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Left Behind: Backdrop to a National Crisis
By
Peniel E. Joseph, Ph.D.
The tragic aftermath of Hurricane Katrina is the most recent expression of
the deepening crisis of the American state in the age of globalization. This
crisis of the American state is intimately connected to a series of events and
political trends in the post-Cold War era. The most notable examples of these
recurring circle of crises in recent years were embodied in the 2000
presidential election, the disturbing gap between rich and poor, growing
disaffection of the American electorate, and the domination of information and
knowledge by the power elite. Until the arrival of Katrina, the most obvious
manifestations of these dangers were reflected in the twin crises of the
national security state in post-9/11 America, and the American invasion of Iraq
and subsequent occupation since 2002. Despite its ferocious rage, Katrina is not
solely responsible for the untold devastation that was visited on the poor
people of New Orleans and the Gulf Coast region. She is only guilty of exposing
the cynicism of an American political system that allows masses of the poor,
especially the black poor, to endure lives of quiet desperation amid a land of
plenty. As in all monumental events, Katrina has a context. While mindful of the
significance of its more recent national and global trends, Katrina has a deeper
context in the marginalization of the black poor in the history of American
public policy, as well as in the American imagination.
The recent disaster in New Orleans and the larger Gulf Coast region has, in
addition to inflicting incalculable horrors on the region in the form of death
and misery, opened up the vortex of race, class, and citizenship that provides a
backdrop to this unfolding national crisis. Sluggish federal response, a
president lacking the political will to convey the breadth of the catastrophe,
corporate media reports that characterized the black poor as savages while
portraying their white counterparts as struggling innocents, and the Louisiana
Governor's hysterical threats to shoot "looters" bring these contradictions into
sharp focus. Collectively, the masses of the black poor in New Orleans have
waited much longer for government intervention than the agonizing hours and days
it took to persuade government officials that the crisis was too overwhelming to
ignore. The direct descendants of enslaved Africans, African Americans in New
Orleans have lived and died, fought and struggled, and, often waited lifetimes
for help that never came.
The death and devastation in New Orleans, a city that is two-thirds black, with
a poverty line that hovers above thirty percent (84% of whom are black),
represents the contemporary face of racism. Hurricane Katrina's assault on the
poorest and most vulnerable segments of the African American community throws
into sharp relief recent debates over black poverty, civil rights, and
individual responsibility triggered by comedian Bill Cosby's controversial
comments that decried the decline of community values, family structure, and
individual responsibility among the black poor. In Katrina's immediate aftermath
federal officials echoed Cosby's indictment of the black poor. They also openly
questioned why those left behind had stayed in their homes in the face of Mayor
Nagin's evacuation order. Why didn't they leave sooner? Because they couldn't.
In an economic climate where, despite soaring oil prices and middle-class
anxiety, Americans consider the ownership of ever expanding homes and gas
guzzling SUV's a personal right, it's easy to forget those left behind during
these prosperous times. But for all too many African Americans, the denial of
adequate public education and professional opportunities to participate in
American prosperity has a familiar ring to it. In an era where too many
Americans congratulate themselves on the size of the black middle-class, the
number of prominent black political figures, and the wealth of black
entrepreneurs, the pitiful lives of the black poor goes rarely acknowledged and
remains invisible.
African Americans in New Orleans represent the latest generation of blacks to
live in shelter unfit for human beings, attend schools that do not educate, and
be viewed by black elites and white politicians as undeserving Americans. Over a
century ago the great African American intellectual W.E.B. Du Bois, in his
pioneering study, The Philadelphia Negro, investigated the miserable living
conditions of blacks in Philadelphia and concluded that racist public policy,
not racial malingering, conspired to trap blacks in the inner city. Du Bois'
intervention went unheeded during much of the first half of twentieth century
America as waves of blacks migrated to big cities in the North, Midwest, and
West. Confined to racially and economically segregated "ghettos," black urban
development during and after the First and Second World Wars, was contoured by
public policy (most notably the New Deal) that effectively prevented African
Americans from enjoying the massive wealth transfers and subsidies (in housing,
the GI Bill, etc.) that facilitated the baby boomers' entrée into America's
postwar middle-class. Of course, it wasn't just northern cities (or urban areas
for that matter) that were short-changed. Urban rebellions during the 1960s
transcended regionalism. Although they are popularly remembered as having taken
place in Harlem, Detroit, Newark, and Watts, the rebellions expanded the
devastating nexus of race, class, crime, education, and poverty that would grip
the 1970s. To add insult to injury, American social scientists largely ignored
the long history of racial discrimination and policy exclusion that (along with
deindustrialization and globalization) led to urban crises during the 1970s and
1980s and labeled urban America's most desperate residents as the "underclass."
These are the African Americans who were left behind to die in New Orleans. In a
different era, Black Power activists such as Huey P. Newton described this group
as "brothers on the block" while Malcolm X characterized them as "Field
Negroes."
Perhaps it is fitting that one of the most eloquent defenses of black
people--and by extension, of American democracy and the very meaning of
citizenship--has come from rap artist Kanye West, whose improvisational critique
during an NBC hurricane telethon ("George Bush does not care about black
people.") placed the spotlight on the media's hypocrisy and the White House's
blatant callousness. Hip Hop, afterall, was borne out of the crucible of
America's urban crisis, producing a generation of black and brown youth who
know, against all odds, that their lives are worth living and saving. While
Katrina has unleashed a national crisis, it also presents Americans of all
colors with a tremendous opportunity. If the nation ever needed to be reminded
of what's at stake when we discuss "race relations," this is no longer the case.
Chester Himes once said that "A fighter fights, and a writer writes." Now is the
time for progressives, radicals, and humanists of all stripes to do both.
Peniel E. Joseph teaches in the Department of Africana Studies at SUNY-Stony
Brook. He is the author of Waiting Till the Midnight Hour: The Black Power
Movement and American Society (New York: Henry Holt, 2006) and editor of The
Black Power Movement: Rethinking the Civil Rights-Black Power Era (New York:
Routledge, 2006) and can be reached at Peniel.Joseph@stonybrook.edu.
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