WEB. Dubois, Booker T. Washington, controversy, American minority
W.E.B Dubois and Booker T. Washington were two great leaders of the African American community back in the late 19th and early 20th centuries who sharply disagreed on strategies to ensure black social and economic rights and progress following the era of radical "Reconstruction". Born a slave in 1856, Washington was the founder of Tuskegee Institute, a normal and industrial school in Alabama. His rise to national recognition came in 1895 with a speech he delivered at the opening of the Cotton States and International Exposition held in Atlanta in September 1895 in which he outlined his social philosophy and racial strategy. In this speech, he called on white America (especially the South) to support the industrial education for Black Americans and provide jobs while the latter would give up demands for social equality and civil rights. His main idea to the Black community was that political and social equality were less important immediate goals than economic sustainability and success. Why was it so? Following the U.S Civil War, the North imposed to the South the end of slavery and the recognition of equal rights for all U.S citizens independently of their race. The XIIIth amendment to the U.S Constitution ratified in 1865 held that slavery and involuntary servitude (except as punishment for a crime) was abolished, the XIVth amendment ratified in 1868 defined citizenship and dealt with post Civil-war issues while the XVth amendment ratified in 1870 prohibited the denial of suffrage based on race, color or previous condition of servitude. Yet, during the years following Reconstruction (1865-1877), the situation of the African Americans strongly deteriorated. The hopes for full citizenship were soon shattered after the "great betrayal" of 1876 when the federal government restored white supremacist control to the South (Northern troops left the South). The era of Jim Crow laws on segregation led to the Black disfranchisement, social discrimination and harsh violence through lynching and the foundation of the Ku Klux Klan in 1865. Strict legal segregation of public facilities in the South was empowered in 1896 by the Supreme court ruling in the Plessy vs. Fergusson case, which relied on the "separated but equal" doctrine. The people of color were deprived of their civil rights in a "second-class" citizenship especially because of the 1898 William vs. Mississippi decision (even if Blacks had the right to vote, the States were allowed to impose restrictions). Hence the basic question : how to regain first-class citizenship?
Washington's answer was exposed in his 1895 speech : he encouraged the African American community to become skilled workers so that they would be indispensable to the wealth of the South, then political and social rights would soon be granted to them. W.E.B. Dubois was born in 1868 in a privileged family, he was highly educated, got a PhD. in history from Harvard, studied in Berlin. He had a complete opposite background compared to Washington. Dubois's approach differed as he pushed for a struggle for civil rights, led by the "talented tenth" of his race who should form the Black elite which would be very demanding to obtain equality of situations. Washington was a gradualist economic strategist while Dubois was a gradualist political strategist. In a word, both of them shared the same goal but offered two opposite visions, two opposite philosophies for the path to equality. Who had it right? The first idea that would strike one is that they were both right as they shared the same goal, but if one of them had to be wrong, it means that one out of the two strategies was better and prevailed. This demands to choose between an incrementalist approach and a radical one. So the main question is : which one tended to be more effective? This also supposes to make a quick assessment of nowadays' issues within the African American community.
In order to try offering an answer to this question, one should try and see whether Washington and Dubois were so opposed one to another (I) and then make an assessment of the methods proposed by updating them (II).
[...] The U.S is being resegregated : in 1963 MLK in his have a dream” address envisioned the day “when the sons of former slaves and the sons of former slave owners will be able to sit down together at the table of brotherhood”. Since that day, some progress has been made in race relations. Sadly though, the progress has been in the laws rather than in the minds. Legal segregation is history but it has been replaced with self-segregation: the result is that two universities one black and one white exist side by side on the same campus. [...]
[...] Dubois opposed Washington's program because to him it was narrow in its objectives. He stressed the necessity for liberal arts training because he believed that Black leadership should come from college-trained backgrounds: the “talented tenth”. Giving a clear-cut answer to the question had it right?” is particularly difficult. How could we decide on who had it right when the two protagonists used to agree? Dubois changed his stance when he felt the ideas he had espoused proved to be inefficient (as segregation remained and political rights were still lacking). [...]
[...] Washington, who had it right? Observations: W.E.B Dubois and Booker T. Washington were two great leaders of the African American community back in the late 19th and early 20th centuries who sharply disagreed on strategies to ensure black social and economic rights and progress following the era of radical “Reconstruction”. Born a slave in 1856, Washington was the founder of Tuskegee Institute, a normal and industrial school in Alabama. His rise to national recognition came in 1895 with a speech he delivered at the opening of the Cotton States and International Exposition held in Atlanta in September 1895 in which he outlined his social philosophy and racial strategy. [...]
[...] Who had it right then? If I had to answer this by taking into account the effectiveness of the methods proposed I would find myself in an uneasy situation as both methods seem to have been applied with some successes and as both methods still exist nowadays. Even if we tended to see in class that the African American middle-class today follows Washington's approach, the African American working-class seems to be following Dubois. Moreover, I would tend to think that the Asian community is inspired by Washington, even if it is not with effective consciousness. [...]
[...] The people of color were deprived of their civil rights in a “second-class” citizenship especially because of the 1898 William vs. Mississippi decision (even if Blacks had the right to vote, the States were allowed to impose restrictions). Hence the basic question : how to regain first-class citizenship? Washington's answer was exposed in his 1895 speech : he encouraged the African American community to become skilled workers so that they would be indispensable to the wealth of the South, then political and social rights would soon be granted to them. [...]
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