The Black Panther Party's Unwavering Commitment to Solidarity
In a world where conversations often revolve around belonging and identity, it's refreshing to revisit the lessons of the past. The Black Panther Party, a radical movement that emerged in the 1960s, understood something profound: solidarity is not about claiming a place at the table, but about taking risks and standing in positions of vulnerability.The State's Repression Knows No Color
When it came to repression, the state made no distinction between Panthers and their white allies. COINTELPRO, the FBI's counterintelligence program, targeted everyone with equal ferocity. Phones were tapped, homes were raided, leaders were jailed, framed, and murdered. Fred Hampton was assassinated in his bed, while Mark Clark was killed beside him. White organizers who worked closely with the Panthers were surveilled, harassed, and sometimes imprisoned.
The FBI's Strategy: Infiltration and Manipulation
The FBI's whole strategy was infiltration, psychological warfare, and turning people inside movements into informants, provocateurs, or destabilizers. White members and associates were often seen as 'useful' for this because they could move more freely, draw less police suspicion, and sometimes had weaker political or community grounding than Black cadre says who were rooted in survival, not ideology.
The Panthers' Unwavering Commitment to Solidarity
Despite the intense repression, the Panthers never blurred the political line between Black self-determination and multiracial coalition. They worked with white radicals, but they did not dissolve themselves into a colorblind left. They insisted that anti-Black racism was foundational to American capitalism, not a side issue. They understood that white people had a different relationship to the state, even when they opposed it.
The Black Panther Party's commitment to solidarity is a powerful reminder of what it means to stand in positions of vulnerability and take risks for the sake of justice. Their unwavering dedication to multiracial coalition-building and their refusal to erase racial domination from the conversation are lessons that continue to resonate today.
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