Thursday, March 21, 2024

REVISITING THE POPULAR FRONT: CELEBRATING THE LIFE OF ANNE BRADEN

Harry Targ (a revised version of an original post on Tuesday, March 23, 2010)



…there are no heroes in this story…no villains…only people, the product of their environment, urged on by forces of history they often do not understand. Anne Braden, 1958.

https://www.zinnedproject.org/materials/anne-braden-southern-patriot A film by Anne Lewis “Anne Braden: Southern Patriot”

Biographies can tell us about ourselves, where we came from, and where we might go. I recently read a narrative of the life of an extraordinary activist and her time. I think her history is relevant for us today.

Subversive Southerner: Anne Braden and the Struggle for Racial Justice in the Cold War South, by Catherine Fosl, tells the story of a militant Southern woman who rejected the political culture of her day to fight for the liberation of African Americans, always insisting that Southern whites had to play a significant role in that struggle.

Anne Braden was born in 1924 in Louisville, Kentucky to a traditional Southern family. Schooled in the values of Southern womanhood, she increasingly saw the white supremacist south as an evil that not only repressed African Americans but served as an impediment to the achievement of human liberation of people everywhere. She pursued a career as political organizer and journalist, publishing the invaluable periodical, The Southern Patriot. She, with her husband Carl Braden, spent years organizing against racial segregation. Her struggle repeatedly encountered racists who opportunistically used anti-communism to protect their white privilege.

The biography of Braden suggests several historical lessons for us today. First, Braden was raised in a political culture that was hostile to social justice, although in a supportive, though sometimes stern family. In the society at large Braden experienced racism and was expected to accept and endorse it.

Second, through a multiplicity of associations and experiences she came to realize that racism was not only an impediment to her own development as a full human being but was also an impediment to the development of all humanity. Consequently, at relatively young ages, Braden came to the view that she must devote her life to the struggle against racism.

Third, Braden realized in her struggles that capitalism as an economic system stood in the way of human liberation. She understood that the capitalist mode of production was built on the backs of workers. Racism was used by capitalists to divide workers who together could organize to create a more humane society.

Fourth, Braden accepted as a basic premise of her political work the proposition that human solidarity was a necessary if not sufficient condition for the creation of a humane society. Anne Braden, saw human beings as shaped by their environments. Her own upbringing in a segregated society shaped her consciousness, but circumstances made her realize that people can liberate themselves by organizing resistance to that society. Racism had its roots in economic and political structures, and people were “urged on by forces of history they often do not understand.” But they can come to recognize and oppose those institutions that oppress others and by extension, themselves.

Fifth, Braden committed her life to organizing against capitalism, imperialism, colonialism, and racism. This meant crossing racial lines, participating in union struggles, linking struggles for civil rights with struggles for civil liberties, and unabashedly working with the Left to bring about social change.

Finally, Anne Braden became one of the most despised political activists in Cold War America. Anne and Carl Braden purchased a home in Louisville in the 1950s and sold it to an African American family. The property was in an all-white neighborhood. This generated a massive campaign to keep the family from occupying their house. The campaign was leveled at the Bradens for their work against segregation as much as against the African American family. After an extended public trial characterized by charges of Communist subversion Carl Braden was sentenced to prison for “sedition” based on an arcane Kentucky law. Subsequent to the trial and incarceration, virulent anti-communism dogged most organizing campaigns embraced by the Bradens.

The Southern Conference Educational Fund (SCEF), which the Bradens led, was always viewed with suspicion. Anti-communism even crept into the politics of the civil rights movement as it blossomed in the late 1950s. Despite the virulence of it, which usually was linked with racism, Anne Braden became an inspirational force among the young SNCC organizers in the South in the early 1960s, along with Ella Baker. Anne Braden took particular responsibility for building white activism around civil rights.

In the end, anti-communist campaigns, such as those against the Bradens, were used as tools by racist forces to demean, delegitimize, and split the working class and youth and to defeat progressive forces. Anti-communism and the defense of white supremacy became inseparable.

How do we assess the role of  Anne Braden in historical perspective, particularly during Women’s History Month? She participated as a leader, as intellectual and moral inspiration at a time when the working class was on the move in the 1930s and 1940s, and civil rights activism spread in the 1950s. Braden committed her life to the struggle against racism and she saw Black/white unity as basic to victory.

She participated in struggles with allies from the organized Left, particularly with members of the Communist Party USA.

Finally, and most critically, Braden participated in and advanced a politics of the Popular Front. Popular Front politics began with a commitment to class struggle. It was based on the presumption that racism was the central barrier to social change. And Popular Front politics prioritized commitments to broad-based networking among people and groups who engaged in a whole array of peace and justice issues.

Are there lessons from these lives for us today? I believe so. Braden taught us that the pursuit of social change was a lifetime activity. And ehe demonstrated to us that our political work must engage the broadest range of issues and the greatest numbers of people in our struggles for a humane future. The Braden biography tells an insightful and inspiring story that everyone interested in social change should read.






 

The Bookshelf

CHALLENGING LATE CAPITALISM by Harry R. Targ

Read Challenging Late Capitalism by Harry R. Targ.