the clenched
fist), graffiti, political trials, and even funerals. The BPP also
spread its ideas through very skillful use of the establishment's
t.v., radio, and print media. One singular indication, although
there are others, of the effectiveness of BPP propaganda techniques
is that even today, over a decade later, a large part of the programs
shown on t.v. are still "police stories" and many of the
roles available to Black actors are limited to police roles. A lot
of this has to do with the overall process of still trying to rehabilitate
the image of the police from its devastating exposure during the
Panther era, and to prevent the true role of the police in this
society from being exposed again.
The Negative Aspects of the BPP Contributions
1. Leadership
Corrupted: COINTELPRO
eventually intimidated and corrupted all three of the BPP's top
leaders: Huey P. Newton,
Bobby Seale and Eldridge Cleaver.
Each, in their own way, caved in to the pressures and began acting
in a manner that was deliberately designed to destroy the BPP, and
to disillusion not only Party members but Afrikan people in America
for years to come. COINTELPRO's
hopes were that Afrikans in America would be so disillusioned that
never again would they trust or follow any Afrikan leader or organization
which advocated real solutions to Black oppression.
2. Combined Above
and Underground: This was the most serious structural flaw in
the BPP. Party members who functioned openly in the BPP offices,
or organized openly in the community, by day might very well have
been the same people who carried out armed operations at night.
This provided the police with a convenient excuse to make raids
on any and all BPP offices, or members homes, under the pretext
that they were looking for suspects, fugitives, weapons, and or
explosives. It also sucked the BPP into taking the un-winnable position
of making stationary defenses of BPP offices. There should have
been a clear separation between the above ground Party and
the underground armed apparatus. Also small military forces should
never adopt, as a general tactic, the position of making stationary
defenses of offices, homes, buildings, etc.
3. Rhetoric
Outstripped Capabilities: Although the BPP was adept at the
art of propaganda and made very good use of its own and the establishment's
media, still too many Panthers fell into the habit of making boisterous
claims in the public media, or selling "wolf tickets"
that they couldn't back up. Eventually, they weren't taken seriously
anymore. The press, some of whom were police agents, often had only
to stick a microphone under a Panther's nose to make him or her
begin spouting rhetoric. This often played into the hands of those
who were simply looking for slanderous material to air or to provide
possible intelligence information to the police.
4. Lumpen Tendencies:
It can be safely said that the largest segment of the New York City
BPP membership (and probably nationwide) were workers who held everyday
jobs. Other segments of the membership were semi-proletariat, students,
youths, and lumpen-proletariat. The lumpen tendencies within some
members were what the establishment's media (and some party members)
played-up the most. Lumpen tendencies are associated with lack of
discipline, liberal use of alcohol, marijuana, and curse words
loose sexual morals, a criminal mentality, and rash actions. These
tendencies in some Party members provided the media with better
opportunities than they would otherwise have had to play up this
aspect, and to slander the Party, which diverted public attention
from much of the positive work done by the BPP.
5. Dogmatism:
Early successes made some Panthers feel that they were the only
possessors of absolute truths. Some became arrogant and dogmatic
in their dealings with Party members, other organizations, and even
the community. This turned people off.
6. Failure to Organize
Economic Foundations in Community: The BPP preached socialist
politics. They were anti-capitalist and this skewered their concept
of building economic foundations in the community. They often gave
the impression that to engage in any business enterprise was to
engage in capitalism and they too frequently looked with disdain
upon the small business people in the community. As a result the
BPP built few businesses which generated income other than the Black
Panther newspaper, or which could provide self employment to its
membership and to people in the community. The BPP failed to encourage
the Black community to set up its own businesses as a means of building
an independent economic foundation which could help break
"outsiders" control of the Black community's economics,
and move it toward economic self reliance.
7. TV Mentality: The
60's were times of great flux. A significant segment of the U.S.
population engaged in mass struggle. The Black Liberation, Native
American, Puerto Rican, Asian, Chicano, Anti-War, White Revolutionary,
and Woman's Liberation, Movements were all occurring more or less
simultaneously during this era. It appears that this sizable flux
caused some Panthers to think that a seizure of state power was
imminent or that a revolutionary struggle is like a quick paced
TV program. That is, it comes on at 9 p.m., builds to a crescendo
by 9:45, and by 9:55 Victory! all in time to make the 10 O'Clock
News. When it didn't happen after a few years, that is, Afrikans
in the U.S. still were not free, no revolution occurred, and worse,
the BPP was everywhere on the defensive, taking losses and riddled
with dissension, many members became demoralized, disillusioned,
and walked away or went back to old lifestyles. They were not psychologically
prepared for a long struggle. In hindsight it appears that the BPP
didn't do enough to root out this TV mentality in some members,
but did in others, which is an aspect to ponder on.
Although the BPP made serious errors, it also gained a considerable
measure of success and made several significant new contributions
to the Black Liberation Movement. The final judgment of history
may very well show that in its own way the Black Panther Party added
the final ingredient to the Black Agenda necessary to attain real
freedom: armed struggle and that this was the great turning point
which ultimately set the Black Liberation Movement on the final
road to victory."
Sundiata
Acoli
Marion Penitentiary, 4/2/85
Sundiata's current address:
Sundiata Acoli (Squire)
#39794-066
USP Allenwood
P.O. Box 3000 - Unit 3
White Deer, PA 17887
Sundiata Acoli Freedom
Campaign
5122 South Ada
Chicago, IL 60609
Voice/FAX: 312-737-8679
e-mail: FreeAcoli@aol.com
or sacoli@hotmail.com
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