Black Power is a political slogan which describes the aspiration of those ascribing to varying degrees of black nationalism to acquire full ethnic self-determination of black people. In particular, this regards African-Americans. More generally, the term describes a conscious choice for blacks to nurture and promote their own models of value rather than look for other races to validate them. It calls for blacks to identify their historical struggle and work to help themselves. The first person to use the term Black Power in its political context was Robert F. Williams, a writer and publisher of the 1950s and 60s. Mukasa Dada won the support of thousands of working class Africans when he chanted "Black Power" while Martin Luther King Jr. campaigned for what he termed an "integrated power".
It is important to note that black power did not strive for integration but rather to improve conditions for black people.
Internationalist offshoots of Black Power include African Internationalism, pan-Africanism, and black supremacy. Meanwhile, some Black Power activists within the United States, calling themselves "New Africans", believe that U.S. blacks should have their own independent nation-state made up of the Black Belt, because they claim the contiguous region is already majority-black. (The region has pockets of majority-black, but the region as a whole is not.)
The movement for Black Power in the U.S. came during the Civil Rights Movement in the 1960s. Many Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) members, specifically Stokely Carmichael, were becoming critical of the political line articulated by Martin Luther King Jr., among others, which advocated non-violent resistance to racism, and the ultimate goal of desegregation. SNCC members thought that blacks in the U.S. would be dominated by whites as long as they were citizens of a majority white nation. Because of this, SNCC adopted the principle of self-determination (i.e. Black Power, in the case of black people).
SNCC also saw racists had no qualms about the use of violence against blacks in the U.S. who would not "stay in their place," and that "accomodationist" Civil Rights strategies failed to secure sufficient concessions for blacks. As a result, as the Civil Rights Movement wore on, more radical, violent undertones intensified and began to more aggressively challenge white hegemony. Willie Ricks won the support of thousands whenever he spoke to a crowd of working-class African-Americans, when he chanted "Black Power" — but even as that idea was becoming dominant among the masses, who faced the reality of everyday warfare being waged against them and their community, Martin Luther King Jr. continued to campaign for what he termed an "integrated power." The idea of integrated power is that once racism has been broken down, everyone will become "colorblind" and blacks will be able to fully assimilate into U.S. society.
Today, most Black Power advocates have not changed their self-sufficiency argument. Racism still exists worldwide and it is generally accepted that blacks in the United States, on the whole, did not assimilate into U.S. "mainstream" culture either by King's integration measures or by the self-sufficiency measures of Black Power — rather, blacks arguably became evermore oppressed, this time partially by "their own" people in a new black strata of the middle class and the ruling class. Black Power's advocates generally argue that the reason for this stalemate and further oppression of the vast majority of U.S. blacks is because Black Power's objectives have not had the opportunity to be fully carried through.
The Nation of Islam is perhaps the best-known Black Power group. Another fairly well-known group espousing most of the philosophies common to Black Power are the New Black Panthers. Some of the groups espousing the slogan are considered "black racist" in nature.
More severe criticisms leveled at Black Power have come from the Radical Left, anti-nationalists, communists and others who oppose identity politics. These forces, particularly the communist ones, say that Black Power is dangerous to proletarian internationalism.
Criticism of this phrase also charges that it is hypocritical for this phrase to be accepted as an ideology that represents empowerment and unity, whereas the phrase White Power is almost universally considered as a racist phrase.
Politics and race | Racism | African American culture | African-American history
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