By Yuri Kochiyama
Shades of Power: Newsletter of the Institute for Multi-Racial Justice
Spring 1998
Much of the history of African/Asian and Black American/Asian American
inter-actions is not as well known as it should be. All peoples of whatever race
or color have criss-crossed into each other's lives more than we think. But such
history, like all true history, has often been hidden, lied about, or distorted.
Malcolm X used to admonish: "Study history. Learn about yourselves and
others. There's more commonality in all our lives than we think. It will help us
understand one another." We also need to remember that history, depending
on how it is told, can be used as a weapon to divide us further, or as a vehicle
to seek truths that might bring us to greater mutual understanding.
Unfortunately, thanks to the mass media, we are more likely to hear about
ways that we are divided. We hear about attacks on African students at Nanjing
University in China, the killing of 15-year old African American Latasha Harlins by a Korean shopkeeper in Los Angeles, and
anti-Korean actions following the verdict in the beating of Rodney King. These
events also reveal the social and economic gaps between peoples of color.
But there is so much that unites us, which we do not learn. As Gary Okihiro
observed in a paper he wrote: "Africans and Asians share a history of
migration, interaction, and cultural sharing. They share a history of European
colonization, decolonization, and independence under new colonization and
dependency. Africans and Asians share a history of oppression in the U.S.,
successively serving as slave and cheap labor..."
The first Asians who came to the United States were Filipino slaves, who were
originally taken to Mexico by Spanish and Portuguese merchants in the 18th and
19th centuries. They escaped to New Orleans, Louisiana, where their descendants
live today, in their own communities. Also in that period, people from China and
India were sold to European and American ship captains as "coolies" in
the same way the pigs were sold: they were put in pigpens, nearly naked and
filthy, with their destinations painted on their chests. Many Chinese workers
were sent to Latin America.
Between 1870 and 1890, when Congress was debating the infamous Chinese
Exclusion Act barring Chinese immigrants, African American leaders like
Frederick Douglass and Augustus Straker spoke out against the bill. They
considered the objections to the Chinese "in kind and principle"
identical to attacks on Blacks, and said that their opponents were the same as
those of the Chinese. Senator Blanche K. Bruce of Mississippi, the only African
American in the U.S. Senate, voted courageously against limiting the rights of
the Chinese people by the Exclusion Act.
During the Spanish-American War of 1898, some 6,000 Black soldiers sent to
the Philippines with Theodore Roosevelt's "Rough Riders" were repelled
by American atrocities (600,000 Filipino civilians massacred). Feeling kinship
with their "brown brothers," as they said, the Black soldiers risked
their lives by joining the Filipino guerrillas.
At the turn of the century, a Japanese man named Sen Katayama became the
first Asian to attend a Black college in the southern United States. He went on
to be an outstanding labor leader and friend of the acclaimed Black writer of
the Harlem Renaissance period, Claude McKay. Together they organized the
Communist Party in New York. U.S. labor history has ignored Katayama, probably
because racism marginalized workers of color.
In the early 1920s another Asian came to the U.S. while in exile for his work
to free Vietnam from French colonialism. Ho Chi Minh lived in the ghettoes of
Chicago and Harlem, became an admirer of Black leader Marcus Garvey, and wrote
one of the earliest books on racism in the United States (it was published in
the Soviet Union). During the U.S. war on Vietnam he was seen as a hero by
Blacks and other Americans opposed to the war, who often considered it a racist
war and identified with its victims.
In the 1930s the Black historian and leader W.E.B. DuBois visited China,
Manchuria and Japan. DuBois met Mao Tse-tung and other Chinese leaders. Famed
Black Americans who have visited the People's Republic of China also include
Langston Hughes, Vicki Garvin, Robert Williams, and several members of the Black
Panther Party.
Inter-action was common between African-Americans and the Japanese as well.
In the midwestern United States, immigrant Japanese related to the newly
emerging Nation of Islam (NOI), and some made ties for the purpose of friendship
and trade. In early 1940, Elijah Muhammed and others of the NOI went to jail
because they would not support World War II against Japan and spoke out against
it; they also opposed the concentration camps where Japanese Americans were sent
at the time. First generation Issei Japanese worked with militant Black
nationalists in those years.
The historic 1955 conference of non-aligned nations held in Bandung,
Indonesia brought together African and Asian leaders in a historic gathering.
The U.S. was irked at not being invited but many prominent Blacks attended,
including Adam Clayton Powell and Margaret Cartwright, the first Black reporter
assigned to the United Nations. The Bandung conference was organized by
Indonesian president Ahmad Sukarno, whom Malcolm X held in high esteem because
he would not bow down to the white man.
The 1950s also saw the United States getting embroiled in the Korean War. At
a huge rally in New York, the distinguished and charismatic Black leader Paul
Robeson declared that "it would be foolish for African Americans to fight
against their Asian brothers." He urged Blacks to resist being drafted and
said that "the place for the Negro people to fight for their freedom is at
home." Despite worldwide recognition for Robeson's many talents -- as a
football hero, lawyer, actor, singer, and speaker -- he came to be seen as a
threat by the United States. In reality, he was an anti-imperialist
internationalist and lover of humanity.
The 1960s brought many acts of solidarity involving Asians and Blacks
alongside Latinos and Native Americans. We find these in protests against the
Vietnam War; support for the "I" Hotel in San Francisco; student
struggles for ethnic studies. There was much interaction between Black Panthers,
the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC), Young Lords, I Wor Kuen,
Brown Berets and other Chicano groups, the Red Guards, and Manila Town Filipino
activists. Together Asian activists supported Wounded Knee in the West and the
Attica Brothers on the East Coast; the fight to bring the People's Republic of
China into the United Nations; and support for Third World political prisoners
throughout the country, including Puerto Rican independistas.
Beyond our borders, Mao Tse-tung, leader of the emerging People's Republic of
China, said during the 1968 urban riots by African Americans: "I hereby
express resolute support for the just struggle of the Black people in the United
States." In that same period Mao sent thousands of workers to help build
the railroads between Zambia and Tanzania in East Africa. Chinese workers also helped to construct the national sports stadium
in Zimbabwe and a library in Harare. In addition, Zimbabwe received work teams
from North Korea. An outstanding Korean woman writer, Pak Sunam, always referred
to Franz Fanon -- the Martinique-born psychiatrist who became a powerful voice
of anti-colonial, anti-racist struggle -- as "her brother."
There are many stories of solidarity featuring Malcolm X; he probably
impressed Asian Americans, in particular youth, more than any other Black
leader. In June, 1964 Malcolm met with Japanese atom-bomb victims who came to
New York for plastic surgery and toured the U.S. speaking out against nuclear
proliferation. They were deeply impressed by Malcolm's graciousness and
openness. Malcolm also spoke of his admiration for Mao Tse-tung and his support
for Vietnam's struggle, which he saw as the struggle of the whole Third World.
Another important area of Black/Asian interaction has been music, primarily
jazz. Coltrane, Max Roach, Milford Graves, Herbie Hancock and other jazz greats
made periodic tours to Japan, as did reggae artists such as Jimmy Cliff. At the
same time, Asian American musicians like Fred Ho, Mark Izu and Francis Wong have
created jazz combos. Dancer/singer Nobuko Miyamoto and poet Janice Mirikitani
are heralded by Black audiences.
There are still more examples of Black/Asian interaction. But much remains to
be done to build bridges and create a united force that can challenge the system
in which those with wealth and power live high off the toil and desperation of
the marginalized. We must all work to break down barriers and phobias and build
working relations, while understanding that each group has its own primary
issues and needs its own privacy and leadership. If we want to change society,
we must begin by transforming ourselves; learning from one another about one
another's history, culture, dreams, hopes, personal experiences. We must become
one, for the future of humanity.
Kochiyama is a Japanese American born in California, is a longtime
community activist living in Harlem who has worked on many issues, in particular
supporting political prisoners. She worked closely with militant Puerto Rican
groups like the Young Lords Party and was a member of the Organization of
Afro-American Unity as well as a close friend of Malcolm X.