() IJi II ionsl l' iews HENRY LOUIS GA S, JR .. erali m, i ty on out the TA RITI NI> .tivi t Barbara Smith illuminat omethin of the content of BI ck identity for many young people in a tory about teach rwho taught John Steinb .k' "Th Grap of Wrath" and found h ac tud nt uming that its chara ters were Black, too. Why? B ause anyon wh uffered much ju t had to be BI k. Th tudents'identity Bl cks was intrin ically tied to opprcs ion to .ocial or oconomi marginality .• But identitic never take. hapc in isolation, a point brought hom a letter. A profes or at the J w i h Tbcologi al Seminary of America wrote to me omeone who came of age in the early 60s, when "tl � civil rights mov .rncnt captured the moral ima ination of the nation"­ or much of it. 'All too many of us continue to regard caring and critique as mutually exclusive. ' "M a teenager in 1962," he related, "I remember the work that my synagogue youth group engaged in to do our small part for the great struggle that Black American had mounted. For us at that time there was the sense that we were participating in the mo. t important religious challenge of our age ... "I think that in certain ignificant way my Jewish identity w� Shaped by connection to the ivil rights movement-that 'seeking justice' w� hat tradition demandedof me and thatthe'�eIVor of; tho tim�\aJl wed me the ctumce to go beyo "my eIC' e thought it hat he was teaching at the institute where Rabbi Abraham Joshua Hesche! spent his career and that his daughter went "to the Abraham Joshua He chel day chool in Manhattan, where the ph to of Prot> or He chel marching with Dr. King should crvc virtually as the emblem of the' .hool.' THE ANECnOT � HELPED explai n to m what make Bla k anti-Semitism inordinately di turbing to many Jewi h American' for whom the Black struggle for racial justi c remains paradigmatic, help­ ing to define who they are . . It may be that orne Jew tend to overreact to Black anti-Scrniti m: it may be that orne Blacks, adhering to a ort of ethnic divi ion of labor, then tend tQ under-reacrto it. It's at this point that political i 'sues internal to ourcommunitie come into play, All too many of us continu to regard caring and critique as mutuality exclusive. Nothin new here. The hi tory of African-Ameri­ cans .is marked not alone by its noble demand for political tolerance. from the larger society but also by its paradoxical tendency to censure its own. W.E.B. DuBoi was rebuked by the NAACP for his nationali m in the 19 and then again for his sociali m later. Jame Baldwin and Ralph Ellison were victim of the Black Arts Movement in the 60 • while Martin Luther King, Jr. and Eartha Kitt were roundly condemned for their early protests again t the Vietnam War. Amiri Baraka repudi­ ated a whole slew of writers in the 6 for. ing too "assirnilationi i." then invented a whole new canon of Black targets when he became a .Marxi t a few years later. Michele Wallace, Nt zakc Shangc and Alice Walker have been called Black-male bashers and accused of alculated eomplicity with white ra i ts. Not urpris ingly, many Black writers and intetl tuals have been acutely aware of th hazard' of falling ut of favor with th "thought" police, wheth r in whitef ce or Black, TIl I R A ON to think that we ar movi ng into an era where genuinely critical dialogue among African-American can m re readily be upportbd. But there i till om way to o. There remains a tro� temptation to di the me nger. 0 I mu. t hammer away at a til! elusive truth. Th obtiganons of Bla k i nt llectual arc not exhau ted by lcbra­ ti n. Critique, too, can b a form of aring. A tivi like Bell Hooks Michele Walla e or Marlon Ri g • who publicly ail xi rh and homophobi in our mrnuruties, arc cnga red not in ra e trcas n ut : orncthin mu h 10. r 0 dcvotiorr. Yet the fa e r i tan : Why. hould � try to et our own ho C I n order when there i 0 much at fault with th lar r 1 ty? May aw It' where we hv . So many African-Amcncaru p rndcr v hat th to arr �t big try in ur v n mmunity vcn Cll\ th Y ontront r� 'Ial I �iu.'t'<':c m the nati n. And they know th re ar pra man 0 id rations to h weigh d. too. /' . Hi torically, the di ou BI k writer' and intellc tual has us looking over our houlders t any ima 'I nary white auditor, yet imulta­ n u Iy hopm t t u h th Am n om r of n at time equally imaginary Bla' k audience. The r '�ut� have ftcn 'en dl. appotntln .' R prilllcd from Til ' � Y, rk TlIn '\ • I ianizauor», at the IOl'aJ level. Like the "dry h n ,..," In lli' olu nov '­ ()f!.!. I f/.ttHII1\ arr . llll1 TilE HR'I S'l EP III nlll\lll:!,11 a . .ornph: h this t: k 1:-' to VI1,!' ruu " psornot loc II. tare, r '1on:.11 .ind nil uuna] 11 .twor In!.! III '1:1 II)llt rnovemcnt-, .md (lI.',Il1I/.IIl{)f1\ nd i n tht .... rmu.rl h,\\l()I"flll\l'­ m .nt I uildmu." w c rnu t dcv 'lop stru .tur '''' \\ hn.h (an 1<1 dilate til; Il'1 u· .... s oj nctworkmu. In th' not to dl:-' .In l'ulur',;1 f cl- DR. BE JA IN CHAVIS CIVIL RIGHTS JOU AL o In recent wee occupied with di cus iun State of Emergenc which 'XI�t<; f( r the Black ma, scs in the .S. and the ri i. of Bla k p Ii ti .al lcaderslup. In thi re ard, I am forced to he 'd the advice of the mythi al Afr: 'an American fi ur Jun ebu Jabo EW LE DEI��IIIP an .... " from th pr )J'c ts. program. vtru "1 and movement \ lu '11 P -oplc iniu­ ate to cop WI th 'nd over 'om the pr I 'm I rl!-.I. that rcqun' r' olu- ti n. ' H n t!. 10 my Jud 1 'm 'nt, \ hal I mo I urg ntly nccucd 10 thIS P 'no J i� to uild a rno em 'nl tor Hhrk to HARRIS ('0 Am 'nl'(\l1 l'ommul1ltl'� In 'V I n 01 lilt C lU lry Hllndl{,u-. of ommuntl' RON DANIELS VANTAGE POINT \l,t1ch and J: np iw ' m nt (AAI­ Fl f.- A c\ p' I '1)1l' par () u' worx, "'''I·RI· vi ll de 'ot tim arxl in­ , uv. tl) I, 'Ill 'CI .Ital st. fa nhtat r I ,d;1I1 hllr I {lr :1 n.IIIC)f1,t1 nctw ork 0 /'(111 I h I 11,1, \( I \ fJ.\ p, '\ldelJ( II liz!' II \1/ ,If I' (If ( OII/IIl/IIl11) Or '(/111 "If'1I o/lfl /)1 \ t/opm /I( ill ) 1/(/" • 'I II. ("hi ), //( 111 b ' con· IcIC (t'd at (.! If"� 71()·5747.