Paul Robeson: `The artist must elect to fight for freedom or slavery'

Peekskill outrage, September 4, 1949.

[See below for a four-part documentary on Paul Robeson's life.]

By Harry Targ

On September 4, 1949, an angry crowd surrounded the 20,000 friends of Paul Robeson who had come to hear him in an open-air concert at Peekskill, New York. After the event right-wing, anti-communist inspired mobs attacked supporters who were leaving the event. These attacks included smashing the windows of Pete Seeger’s automobile with several family members inside. Sixty years later we remember the great progressive Paul Robeson, his struggles for justice, and his refusal to bow to the politics of reaction.

The young Robeson

One of the giants of the 20th century, a citizen of the world, an actor/singer and activist for justice, Paul Robeson has been virtually erased from popular consciousness, a victim of the vicious anti-communist hysteria of the 1940s and 1950s.

Paul Robeson, an African American, was born to Maria Louis Bustill and William Drew Robeson in Princeton, New Jersey in 1898, 33 years after the close of the US civil war and two years after the US Supreme Court declared in Plessy vs. Ferguson that separate institutions for Black and white people were constitutional. New Jersey, while not segregated to the extent of the deep south, was hostile to the rights of Black people.

Robeson was born into a family with a long-standing commitment to struggle for justice. His mother’s ancestors participated in the underground railroad, bringing escaped slaves from the south to the north. Her family included ministers, teachers and artisans in the northern free Black community. His father was a slave who escaped to the north and joined the Union army. As a minister educated at Lincoln University, Robeson’s father defended the rights of Black people in the New Jersey communities where he worked.

Many years later when he was politically active, Robeson would refer to the experiences of his people struggling against slavery and oppression to be free. He likened the struggles of his ancestors to the Black people of his day, and also to factory workers seeking labour rights, and peoples all round the world who were struggling to overthrow European colonial empires.

The young Robeson studied hard, was coached in elocution by his demanding father and performed so well in school that he was admitted to Rutgers University in 1915, only the third Black ever to enter that institution. Robeson graduated in 1919 as valedictorian, champion debater and two-time All-American first-team football selection.

Robeson attended law school at Columbia University from 1919-1923 but decided against a law career because of the racism he faced at a preeminent New York law firm.

While he attended law school, Robeson began appearing in plays and found his way to the influential Provincetown Players of Greenwich Village. Robeson’s artistic career was successfully launched by his performances in two of Eugene O’Neill’s most important and controversial plays, All God’s Chillun Got Wings and Emperor Jones. From there his reputation and visibility spread.

By the late 1920s, he appeared in Porgy, Stevedore and Showboat, where he sang “Old Man River”, a song that would have deep political significance for him later on. On tour in Europe in the late 1920s and starring in a London production of Othello, in 1930, Robeson had become a star of worldwide proportions. During the 1930s, he would appear in 11 films, mostly British productions, further solidifying his global reputation as an actor.

As his reputation was soaring in the theatre of the 1920s, Robeson came to the realisation that the rich musical heritage of his people, then called Negro spirituals, needed to be celebrated and performed. He thus launched a singing career that would be his most enduring contribution to US culture and, at the same time, would serve as a vehicle for him to participate in the struggle of Black people to achieve their freedom from racism and Jim Crow segregation. Over the next 30 years, he would learn at least a dozen languages and would celebrate the musical traditions of peoples from Africa, Asia, the Middle East, Europe and Latin America, as well as the United States.

Image removed.

Paul Robeson performs for construction workers at the Sydney Opera House site, 1960.

The politicisation of Paul Robeson

By the mid-1930s Robeson’s outlook concerning the world around him and how the artist must relate to that world had changed significantly. Always aware of racism and segregation, Robeson began to see the oppression of his people as similar and related to anti-Semitism, colonialism, worker exploitation and attacks on the first socialist state, the Soviet Union.

Leaving a London theatre after a performance of Showboat in 1928, Robeson encountered a massive march of Welsh miners who had come all the way from Wales to demand better wages and working conditions. Robeson spoke to their group and joined their struggle. The mutual love and respect Robeson and the Welsh miners developed for each other would last for the rest of his life.

But it was the escalating Spanish Civil war, fascist armies fighting to overthrow a democratically elected government, that led Robeson to declare his commitment to political struggle on behalf of the dispossessed. In a speech given before the National Joint Committee for Spanish Relief at Royal Albert Hall on June 24, 1937, he proclaimed: “I have longed to see my talent contributing in an unmistakably clear manner to the cause of humanity. Every artist, every scientist, must decide NOW where he stands. He has no alternative.” The artist, he said, “must elect to fight for freedom or slavery”.

Robeson spoke out for workers, walked their picket lines and sang to gatherings of trade unionists in auto, steel, shipping, meat packing, electrical and mining industries who were demanding the right to form unions during the massive organising drives of the Congress of Industrial Organizations (CIO). He sang of that great Industrial Workers of the World (WW) singer/ organiser, “Joe Hill”. And he sang songs championing racial justice.

Red scares

After World War II, Robeson met with US President Harry Truman and demanded that he take a stand against segregation and support anti-lynching legislation in the south. He already had spoken out against the exclusion of Blacks from major league baseball. Opposing the Cold War and Truman’s refusal to stand against segregation in the south, Robeson joined the campaign of third party candidate Henry Wallace, of the Progressive Party of America, who was running for president in 1948.

Robeson had often visited the Soviet Union, befriended the great Soviet film maker Sergei Eisenstein and had spoken with admiration about what appeared to be the lack of racism there. After World War II and as the Cold War was heating up, the US government and right-wing groups launched a campaign to stifle the voice of Paul Robeson because of his sympathies for the Soviet Union and his strong advocacy for racial justice in the United States. He was called to testify before the House Committee on Un-American Activities. Thugs vandalised and beat attendees at the summer Robeson concert in Peekskill, New York. Government agents pressured concert impresarios to stop sponsoring Robeson's concerts. And when his public access to audiences declined in the 1950s, even Black churches were pressured to cancel Robeson visits.

The centrepiece of the effort to muzzle Robeson was the decision of the US State Department to revoke his passport in 1950. He was forbidden to leave the United States even though he still was a beloved worldwide figure. His passport was not reinstated until 1958 when the Supreme Court ruled that the State Department did not have the right to confiscate the passports of citizens..

Despite his not being able to travel, working people around the world continued to support Robeson. Canadian trade unionists from 1952 through 1955 organised four Robeson concerts at the border between the state of Washington and Canada. Robeson performed from the US side and Canadian workers listened to his music from their side. Robeson welcomed the Canadian workers at the 1952 concert singing his signature song, “Old Man River'' from Showboat. He sang the lyrics he had revised from the original version in the 1928 musical -- from stereotyping of Black people as docile to Black people as fighters for their freedom. Robeson began to insert the newer progressive lyrics in the 1930s when his own political consciousness had begun to change and for the rest of his life he saw the new lyrics as emblematic of his own political transformation.

In 1957, Welsh miners organised a chorus in a London studio and sang to Robeson listening in New York using the then new long distance telephone lines. They always remembered his support for their struggle and they wanted to demonstrate to him and the world their opposition to the efforts of the United States to stifle the voice of Paul Robeson.

After Robeson’s passport was reissued he resumed worldwide travel in the late 1950s. He fell ill in 1961, returned to the United States and for the most part retired from public life.

Robeson believed that peoples everywhere shared common musical forms and common struggles: workers, peoples of colour, colonised peoples, women. He celebrated their differences but insisted on their human oneness. Perhaps we need to rediscover that vision again today. He died in 1976 but his spirited call for human solidarity is just as precious today as it was in his lifetime. And, as at Peekskill, those who support human solidarity must be prepared to “hold the line” against reaction.

Hold The Line

Let me tell you the story of a line that was held,

And many brave men and women whose courage we know well,

How we held the line at Peekskill on that long September day!

We will hold the line forever till the people have their way.

Hold the line!Hold the line!

As we held the line at Peekskill

We will hold it everywhere.

Hold the line!Hold the line!

We will hold the line forever

Till there’s freedom ev’rywhere.

[Harry Targ teaches foreign policy,US/Latin American relations, international political economy and topics on labour studies. He is a member of the Committees of Correspondence for Democracy and Socialism (CCDS), the Northwest Central Labor Council (AFL-CIO) and the Lafayette Area Peace Coalition (LAPC). This article first appeared at Targ's blog Diary of a Heartland Radical and has been posted at Links International Journal of Socialist Renewal with permission.]

Biography of Paul Robeson


Visit the Paul Robeson Foundation website at http://www.paulrobesonfoundation.org/.

Submitted by douglas jordan (not verified) on Mon, 09/21/2009 - 17:14

Permalink

There is much to admire and respect in the life and achivements of Paul Robeson. His courage in defying the witchhunt of the 1940s onwards can serve as an example of how to act in the face of state oppression. But that is only one side of the picture.

At a conference called to defend the Bill of Rights held in New York in late July 1949 he opposed a motion called for the pardon of the eighteen Trotskyists convicted under the Smith Act in 1941 by claiming that they were 'the allies of fascism who want to destroy the new democracies of the world...They are the enemies of the working class. Would you give civil rights to the Ku Klux Klan'.

A product of his time and like many radicals blind to the reality of Stalinism. This does not undermine his achivements but needs to be discussed in the totality of his life.

Robeson's appearence at the Sydney opera house was in 1960 not 1969. During his visit to Australia he was shown a private screening of a film on the condition of Aborigines living in the Warburton ranges. At its end he openly wept at what he had seen. He promised to come back and do whatever he could to make the issue public. Due to circumstances beyond his control he never did. A pity.

Submitted by Lou (not verified) on Fri, 06/04/2010 - 06:09

Permalink

I'm almost ashamed to say that I hadn't heard of him either until I listened to the Manic Street Preachers,  just like RickyRay. It was only after listening that peaked my interest and got me researching him.