Stokely Carmichael, Black Activist, Dies
Civil rights: The fiery leader who coined the slogan 'Black Power'
was 57 and living in Africa.
By JOHN J. GOLDMAN, Times Staff Writer
EW YORK,
Kwame Toure, who as the fiery political activist named Stokely Carmichael
was a seminal figure in the Black Power movement of the 1960s, died Sunday
at the age of 57.
He died of prostate cancer at his home in
the West African nation of Guinea, where he had lived since 1969, said
Sharon Sobukwe, a Philadelphia-based member of Toure's All-African People's
Revolutionary Party.
Toure came to public attention at a time of
great upheaval in America. First as a university student and then as a
leader of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee, he traveled frequently
to the South to register blacks to vote. He registered thousands but paid
a price by being arrested more than 25 times for his efforts. He once spent
49 days in Mississippi's infamous Parchman Penitentiary, where he was routinely
beaten. It was during a protest march in Mississippi in June 1966 that
he used the phrase "Black Power."
Toure and other black leaders were continuing
a march from Memphis to Jackson that had been started by James Meredith,
who integrated the University of Mississippi. They joined the "Walk Against
Fear" after Meredith was shot along a Mississippi highway.
Toure had been arrested as the marchers approached
Greenwood, Miss. After posting bond, he returned to his colleagues and
told them in no uncertain terms that it was time to demand black power.
According to witnesses, he asked the marchers
what they wanted and the response was "Black Power!" The chants continued,
and it became a rallying cry that galvanized pride among many blacks.
But the slogan was troubling to many in the
civil rights movement, including the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. He called
the phrase "an unfortunate choice of words." Some whites who had supported
the goals of integration viewed it as a call for racism in reverse.
Some critics charged that Toure's rhetoric,
which accelerated in tone after the Mississippi march, fueled rioting in
cities across America in the next few years.
Toure tried to explain the term in the book
"Black Power," published in 1967 with Charles V. Hamilton, a Columbia University
political science professor.
"It is a call for black people in this country
to begin to define their own goals, to lead their own organizations . .
. to resist the racist institutions and values of this society."
But Toure's call for "black power" was to
many in the civil rights movement more harmful than helpful. For months,
there was debate about what the phrase really meant, and many believe that
debate helped splinter the civil rights movement.
Earlier this year, he attempted to compare
his views on violence with those of King, who advocated nonviolence in
attaining civil rights.
"[We] had one simple definition that separated
us," Toure said. "He saw nonviolence as a principle, which means it had
to be used at all times, under all conditions. I saw it as a tactic. If
it was working, I would use it; if it isn't working, I'm picking up guns
because I want my freedom by any means necessary."
Toure was born in Port-of-Spain, Trinidad
and Tobago on June 29, 1941. His father was a carpenter, and his parents,
with two of their daughters, traveled to the United States. Toure remained
in Trinidad, living with two aunts and his grandmother. He received a traditional
British education, and in an interview later complained that he was forced
in class to memorize Kipling's "White Man's Burden."
In 1952 at the age of 11, he joined his parents
in the Harlem section of New York where his father held a second job as
a cabdriver to help support his wife, Mae, and children. The family moved
to Morris Park, a white neighborhood in the Bronx, and for a time Toure
belonged to the Morris Park Dukes, a local gang. Upon entering the prestigious
Bronx High School of Science, he changed.
"I broke from the Dukes," he recalled in a
Life magazine interview some years ago. "They were reading funnies while
I was trying to dig Darwin and Marx."
Tall, handsome, stylish, he cut a dashing
figure in school where he was popular with his classmates, both black and
white. In 1960, after seeing pictures of blacks sitting in at lunch counters
in the South, Toure became politically active. He rejected scholarships
from several predominantly white colleges and entered Howard University
in Washington.
During his freshman year he took part in freedom
rides--integrated bus trips to the South to challenged segregated interstate
travel. In 1964, graduating with a bachelor's degree in philosophy, he
became an organizer for the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee--eventually
rising to head the civil rights organization. He became the group's most
influential and powerful leader and was instrumental in altering its orientation
from peaceful integration to "black liberation."
Toure resigned as chairman of the organization
in May 1967 and became affiliated with the Black Panthers, the more militant
black liberation group founded by Huey P. Newton and Bobby Seale. He became
the party's prime minister.
But he became disenchanted with the Panthers,
apparently over Eldridge Cleaver's belief that coalitions could be formed
with liberal whites. He quit the party and, in an open letter, charged
that the party had become "dogmatic" in its ideology.
He left the United States in 1969 with his
South African-born wife, singer and political activist Miriam Makeba, to
live in Guinea, which he had visited in 1967. He changed his name to Kwame
Toure, taken from Kwame Nkrumah, who is regarded by many as the father
of pan-Africanism, and Ahmed Sekou Toure, the leader of Guinea. He founded
the All-African People's Revolutionary Party, and by 1971 he was advocating
a homeland in Africa for oppressed blacks.
"The black man should no longer be thinking
of transforming American society," he told Jonathan Power, a freelance
journalist, who interviewed him in Conakry, Guinea. "We should be concerned
with Mother Africa.
"America is an octopus with tentacles all
over the world," he said. "If the tentacles that grip Vietnam, South America
and Africa are cut, it will be so much easier to rise up and cut off the
head."
He continued to live in Africa in the ensuing
years, making periodic trips to the United States to see friends and lecture
on the merits of socialism, while criticizing capitalism, Zionism and the
United States.
"The image he would not object to is a very
fiery, committed 'radical' of the 1960s," Hamilton, co-author of "Black
Power," said. "But he would like to be remembered post-'60s too.
Early in 1996, tests revealed that Toure had
prostate cancer. He entered Columbia-Presbyterian Medical Center, where
he received treatment including radiation therapy. He continued to receive
treatment in the United State and Cuba for the disease.
Toure was twice married, once to Makeba and
once to Malyatou Barry. Both marriages ended in divorce. He is survived
by his mother, his sister and two sons, Toure's political party said.
The Rev. Jesse Jackson, who visited Toure
several times last week in Guinea, told Associated Press on Sunday that
Toure was "One of our generation who was determined to give his life to
transforming America and Africa. He was committed to ending racial apartheid
in our country. He helped to bring those walls down."
Copyright 1998 Los Angeles Times. All Rights Reserved