Ella Baker and the Limits of Charismatic Masculinity l Black Agenda Report

Ella Baker and the Limits of Charismatic Masculinity

 Pascal Robert

Tue, 02/19/2013

by Pascal Robert

Ella Baker, the consummate organizer, “was very critical of the hot shot Black preachers who would seem to mesmerize their audience with soaring oratory, then leave and expect others to implement an agenda.” She put forward a grassroots critique of overwhelmingly male Black leadership, and showed “more wisdom, courage, and vision then almost all of them.”

Ella Baker and the Limits of Charismatic Masculinity

by Pascal Robert

This article originally appeared on Mr. Robert’s website, Thought Merchant.

She believed in giving people the power to choose their direction and make demands.”

In perhaps one of the most important biographies of a civil rights leader published, Professor Barbara Ransby has conveyed the epic life and struggle of a woman whose sheer skill, leadership, and ability to mobilize the marginalized and dispossessed to full participation in their fight for human dignity is almost unprecedented in American history. In her book, Ella Baker & The Black Freedom Movement, Professor Ransby documents the life of Ella Baker, a Black woman born to a middle class family in North Carolina in 1903 who, after witnessing the staunch spiritually based dedication of her mother to serving the poor in the South, transforms into a sheer force of will that worked with all the major civil rights organizations of her time, and helped mobilize to create two of the most crucial to the Civil Rights Movement: The Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC) and the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC).

Before we continue to heap praise or Hosannas on men like Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., Wyatt T. Walker, Stokely Carmichael, Malcolm X, Paul Robeson, Thurgood Marshall, W.E.B. DuBois, or any of these other gentlemen we idolize as embodiments of masculine heroism, we should know about one woman, of many, who had more wisdom, courage, and vision then almost all of them: Ms. Ella Baker.

Baker believed in empowering the most common person, whether a sharecropper, teenager, or illiterate vagrant with skills to make demands on the political establishment.”

What made Baker’s method of organizing both effective and revolutionary is that it completely dismissed the traditional paradigm of leadership that had plagued the Black community from its earliest history in North America, stemming mostly from the Black Church: charismatic masculine leadership based on oratory and exhibitionism. Baker believed in empowering the most common person, whether a sharecropper, teenager, or illiterate vagrant with skills to make demands on the political establishment. Baker believed that people did not need fancy leaders with degrees and pedigree to tell them what was best for them. She believed in giving people the power to choose their direction and make demands, and put pressure on institutions without depending on big shots with fancy suits. In her book Professor Ransby notes:

At every opportunity [Ella] Baker reiterated the radical idea that educated elites were not the natural leaders of Black people. Critically reflecting on her work with the NAACP, she observed, “The Leadership was all from the professional class, basically. I think these are the factors that have kept it [the NAACP] from moving to a more militant position.”

Moreover, Ella Baker was very critical of the hot shot Black preachers who would seem to mesmerize their audience with soaring oratory then leave and expect others to implement an agenda. As Ransby further notes at one point Ella Baker asked Dr. King directly “…why he allowed such hero worship, and he responded simply, that it was what people wanted. This answer did not satisfy Baker in the least.”

Ella Baker did not mince words on her thoughts of Dr. King’s leadership style and vocally spoke out on its limitations:

Baker described [Dr. King] as a pampered member of Atlanta’s black elite who had the mantle of leadership handed to him rather than having had to earn it, a member of a coddled ‘silver spoon brigade.’ He wore silk suits and spoke with a silver tongue.

…In Baker’s eyes King did not identify enough with the people he sought to lead. He did not situate himself among them but remained above them.

“…Baker felt the focus on King drained the masses of confidence in themselves. People often marveled at the things King could do that they could not; his eloquent speeches overwhelmed as well as inspired.”

Obama has been as anemic in delivering real change and effective at stifling progress as Ella Baker worried Dr. King would have been.”

The limitations of this charismatic masculinity noted by Ella Baker are profound, particularly in today’s political age when we have a president like Barack Obama who often tries to channel the traditions of charismatic leadership and oratory from the Black tradition. Ironically, Obama has been as anemic in delivering real change and effective at stifling progress as Ella Baker worried Dr. King would have been. So perhaps in a strange twist, we have found a similarity between King and Obama after all.

Often in America, when discussing prominent Black trailblazers who fought the injustices of segregation and racial oppression, we see the same images of a variety of men. I somewhat jokingly call them our superhero black male icons. This phenomenon mimics the more noxious western patriarchal fascination with viewing history as a series of events being shaped and guided by the hands of a strong capable man embodying all our fantasies about leadership, masculinity, and sometimes fatherhood.

The danger of such imagery is that it often both obscures and denies the scope of nuanced factors, issues, and circumstances in shaping the events from which our societies were born. Furthermore, such narratives often exclude any consideration of female agency in effecting the great events that have transpired over time.

Barbara Ransby should be applauded for putting a halt to this tradition and setting the record straight with her towering biography Ella Baker & The Black Freedom Movement. As a man still troubled with patriarchal sexist notions, this book opened my eyes to ways in which the roles of women are often neglected and intentionally obscured. Let us all read the story of Ella Baker and make sure such injustices do not continue.

Pascal Robert is an Iconoclastic Haitian American Lawyer, Blogger, and Online Activist for Haiti. For years his work appeared under the Blog Thought Merchant: http://thoughtmerchant.wordpress.com/ You can also find his work on the Huffington Post here: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/pascal-robert/ He can be reached via twitter at: https://twitter.com/probert06 @probert06 or thoughtmerchant@gmail.com

 

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A New Years Pledge for the Conscious Black Community

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A New Years Pledge for the Conscious Black Community

Over the years many of us have made countless new year’s resolutions that we sometimes kept for a few months, a few days and in some cases a matter of minutes. We can surely agree that many of us have 
fell short on keeping most individual resolutions but also have fallen far short on our collective new year’s initiatives that otherwise may have had a positive impact on our community and therefore our people had we been able to exhibit more discipline.
Well, one thing about life here on the physical plane….as long as we are alive…we have another chance to try again.
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So as a member of the conscious community we would like to ask all of our brothers and sisters, young and old, who have the strength, the heart and the conviction…
 
To join us in making a pledge, that this time we will keep……That we must keep… in order for ourselves, our children as well as the many generations to come to survive in this ongoing battle we find ourselves in….OUR SURVIVAL!
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THE PLEDGE
 
January 1st 2013
I (We) make a pledge, to ourselves and to our people, that from this day, January 1st 2013 forward, I (We) will engage in dialog, conversation and planning….. whether it be in Church, the Masjid, in organizations, family gatherings or community functions….regarding what I (We) can do to promote, organize and initiate Self Determination for ourselves and for our people.
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Let us further our pledge to:
Teach and developing our youth first and foremost, “Ourselves”
Organize and open progressive, “Afrikan Centered” educational centers for our youth.
Organize and establish an Afrikan centered Educational master model for Black Communities that can be duplicated where and when necessary across the country.
Organize, develop and support black businesses to provide our basic necessities that we now purchase from everyone else.
Organize and establish buy Black educational programs throughout our Black communities.
Organize and establish an Afrikan centered Economic master model for Black Communities that can be duplicated where and when necessary across the country.
Identify, groom, fund and then hold accountable Black political representation for our communities and people.
Organize and establish an Afrikan centered Political master model for Black Communities that can be duplicated where and when necessary across the country.
End the violence and exploitation of Black women (Queens)
Organize motherhood and fatherhood development classes for our people in Black communities.
Organize Eldership development classes for our Elders in Black communities.
Establish Afrikan centered Community Security teams for our community that can be duplicated across the country.
Establish Afrikan centered Rites of Passage models for young black men and women that can be duplicated across the country.
Develop and maintain credible and reasonable organic and natural food sources that we control for our communities.
Organize to elevate the fight for the freedom of all political prisoners being presently held throughout u.s. prisons.
Organize to up root the present and growing system of the Prison Industrial Complex.
Organize our youth our community and our people to re-connect with our brothers and sisters and the struggles in Afrika our Motherland. Our struggle and ultimate liberation is a global one…..we must not let them fool us or our children into thinking otherwise.
Teach and develop our youth first and foremost, “Ourselves” No one else can or will do it like the best of us.
Does this sound like too much to do??
NOT FOR THE ORIGINAL PEOPLE OF THE EARTH!
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To our leaders
Those of us who find ourselves in the various positions of leadership, be it in our families, in education, in the political realm and those who lead community organizations must now teach self determination. We should not rest or lose focus or continue to be side tracked from the ultimate mission at hand. That is the very same mission that we can see very clearly taking place in all other progressive communities across the country.
Organizing Self,
Educating Self,
Establishing Businesses for Self,
Patronizing Self, Building for Self
and Protecting Self!
This must now again become the rally cry of all credible leadership who truly is operating in our behalf.
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A People at the Crossroads.
To the right towards self reliance, dignity and self determination. To the left, our continued dependence on politicians, the corporate structure, schools who mis-educate our children and every other group providing employment, businesses and services to our people …..
In the latter direction lies the destruction of those who would once be the greatest peoples on earth……
 
We now have another opportunity
We must make a choice……
What will we do??
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No time to waste…
 
Push the card towards the leadership in your group, requesting that policies and practices of your group move in the direction of OUR self determination as a people. If it is found that the present leadership of your group or organization does not or will not move in this direction, the direction that is most feasible for the survival of our communities and the future of our people, then you and the constituency of your group should move to replace that leadership with a progressive leadership that believes in promoting self determination. If that is not deemed possible then you and all self respecting, progressive members should leave that group or organization for a more suitable one and or start your own progressive, liberation oriented group.
Our lives and the lives of the future generations rely on our next move.
 
May we all have a safe, healthy, productive and most of all revolutionary new year..
In Peace and in Struggle
 

The Brothers of STEP Inc. http://www.steptothefuture.org/index.html Step Inc: