By Manning Marable
www.blackstarnews.com
I recently delivered a keynote address in London celebrating the life
and contributions of a leading figure of Pan-Africanism and Black
liberation, George Padmore, at the invitation of the Borough of London.
It was part of a year-long celebration of Afro-Caribbean history and
culture in Britain. Such occasions always allows me to reflect on people
who have contributed to the upliftment of Black people.
Born in Trinidad in 1901, Padmore would come to personify the hopes and
aspirations for Black freedom throughout his native Caribbean and
Africa. The English-speaking Caribbean is in ways unique in the Black
world for the remarkable tradition of political intellectuals it has
produced. In the six generations since the abolition of slavery in the
Caribbean, there have been a series of Black intellectuals whose
activities and social analysis greatly shaped and denied insurgent
political movements in their region and elsewhere.
Just a short list of these extraordinary figures includes Henry
Sylvester Williams, born in Trinidad in 1869, educated in North America
and England, and the coordinator of the first Pan-African Conference
held here in London in 1900; Jamaican Black nationalist and
Pan-Africanist Marcus Garvey, born in 1887, the founder of the Universal
Negro Improvement Association in 1914, which became one of the most
dynamic and influential mass movements in Black history; Jamaican
journalist W.A. Domingo, born in 1889, who briefly edited Garvey's
newspaper, The Negro World, and who subsequently helped found the
pro-independence Jamaican Progressive League in New York City in 1936;
and Cyril V. Briggs, born in Nevis in 1887, who created the first
international political organization based on revolutionary nationalism
and socialism, the African Blood Brotherhood, and who later became the
first major Black leader of the U.S. Communist Party.
One of the greatest social theorists of the twentieth century was
Trinidadian scholar-activist C.L.R. James, author of the acclaimed
history of the Haitian revolution, The Black Jacobins. Others in this
Black radical Caribbean tradition include: Jamaican activist and writer
Amy Jacques Garvey, who contributed to building the movement of
Pan-Africanism; Jamaican Communist and feminist leader Claudia Jones,
who fought for Black people, women and workers both here and in the
United States; and the great historian and Guyanese political
revolutionary Walter Rodney, author of How Europe Underdeveloped Africa.
Within this rich intellectual and political tradition stands the son of
Trinidad, born with the name Malcolm Nurse, who would later be known as
George Padmore.
Among historian and activists through the Black world, the biography of
Padmore is well known. As a university activist student in the United
States in the 1920s, Padmore joined the Communist Party and quickly rose
in its ranks. As head of the Negro Bureau of the Communist Trade Union
International, Padmore organized an elaborate network of thousands of
anti-colonial militants throughout the Caribbean and Africa during the
Great Depression. In 1931, Padmore wrote The Life and Struggles of Negro
Toilers, which championed the cause of Black labor throughout the
world.
After breaking bitterly with the Communists over their colonial
policies, Padmore returned to London with few resources. Still, from his
modest apartment, he charted a course of action which would deeply
influence anticolonialist movements in both Africa and the Caribbean.
Padmore established the International African Service Bureau, a network
that coordinated voluminous correspondence between African and Caribbean
nationalists, trade unionists, editors and intellectuals. Padmore's
small journal, the International African Opinion, became an invaluable
source of information and analysis for Black radicals. Padmore was the
mentor and influential theoretician to an entire generation of Black
leadership, including Jomo Kenyatta of Kenya and the charismatic
Pan-Africanist Kwame Nkrumah of Ghana.
It is difficult to overemphasize Padmore's crucial ideological and
political role in the emergence of political nationalism and movements
of independence in English-speaking Africa. C.L.R. James went so far as
to assert: "It is impossible to understand the development of the
revolution in the Gold Coast that brought Ghana, unless you realized
from the start, the man behind it was Padmore."
Like all public figures active in politics, Padmore was not perfect.
Like Garvey, Padmore dreamed of an independent Black Africa, united
around the principles of mutual cooperation and Pan-Africanism. However,
his Pan-Africanist vision failed to recognize the power of British and
French colonialists to coop independence movements, and to create
"neocolonialism" with new Black elite taking the place of the white
colonial elite.
After Padmore left the Communist Party, he became a bitter critic of
Marxism. He argued in his 1955 book Pan Africanism or Communism that
Black people must be "mentally free from the dictation of Europeans,
regardless of their ideology." But Padmore's hatred of Communism pushed
him into the arms of U.S. and British imperialism. Padmore, and his
protégé Nkrumah, also failed to appreciate the importance of democracy
in the development of new states in Africa. This failure ultimately
contributed to the conditions leading to Nkrumah's overthrow by Ghana's
military in 1966.
Despite his mistakes, Padmore committed his entire life to the ideal of
Black liberation. After his death in 1959, dozens of new Black states in
the Caribbean and Africa would enter the world stage. They owed their
independence, in part, to the monumental contributions of Padmore. Black
Americans must recognize that our monumental contributions of George
Padmore. Black Americans must recognize that our struggle in the U.S.
against racism is directly connected with the struggles of people of
African descent worldwide.
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