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The Jewish Story: American Jewry after 1967, part III: The Ocean Hill-Brownsville Strike
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There are stories which are turning points in a larger tale, and there are those which prove to be tempests in a tea cup. The story of the 1968 NYC school strike could be read as both. Either way, this episode offers a look at a microcosm of Black/Jewish relations in 1968 which will have a profound impact down to our day.
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Auto-generated transcript. Not time-synced to the video.
what happens to a dream deferred ass
langston hughes
does it dry up like a raisin in the sun
or fester like a sore
and then run does it stink like rotten
meat or crust
and sugar over like a syrupy sweet maybe
it just
sags like a heavy load or does it
explode
well i'm a guy who's got plenty of
dreams and i'd rather not
see them deferred cause i'm rob mike
foyer and this
is the jewish story
season four episode three american jury
after 1967
part three the ocean hill brownsville
strike
well i've got to tell you that this was
one of the hardest episodes
i've ever made which you might have
sensed from the mouthful of that
title now it's true for all kinds of
reasons
after all at this point in the covid
craziness i've had five children camped
out in my home office
for six months but mostly it was because
i'm congenitally
unable to tell a simple story
now i know that in theory we're in the
aftermath of 1967
and our goal is to understand how
israel's victory impacted the identity
of american jews
i'm not giving up on that but i'll be
honest with you when i tell you it may
be hard
pressed to see exactly how the coming
story relates to that theme
nonetheless i am confident that it does
i'll hint at why i think so
at the very end if you make it there and
truth is you'll really have to listen to
the coming episode
to appreciate the connection in full but
for now
here's the story hey you boy with that
yamaka on your head
you pale face jew boy i wish you were
dead
you came to america land of the free and
took over the school system
to perpetrate white supremacy
now if you read the news these days you
might think that i pulled that off the
internet
and that it's been published in the last
few months but you would be wrong
these are just a few lines from home
written by a 15 year old student
at junior high school 271 in the wake of
a teachers strike
that consumed not only her own ocean
hill brownsville school district in
brooklyn
but actually all of new york city in the
fall of 1968
and you would be right to wonder why a
teacher's strike would evoke such
vehement
jew hatred and trust me i left the worst
parts of the poem
out and the poem made us sir not just
because of its
content but really because of its public
delivery
on december 26 of 1968 julius
lester asked the student's teacher to
read the poem aloud on his new
york-based
weekly radio show lester embodies a
certain trend within the black community
of the 60s and it's worthwhile
to recall through a sketch of his life
story he was a young
liberal idealist who had joined the
civil rights movement in its initial
phase in the early 60s
lester then joined snick that was the
student non-violent
coordinating committee to those who
haven't done your review on season three
he joined during the 1964 freedom server
and had been amongst the mixed group of
white and black students from the north
who went down and opened up the freedom
schools in the south
but the movement was entering a more
radical
phase as the 60s progress and across the
country
the familiar calls of freedom now and we
shall overcome
were being replaced by a more militant
rhetoric such
as black power race pride black dignity
and the third world as part of that
shift
the black nationalist leadership led by
stokely carmichael who we discussed
season 3 episode 22 look it up began to
detach itself as they said from jewish
civil rights leaders their traditional
allies
and snyk ultimately expelled its white
memories
the vast majority of whom were jews
when we first encountered the rise of
the black power movement
back in season three and the challenges
it presented to the so-called
liberal grand alliance of blacks and
jews you may recall
that there were many jews who felt angry
and betrayed by snick's decision
nonetheless most or at least many
were perhaps willing to hear the truth
in stokely carmichael's assertion
that jewish allies need to focus on
organizing with their
own communities and to examine the
racism in their own hearts
as he and co-author charles hampton
stated in their book black power
the politics of liberation the primary
tenet of black power was quote before a
group can
enter the open society it must first
close ranks they declared that the
american pot
had not melted and that black americans
must develop a group
solidarity to operate effectively from a
bargaining position of
strength in a pluralistic society
and then in a statement which will have
deep resonance for our story ahead
not to mention for the news today
carmichael and hamilton asserted that
the middle class
values were the backbone of
institutional racism
now these assertions became much harder
for many jews to accept
when they saw snake's response to
israel's 1967 victory
because just as american jewry was
awaking to this allure of ethnic
solidarity and pride
and will return to the place in american
jewish culture and certainly
israeli-jewish culture
which appreciates the notion that before
a group can enter the open society it
must first
close ranks but as i said just as
american jews were really awakening
to the draw of that perspective they
were confronted by anti-semitic cartoons
and photos
that compared israeli soldiers to nazis
as jewish folk singer theodore bickel
long-time snick supporter said in an
open letter dated on august 25
1967 not long after the war was over
not being able to turn my mind from your
monstrous comparison of my brothers
with the arch foe of my people i shall
leave you with this thought
you may want to spit in my face for
being whitey and a fat cat but do not
look to me for silence
while you insult the memory of my people
so recently martyred
you have no right to tamper with their
graves
and think of mickey schwerner and andy
goodman who have no right to spit on
their tomb
they died for a concept of brotherhood
which you now
cover with shame so here we are
in the fall of 1968 less than half a
decade
after goodman and schwerner died for the
goodness of all humanity and julius
lester is hosting
leslie campbell teacher in the ocean
hill brownsville district
and passionate supporter of the black
power movement so he can read the
hate-filled poetry
of his student on the air i think that
the black
jewish relationship has always been more
complex
the black jewish alliance primarily
involved
middle class blacks the middle class
jews but at the simultaneously
in the black urban areas you had this
tension between jewish merchants and
the black people who lived in the
community now i wouldn't blame you
for assuming that this is just an open
and shut case of
jew hatred nothing really to learn here
but truth is
you'd be wrong my father told the story
that my great-grandfather was a jew
adolf altschule the german jew but i
really had no meaning to go with it
until i began studying and that was a
revelation to me
in judaism i found a religion which
focused on expression of gratitude
rather than an emphasis upon sin where
to study was a way of praying a religion
in which people prayed
in song it was a religion in which you
could ask
questions at least you'd be wrong in
regards to julius
lester who actually became yaakov daniel
ben habram vasaro when he converted in
and was forced out of his position in
the afro-american studies department
of the new school for social research
when he labeled certain statements of
james baldwin
as anti-semitic it's an early occurrence
of our current
cancel culture campbell however will
have a rich
and angry future of hate ahead of him
and he wasn't alone
when mayor john lindsay vowed to fire
the junior high teacher over the poetry
rating
the principal of jshs 271 albert vann
defended him saying in his hurry to
appease the powerful jewish financers of
the city
the mayor had played fast and loose with
campbell's reputation
so like i said this is a story with a
lot of angles
and i have no interest in softening the
hatred in that poem by contextualizing
it
but if we're going to appreciate why
what appears to be just another example
of jew hate
and how it matters to our story we're
going to need to know a bit more about
the new york city school strike
of 1968.
on the morning of may 9th 1968 junior
high school science teacher fred naumann
received a letter that would change new
york city and some would say america
now one thing's without question it
certainly changed things for naumann
because the
latter from the chairman of the local
ocean hill brownsville school board
announced his termination effective
immediately
and he wasn't alone 19 teachers received
the same notice that day
and it so happened that 18 were white
which in ocean hill brownsville meant
almost all were jewish the one black
teacher included on the list proved to
be a case of mistaken identity
and was reinstated almost immediately
after the error was discovered
now reading the letter left some room
for ambiguity about whether the teachers
were being
terminated or merely transferred but in
the coming days of controversies members
of the local school board insisted
repeatedly
that they had fired the teacher and
rhodey mccoy
local superintendent told the new york
times not
one of these teachers will be allowed to
teach anywhere in this city
the black community will see to that
ocean hill brownsville is a small
neighborhood in the corner of brooklyn
it's historically working class and for
the first half of the 20th century
it was a haven for immigrants and thus
it should come as no surprise that the
1940 census shows that the majority of
its 100 000 residents were jews
and also if you've been paying attention
to the jewish story for a while or you
just know a bit of the history and
sociology of america at this point you
know
that this is not the same as saying its
residents were majority
white now by 1970 the neighborhood had
undergone a revolution it was driven by
white flight to the suburbs
black immigration from the south red
lighting urban renewal and a host of
other factors
but no matter what you see to be the
cause the census for that year showed
that
75 percent of ocean hills residents were
black and another 20
puerto rican now here's the catch the
teaching force in the local public
schools in 1968
was still 90 percent white the vast
majority
of whom were jewish and whether these
progressive educational crusading jews
thought of themselves as white before
the events that are about to unfold
by the end they understood that they
were going to be judged to be so
whether they liked it or not in some
ways
it was the educational equivalent of the
economic situation which james baldwin
described in his 1967 new york times
article
negroes are anti-semitic because they're
anti-white
for baldwin it was the landlord the
butcher the pawn broker
who were the targets of hatred as they
locked up their store for the night
and going home with your money in his
pocket to a clean neighborhood miles
from you
which you will not be allowed to enter
but in ocean hill brownsville it wasn't
the landlord butcher and pawnbroker it
was the history teacher
the principal the superintendent now
that might
sound like a better situation after all
the union to which all these teachers
belong was known for its progressive
almost
militant social stance its members were
disproportionately minority
but knowledge is power and that means
education always dances around the edge
of coercion
and when your teachers don't look like
you don't live in your neighborhood
don't share your history then knowingly
or not
they're selling something which can be a
lot worse than bad cuts of meat
they're pushing the supremacy of a
foreign culture
and in 1968 the rising black power and
black pride consciousness
saw such a proposition as downright
lethal
and so when friend naman received his
letter that morning
there were clearly larger forces at play
than his performance as a science
teacher
in fact for decades since 1968
historians and sociologists have loved
to see the coming conflict
between the jewish teachers and black
residents of ocean hill brownsville
as the definitive end of that grand
alliance which had stood at the core of
the civil rights movement
since the 50s writer and scholar of
education
richard callenberg even goes so far as
to say that the ocean hill brownsville
helped spawn neoconservatism in new york
city and nationally
as its implications led jewish
intellectuals like irving crystal
nathan glazer norman podoretz to begin
reassessing the position of jews in
american society and politics
all together that's a big change
and of course inevitably there are
revisionists who argue that the strike
was really a minor affair
it was a tempest in a teacup and in fact
there never was a grand alliance to
begin with
now is not the time to start lining up
the arguments on either side
i'll just let their disagreement serve
as a warning to be wary of facile
historiography
for right now what i'm interested in is
this story
because it serves as a microcosm for so
many of the forces
which will shape american life not only
in the post-67 era
but are still playing out today in
particular
the coming storm created an atmosphere
in which continued jewish ambivalence
about white identity
became all but impossible in new york
city
and for the jews where new york goes
there go
the rest of us it also contributed to
the rise of a very particular form of
jewish pride
which we will reference today but whose
full story is really for another episode
but first things first why did fred
naumann get the
axe well it all starts with that
question you heard in my opening quote
which was from langston hughes's poem a
dream deferred it's a powerful poem
as well as a potent warning and if you
don't know it i encourage you to
google it to read the entire thing in
that last line
hughes asks whether a dream deferred
sags like a heavy load
or does it explode in our case the dream
deferred
was a quality education and the
socioeconomic equality
which at least offered a hope for you
know there's a lot of talk today
about the american dream whether we need
to revive it whether it's completely
dead
or whether it was simply a lie to begin
with i'm not going to weigh in on that
one
but do recall that classic embodiment of
the american dream
has contrasted with the nightmare of old
europe if you work hard enough sun
you too could be president someday
it's based on the notion of meritocracy
replacing aristocracy in an aristocracy
you're born into your position
and that is that never to be anything
else
the idea of a meritocracy is where
people get ahead or behind in life based
on what they have
or have not accomplished now remember
that doesn't guarantee an equal society
in fact even in the ideal sense a
meritocracy
will have social inequality but it
justifies that inequality of
outcomes by claiming equality of
opportunity
and the great equalizer of opportunity
in democratic society
is meant to be education now
the problem is that the success of a
meritocracy
requires society to be almost completely
free of any structural ills
like discrimination racism uneven
resource
distribution within the educational
system because
those things inhibit the equality of
opportunity
which pretty much sums up the situation
in ocean hill brownsville
in the 60s schools in the neighborhood
had a
running tradition of failure and the
reform efforts of the last decade hadn't
helped so much
despite the supreme court's decision
1954 brown
versus the board of education which
ruled against segregated schools
segregation in brooklyn was alive and
well in fact
it actually increased in the decade
following brown versus the board of
education
driven by districting along racial lines
and selective
school construction by 1968
when our story takes place ocean hill
brownsville schools were so overcrowded
that students were attending in shifts 4
000 students were sent to so-called
white schools in an attempt to integrate
and ease the burden but they were made
extremely unwelcome
to say the least basically in this
school dristic
the american dream of rising up through
the meritocracy driven by
hard work and an equality of opportunity
had run
smack into the structural problems of
urban poverty
and racism and so it makes sense that by
the late
60s much of the black community in ocean
hill brownsville
no longer shared the american dream nor
the so-called integrationist
liberalism that characterized the early
phase of the struggle for civil rights
and certainly was a vision which drove
the members of the teachers union
a black separatist consciousness was on
the rise as we've spoken about elsewhere
and its proponents sought taking control
of their own destiny
as the only way to overcome the burden
of history which they had inherited
it's something by the by that those who
think of ourselves as zionists
ought to take seriously and of course in
this case taking control of their
destiny meant taking control of the
schools
already by the mid 60s the afro-american
teachers association
which began as a group within the local
american federation of teachers union
was calling for community-controlled
schools
for educating within a black value
system that emphasize
unity and collective work and
responsibility
as opposed to what they label as the
middle class value of individualism
unless you think that these are some
woke notions of 2020
we're talking about 1960s and
in 1967 it suddenly looked like their
dream would come true
the riots of 1964 and 65 had awoken many
americans
to the volatile situation that had
developed in their urban centers
and new york city mayor john lindsay was
actively searching for ways to keep his
city calm
in 1967 he became an advocate of what he
called greater community control
as the path to social stability and a
major cause in that shift for him
was a study issued by the ford
foundation entitled
reconnection for learning a community
school system for new york city
which laid the intellectual and
political groundwork for community
control of the schools
just as a point of fact the study noted
that fifty percent of new york city
public school students were black or
puerto rican
while only nine percent of the system's
staff members were so
and as a solution for that inequality it
called for the establishment of between
30 and 60 community control boards as it
called them
to replace the single centralized
city-wide
white dominated school board
now these local boards were to be
empowered to use race as a factor in
hiring and promotion
justified by the study's assertion that
black and puerto rican candidates
often had special knowledge of and
sensitivity to
the environments of the pupils and show
should be given preference even when
their professional qualifications did
not meet standards
this was in fact one of the very
earliest
calls for race conscious affirmative
action
as a remedy for past discrimination ever
made in america
and mayor lindsay loved it he began to
marshal wealthy businessmen community
leaders behind the plan
and that very summer three district
districts were chosen
as a first experimental phase of this
decentralization
they were issued a 44 000 grant quite a
bit
in 1968 by the ford foundation and went
about forming community elected school
boards and hiring
administrators and ocean hill
brownsville was one of the three
now initially the decentralization plan
was met with
extreme enthusiasm for local communities
it was black empowerment which would
finally free them from this intransigent
white bureaucracy that ran their schools
for mayor lindsay
and the city elites it was the perfect
means to avoid
urban unrest for the ford foundation and
the new left intellectuals of the city
it was an embodiment of the beloved
principles of participatory democracy
right there was just one fly in the
ointment
the teachers union and somehow no one
saw it coming and so when friend naom
and his colleagues were fired
the experiment itself proved to be more
volatile
than anyone had ever expected
as i mentioned the teachers union in
ocean hill brownsville was a branch of
united federation of teachers known
locally as the american federation of
teachers the aft
by the late 60s the ft had unionized
most of the schools in the city
it was a monopoly that gave it the
ultimate weapon for
labor's aspiration of collective
bargaining power
they could paralyze new york city
schools
it was a huge victory for organized
labor in the city one which
hadn't come easy and it was largely the
result of the efforts of union head
albert schanker
schenker was a native son born to a
newspaper deliverer and a seamstress
who would imbibe the principles of
social democracy from the earliest
age he had also absorbed the reality of
what it meant to be a jew
in new york city in the first half of
the 20th century he grew up religious
but quickly left it behind when he left
his parents home
nonetheless his judaism remained central
to his identity as he later said
and that might have been perhaps because
of his repeated anti-semitic
beatings which he endured in the city's
public schools growing up
when schanker started out as a junior
high school teacher the new york city
educators
were paid less than people who washed
cars for a living
and that wasn't the worst of it there
was tremendous turnover and
absolutely no respect he says that early
in his career
he had an assistant principal who would
spy on him with binoculars across the
courtyard
it was all these experiences along with
his upbringing as a social democrat
which led shanker to play a key role in
drawing new york city's teachers
into a cohesive force and winning them
the right to bargain collectively
he took the reins of the aft in 1964.
now along the way shanker had also
become a staunch supporter of the civil
rights movement
he'd gone with a contingent of teachers
to hear the rev dr martin luther king's
address
at the 1963 march on washington he'd
marched with dr king in selma
in 1965. he was such a passionate
supporter of integration
that he butted heads on a regular basis
with his union members
for being too concerned as they said
about civil rights and not enough about
basic issues like wages
and working conditions and he was
horrified by the ford foundation's
report
schenker surely understood and
sympathized with the need for more black
teachers
but in his eyes hiring or firing based
on race
was antithetical to everything the civil
rights movement had been about
he believed that the universality of
reverend king's message
that people be judged quote not by the
color of their skin
but by the content of their character
was fundamental
to the moral power and therefore hope
for success
of the movement it was not something to
be casually dismissed as the report
seemed to suggest
and when newly appointed superintendent
of the ocean hill district
rhodey mccoy dismissed 19 white teachers
without due process
al shanker felt that he not only had the
power but the obligation to stop it
it's important to note that the liberal
coalition backing this experiment in
ocean hill brownsville
had assumed that superintendent mccoy
was an ally
someone that shared their values of
desegregation and integration
but apparently they were unaware that
rhodey mccoy drew his inspiration from
malcolm x
not reverend king in fact he was
somewhat of a regular
at x's home before his assassination in
1964.
rudy mccoy dreamed of black control over
black
lives parents as librarians community
members patrolling the streets to keep
the drugs out
and the children in school and as he
said in a later interview
everybody in that community began to
play a role in the schools
the school became a focal point of the
community
i was a joy to go to the board meeting
not only were the board members present
but the community folk were sitting
around and they had as much input as the
board members
and it was always on a positive note how
do we help the youngsters
now superintendent mccoy also understood
that real control of the schools
means the control of the teachers and so
he demanded as a condition of his
employment the power
to hire and fire both teachers and
principals within his district
and he made no secret to the school
board of his ultimate goal
an all-black teaching force in his
district
and so this new vision of black power
and pride
as expressed through community control
of the schools ran smack into the
classic liberal principles
of integration and labor's right for
collective bargaining
mccoy's dismissal of 19 white teachers
led to a series of
three strikes which lasted from
september
to november of 1968 it shut down the
entire new york city
school system throwing one million
students out of school
for a total of 36 days at the time it
was the largest
and longest set of school strikes in
american history
and ironically it was the strikes which
gave superintendent mccoy a taste of the
opportunity of which he dreamed
and as he reached out to the community
to fill his empty classrooms the results
surpassed his wildest expectations as he
said in an
interview given well after the strike
was over they began to see and
understand
that they had something to contribute
that they were just as capable of
teaching their youngsters as the
teachers were
and so they got involved in all
dimensions of teaching the research
program evaluation teacher evaluation
and now these youngsters who had
previously seen ninety percent of the
teachers
white are looking at their parents or
the parents of their friends who were
teaching
and this new role model was just
fantastic
now this may have been a good
opportunity for the community of ocean
hill brownsville
but the rest of the city was not quite
sure
how to react the liberals in particular
were in a quandary
when white people fired black people for
no cause
they knew that was wrong when
conservative employers arbitrarily fired
unionized employees
they knew which side they were on but
what was one to think
when black people were firing white
people and when the assault on the labor
union
came from the left the strike and the
controversy around it
unleashed a veritable civil war within
american liberalism
tearing apart groups that had been
allies for decades
black people and jews civil rights
groups and organized labor
that's not all it unleashed because
racial tension
is never far below the surface in
america's cities
and the jews of the aft union were about
to discover that they were indeed
white after all
right from the start some union members
were concerned that their strike would
be seen as anti-black
after all the optics were just too good
but al shanker rejected that stance
responding this is nonsense
this is a strike that will protect black
teachers against white racists
and white teachers against black racists
in his eyes
the question at hand was class not race
what you have is a people in the upper
upper economic level
who are willing to make any change that
doesn't affect their own position
shanker accused such people of
condemning insecure middle class white
teachers
just because they didn't wish to
sacrifice their jobs for black
advancement
what if he said what if you gave 20 of
time inc or u.s steel to the blacks who
would be narrow
then an advertisement by the ad hoc
committee
to vend the right to teach read as
follows the real issue now is job
security
it is the right not to be fired
arbitrarily by your employer
because he doesn't like the color of
your skin or the way you wear your hair
or the political opinions you hold
furthermore shanker saw community
control as a threat to the very
existence of the union and everything
that it had secured
if the local ocean hill brownsville
board could arbitrarily fire personnel
with no explanation what was to stop
other boards in future decentralized
districts
from committing the same act a coalition
of pro-labor
mostly white liberals quickly lined up
behind the teachers of the aft
but they weren't alone rev dr martin
luther king
had been assassinated only months before
but some of his black allies supported
the union
people like bayard rustin organizer of
the march on washington and a philip
randolph
former head of the brotherhood of
sleeping car porters after all
hadn't rev and dr martin luther king
told the afl-cio
america's largest union negroes are
almost entirely a working people
the identity of interests of labor in
negros makes any crisis with
lacerates you a crisis in which we bleed
after declaring their support randolph
and russian held a joint news conference
and released the following statement
it is the right of every worker not to
be transferred or fired at the whim of
his employer
it is the right of every worker to job
security
these are the rights that black workers
have struggled and sacrificed
to win for generations but far from
rallying support across racial lines
rustin and randolph were pilloried by
the black community
as rustin later recalled you'd think
we'd committed a heinous crime from the
insulting telephone calls
vulgar letters and general denunciation
in the press we received
from a number of black people basically
reverend king's vision was fading into
history
as his allies from the washington march
were effectively written out
of this new front in the civil rights
movement
as the strike wore on the gloves came
off
and it's important to know in that light
that the
high representation of jews amongst the
ocean hill brownsville teachers
was far from unique in the late 50 jews
had flocked into teaching in new york
city driven no doubt
by their social democratic ideals but
also by the fact that they faced far
less discrimination
in public work than in the private
sector at the time of the strike
almost two-thirds of new york city's
teachers
supervisors and principals were jewish
now this led to a boiling over
the hatred that james baldwin had
described in that article written only a
year before
i quote the negro is really condemning
the jew for having
become an american white man the jew
profits from his status in america
and he must expect negroes to distrust
him for it he is singled out by negroes
not
because he acts differently from other
white men but because
he does not meaning the jew
who was once an ally is now just another
enemy or as one protester during the
strike put it
we got too many teachers and principals
named ginsburg and rosenberg
in harlem now it's impossible
from our vantage point to know just how
widespread such statements
or even the sentiments behind them
really were and everybody had an
interest
in making the situation worse at one
point a leaflet was distributed to
teachers in mailboxes at two schools
which labeled jewish teachers blood
sucking exploiters
and called on them to get out of black
schools but then
in hopes of winning public sympathy
schanker had 500
000 copies of the flyers printed and
distributed
thus giving them far more circulation
than they originally would have received
critics accused him of exploiting the
ravings of a random crazy
as if they represented the opinions of
black leaders in the district
the local board in fact issued a
statement denouncing anti-semitism
but superintendent mccoy refused to
condemn the flyers
i have to work in both worlds he said we
have more things to be concerned about
than making anti-semitism
a priority and it was less than a year
later
that his teacher leslie campbell praised
the poem of his student
which we heard wishing death on the
pale-faced jew boy
at the time there were many who
understood that to make the question of
community control
an issue of race was to oversimplify a
very complex issue
just as it was to label the jews as
white
a representative of the board of rabbis
in new york said the following
he said the experimental district would
bring not just decentralization but also
disintegration
and destroy quality education the merit
system the teaching profession
ultimately the public school system
itself
his was the voice like shankers that
feared race becoming the deciding factor
instead of individual ability he feared
it would lead to the collapse of the
very meritocracy that had opened so many
doors for the jews in america
on the other hand the advocates of
community control
in the black community and black power
didn't necessarily disagree with the
theoretical idea of meritocracy
no they were opposed to the actual
social structure
which underlay american meritocracy
malcolm x may have been their
inspiration but surely rhodey mccoy and
his school board agreed with dr king's
statement
to the 1967 kerner commission for it is
obvious
that if a man is entered at the starting
line in a race 300 years
after another man the first would have
to perform some impossible feat
in order to catch up with his fellow
runner
the advocates of community control ocean
hill brownsville
offered no equality of opportunity and
therefore
the jewish community's claim about
preserving the meritocracy
was just another defense of white
privilege
and so therefore the black would go one
way
and the jew another
ultimately the public was on albert
schanker's side and maybe justice was as
well
i'll let you decide the ocean hill
brownsville experiment was shut down
and albert shanker went on to become one
of the most important figures
in american education leslie campbell
the teacher who read that hateful poem
on julius lester's radio show left jhs
271 in 1969 less than a year after the
strike
changed his name to jitusi and began to
publish a community newspaper called
black
news as an outlet for black power views
black news would go on to print the
speeches of louis farrakhan
the poetry of amiri bakara who if you're
not familiar with him
was infamous for his 2002 poem that
suggested israel bombed the twin towers
and if you're wondering how ocean hill
connects to israel
a 1970 issue which sports cover art
showing arabs with rocket launchers
forcing israelis to drown in the
mediterranean
says the following the same jewish
racist attitudes
that many of us saw used against ocean
hill brownsville
is only an extension of the racism they
carried to israel
by the way the month after the poem
aired
chairman of the afro-american student
association a representative of the
parents and students
of bedford stuyvesant and a student were
guests
on julius lester's program and all
agreed
that the poem was representative of the
black community sentiment
toward american jews rhodey mccoy stayed
on as superintendent in ocean hill
brownsville for a year beyond the strike
after that he left to pursue his phd at
the university of massachusetts
his dissertation is a dissection of the
strike in all the events leading up to
it
and his bitterness is clear on almost
every page
he says there exists a predetermined
script established by racist
capitalist america which makes the
education of black
poor white and third world children in
this country impossible
a violent revolution is necessary to
have america's institutions serve
all of its people because education can
be translated into socioeconomic power
no white community is about to educate
its black population
and finally with an eye toward the
coming chapter of the jewish story
i'll mention an ad that was published in
the new york paper
the jewish press in the summer weeks
leading up to the strikes
it read america has been good to the jew
and the jew
has been good to america a land founded
on the principles of democracy and
freedom
has given unprecedented opportunity to a
people devoted to those ideals
yet now it finds itself threatened by
political extremism
and racist militancy it's part of a call
to arms
by a then little-known rabbi named mayor
kahana
who was in the process of forming the
jewish defense league to as he said
do the job that the anti-defamation
league should do
but doesn't the hatred exposed
by the ocean hill browns will strike
will actually be a critical piece of rav
kahana's environment of formation
for as he taught his followers never
again means that the jews
should never again be caught by surprise
or
lulled into a foolish trust of others
okay i want to thank a few folks now
that i'm finished i want to thank those
who give their hard-earned money to help
make this show happen
i want to invite you to join them you
can do that by going to my website
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you're also welcome to contact me at rob
mike foyer gmail.com
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who's with us today or in memory of
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i want to thank the land of israel
network that's the land of israel.com
creating a platform that allows me to
reach so many amazing people i want to
thank the pardes institute pards.org.il
for building an educational institution
that gives me the privilege of teaching
some fantastic jews and i want to thank
you for listening