Groundbreaking civil rights book republished

February 17, 2009 ยท Print This Article <javascript:window.print()>

The Ku Klux Klan was rising again. Segregation was the law and Martin Luther
King Jr. was not even born yet.

Amid the terror and oppression, civil rights pioneer W.E.B. DuBois published
a groundbreaking book in 1924 that challenged the pervasive stereotypes of
African Americans and documented their rarely recognized achievements.

His book, "The Gift of Black Folk: The Negroes in the Making of America,"
detailed the role of African Americans with the earliest explorers to
inventions ranging from ice cream to player pianos. He argued that blacks
were crucial to conquering the wilderness, winning wars, expanding democracy
and creating a prosperous economy by producing tobacco, sugar, cotton and
rice and helping to build the Panama Canal.

"The Negro worked as farm hand and peasant proprietor, as laborer, artisan
and inventor and as servant in the house, and without him, America as we
know it, would have been impossible," DuBois wrote.

Now a new edition of the book is being published to mark the 100th
anniversary of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored
People, which DuBois co-founded. The new edition also marks Black History
Month in February and arrives with President Barack Obama taking office.

"African-Americans have served on the Supreme Court, in the cabinet, and,
finally, as president of the United States," Carl Anderson, supreme knight
of the Knights of Columbus, wrote in the introduction. "The Gift of Black
Folk allows us to fully appreciate these monumental achievements."

Harvard University professor Henry Louis Gates Jr., who edited DuBois'
works, including "The Gift of Black Folk," welcomed the Knights reissuing
their own edition. The book, which came during the Harlem Renaissance,
sparked similar books that raised the nation's consciousness of
African-American achievements, he said.

"Black people were using art and historical narrative as weapons in the
civil rights movement, trying to show that black people were innately as
intelligent as white people, that they weren't distinctly inferior by nature
and the best way to do that they felt was by holding up the achievements of
intelligent or artistic or creative black people," Gates said. "And no one
did this more brilliantly than the great W.E.B. DuBois himself."

Gates, who is considering doing an introduction to the book, said he hopes
the decision to issue a new edition "would augur a more liberal set of
social policies for the Knights of Columbus."

While the Knights are known these days for their socially conservative views
on abortion and gay marriage, the organization has its origins in fighting
anti-Catholic discrimination. The Knights, the world's largest Catholic lay
organization, published the original book as part of a series to combat
historical accounts at the time which failed to recognize the achievements
of minority groups.

DuBois' book highlights the role of blacks at crucial points in history from
the beginning.

A black man named Estevanico was the first European to discover Arizona and
New Mexico after others on the expedition died. A black man accompanied
Lewis and Clark, while Commodore Peary, who discovered the North Pole,
praised the work of his black assistant, Matthew Henson.

Blacks invented devices for handling sails, corn harvesters and an
evaporating pan which revolutionized the method of refining sugar. Another
inventor created a machine for the mass production of shoes that was used by
the United Shoe Machinery Company.

J.H. Dickinson and his son were granted patents for devices connected with
player pianos. Granville T. Woods patented more than 50 devices related to
electricity that were assigned to General Electric and other major
companies.

The U.S. Patent Office at the time maintained records for 1,500 inventions
by blacks, an incomplete record, DuBois said. Black scientists did important
work on insects and insanity.

Benjamin Banneker was a leading American scientist whose mathematical genius
won the praise of Thomas Jefferson and led the slave owner to question
notions of racial superiority.

Banneker played an important role in a survey as the nation's capitol was
laid out and studied methods to promote peace, suggesting a secretary of
peace in the president's cabinet, according to the book.

The book portrays Crispus Attucks, a runaway slave, as leading the fight
against British soldiers that sparked the famous Boston massacre of 1770.
Thousands of black soldiers fought on the American side of the Revolutionary
War and distinguished themselves at the Battle of Bunker Hill and other
sites.

Black soldiers and slaves helped saved New Orleans during the War of 1812,
winning praise from General Andrew Jackson. The New York Times praised the
bravery of black soldiers in the Civil War.

"Without the active participation of the Negro in the Civil War, the union
could not have been saved, nor slavery destroyed, in the nineteenth
century," DuBois wrote.

In fighting slavery, blacks forced the country to expand its democracy and
wound up winning rights for poor whites who did not own property, DuBois
argued. Their efforts also led to social reforms such as free public
schools.

"Dramatically, the Negro is the central thread of American history," DuBois
wrote. "The whole story turns on him whether we think of the dark and flying
slave ship in the sixteenth century, the expanding plantations of the
seventeenth, the swelling commerce of the eighteenth or the fight for
freedom in the nineteenth."

JOHN CHRISTOFFERSEN, AP

-- 
"I'm selfish, impatient, and a little insecure. I make mistakes, I am out of
control, and at times hard to handle, but if you can't handle me at my
worst, then you sure as hell don't deserve me at my best." ~Marilyn Monroe

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