By Amiri Baraka <ab11@erols.com>, Black
Renaissance/Renaissance Noire, Vol.2 no.1, Fall/Winter 1998
A 1946 meeting with President Truman at which Robeson urged Truman to
oppose lynching (some 15 known lynchings took place that year alone and
were registered in the presentation to the United Nations by Du Bois,
William Patterson, and others called We Charge Genocide) turned into virulent
hostility and confrontation. Reporters at one point besieged Robeson with
questions like Are you a communist? Robeson told them of his general pro-socialist
views but told them as well they had no business asking. To another question,
Robeson answered that he would not turn the other cheek if attacked, but
instead would tear (his assailant’s) head off, before he could hit
me on the other. The most shocking statement of Robeson’s to Truman
was that if the government did not do something about lynching, Negroes
would! Truman, no slouch as an intellectual, said it sounded like a threat
(Paul Robeson Speaks, 175).
From this moment
on, the press declared war on Robeson. Concerts all over the country were
canceled, 85 in 1948 alone. He was now widely called a Communist sympathizer.
Yet Truman would not even issue a statement condemning lynching. Robeson
was further labeled an avowed and active propagandist for un-American
ideologies. From then on, it was open war: the anti-democratic U.S. government
as the repressive armed power of capital, and its various lieutenants
and flunkies, vs. Paul Robeson, revolutionary Afro-American artist.
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