A TI LUTH Tit_ Cne'", .1 If reu tltliv,rtCl by ob" lAU".' Dr. i" •• , CAm __ H.1l i" NnJ Yorl Ci'y. IdruGry 2J. 1 liOft ,It_ '"'nft.,io"al Cultural £v,"in, .ponsor,d b, WAYS M., .. l" •• " ,It. JlOtla bir'latlay of D . J. . B. Du Bois and launclai" HI"' .,' I r. rOO (1 61) hono"n, his lift Gntl orls. This is " •• w' ""'lor I ,cia 01 Dr. Kin, ""or, his as sina,ion. To. ICHT we ssemble here to P' y tribute to one of the rno t remarkable men of our time. Dr. Du Boi as not only an intelle tual gi nt explor- ing the frontiers of nowledge, he w in the fir t place a te her. He ould have w ntcd his life to teach UI somethin bout our t k of em ncipation. One idea he insistently taught was that black people have n kept in oppre ion and depriv tion by a poison- ous of lies that depicted them as inferior, born defi- cient nd deservedly doomed to . ervitude to the grave. So iduou Iy has this poison been injected into the mind of America that its disease has infected not only whit but many Negroes. So long as the lie was believed the brutality and criminality of conduct toward the Negro w e y for the con ience to bear. The twisted logic ran­ if the bl ck man was inferior he was not oppr ed-his place in society was appropriate to his meager talent and intellect. Dr. Du Bois recognized that the keystone in the arch of oppression w the myth of inferiority and he dedicated his brilliant talents to demolish it. There could ar ely be a more suitable per on . for such a monumental task. First of all he was himself unsur- ... passed as an imellc t and he was a Negro. But beyond this h onately proud to be black and finally he had not nnly genius and pride but he had the indomitable fighting spirit of the valiant. To pursue his mission, Dr. Du Bois gave up the sub- . stantial privileges a highly educated Negro enjoyed living in the North. Though he held degrees from Harvard �d the �niver ity of Berlin, thou h he had more aca- ... , U I < J I I' l � � I ernie creaen ia, han mos � leanS, ac f hltc, he. moved South where a majority of Negroes then lived. He deliberately chose to share their daily abuse and hu­ miliation. He could have offered himself to the white rulers and exacted substantial tribute for selling his genius. There were few like him, Negro or white. He could have .amuaed riches and honors and lived in material splendor . and applause from the powerful and important men of his time. Instead, he lived part of his creative life in the SouUt-mOlt of it in modest means and some of it in poverty, and he died in exile, praised sparingly and in many circles ignored. tell ctual ont r ibuu n . B: ck in (he nin te nth c ntury he laid out a progllll1l () 1 Y ai f rudy of pr hlcm affecting Am ri an 1 'gro and work d tircle Iy ( irn- plement it. Long b f iolog was a science he , as pioneering in the field of .ial rudy . egro lif and ompleted works on health. cduc at ion, employm nt, urb n ondi­ tions, and reli i n. Thi wa at a time when s ientific in­ quiry. of gro I if' w: . () unbel iev bly nc le ted that only a single univ rsit in the entire nation h d uch a program, and it wa (und d with 5.000 for ..,e T' ork. Against uch odd, Dr. Du 80j. produced two enduring classics b fore the tw nti th century. Hi uppressioll of the African lave- Trade. written in 1 96, i Volume I in the Harvard Hi tori al tudies. Hi study The Philadel­ phia Negro, cornpl t d in. 1 99. is till u ed today. Illu - traring the pain taking quality of his s ientifi meth d, to do this work Dr. Du Bois per nally visited and inter­ viewed 5,000 people. He soon realized th ( . tudies w uld n v r adequately be pursued nor <. h. ng r < liz d with ut th mas inv lv . ment of Negr c . The . chol: r then became an rganizer 'Hist�ry had taught him t I no enough for people to be - h supreme task is to organize and unit r becomes a transforming force... . peopl ngry oth t th ir n But he was an exile only to the land of his birth. He died at home in Africa among his herished ancestors, and -he was ignored by a pathetically ignorant America 'r ut .not by history. History c nnot ignore W. E. B: Du Bois. Because his­ tory has to reflect truth' and Dr. Du Bois. was a tireless explorer and a, gifted discoverer -of social ,truths. His singular reatness It\y In III que t for truth bout his own people. Th l e were \'1 Y few sci 10 I 'rs wh c n erned themselves with hone t tudy of the bla k man and he sought to fill thi imm n \' id. Th degree to which he succeeded di5 In e� th glcal dimcll ion f the man. Yet he had more tho 11 , VOid t hll. He had to de I with the army of white prop" 31ldi ts-th myth·mak�rs of gro history. Dr. Du BOI lOok them 11 on in battle. It would be imp. sible to kct h th whol range of his in- and with th rs Iounded til' N. A .P. At til .un t un he be arne aware t'l. t til l':-"P n ion of imp riali TlI wac; a threat to the em 'I g nee of .\ft i . He reco nizcd til import an of til bond bctw n Ameri an gr< .• net til I;llld () th ir an tor, alld h extended hi . nivitirc; to \fri ;tIl • ffair,�, After World Wa r I hall dr, n· A f r i ( a 11 Co It g-t II1 1 ( 1 �. I 92 I , and 1923, alarm,ing ,imI ri.lli l III II (llntri and di . concerting N gro 1Il0 ITI Am ri'a who were afr.licl of this restie , milit. n(. k g nil! . R turning t th t Illtcd . t,ll' from abr ad, h fUlInd hi pion ring agitati n fm Negr tudi s was b . ring fruit and a beginning' . 'i TTl, de (0 hr ad n gro high r education. He tllr w him If into th I, k £ rai ing til intellectual I vel 'f thi. work. Mll< h ). t r, in 1940. h participated in th tahli hill nt of th fir t N gr hol­ arly publication, Phylo1l. A( thc ame time he stimulat I Negro coil ge t (II b through, nnual ollf r n c ti n Ii, nd I v, t· thc quality of their academi tudi s. hut these activiti . nOli h "to b rk for t n men, were far from (he ll1ll f hi hi v ment . In (It six years betwc n l' nd 1 41 he pr du d the monu- mental seven-hun·.ll I-pa \'oilim n Black Reco1l truc- tion in A merica, t me tim writing many rti I and es ays. Black R o1l5lrurtiotl wa . i year in writin but was thirty-thr' y, r in pr p. r, ti n. n it puhli­ cation, one riti id: "It rown the lon, un lfi hand brilliant car r of 1. I II Boi . It i - mparable in lar­ ity, originality and importan tp th B arcts· R, e 01 American Civjliznli071." 1'!zc New rork Timts aid, "It is beyond qu tion th and th r ugh study ever m d of the gr p To in n till ti n," and the New York Herald rrilnwt' pr I im d it .. lid hi tory of tht.: p ri onomi t1 ti , phil phi I di u ion, a m, w rk (f rt all r 11 dint , gro of c of e d eply or rid and his de d onnt f Is hood abl __ - ... �- o • o ct on. ' To understand why hi study of the Reconstruction wa a monumental achievement it i nece ary to ee it in con­ text. White historians had for a century crudely distorted the Negro' role in th Reconstruction year. It was a conscious and deliberate manipulation of history, and the stakes were high. The Reconstruction was a period in which black men had a small measure of freedom of ac­ tion. If, as white historians tell it, Negroes wallo ed in corruption, opportunism, displayed spe tacular stupidity, were wanton, evil, and ignorant, their case was made. They would have proved that freedom was dangerous in the hand of inferior beings. One generation after another of Ame�icans were assiduously taught the e falsehoods, and the collective mind of America became poisoned with racism and stunted with myths. Dr. Du Boi confronted this pow rful tructure of his­ torical distortion and dismantled it. He virtually, before anyone el e and more than anyone el e, demolished the­ lies about Negro s in their most important and creative period of hi tory. Th truth he reve led arc not yet the property of 11 American but they h ve been recorded and arm us for our contemporary battles. In Black Reconstruction Dr. Du Bois dealt with the almost universally ace pted concept that civilization vir­ tually collap ed in the South during Reconstruction be­ cause Negroes ha� � measure of political power. Dr. Du Bois marshalled irrefutable eviden e that, far from col­ lapsing. the outhern e onomy was recovering in' the e years. Within fivc y an the cotton cmp had been restored, and in the suc�eeding five years had exceeded pre-war levels. At the same time other economic activity had as­ cended so rapidly the rebirth of the South was almost compl red. Beyond this he restored to .Iight the most luminous achievement of the Reconstruction-it brought free public education into existence not only for the benefit of the Negro, but it opened hool doors to the poor whites, He documented the sub tantial body of legislation thar was socially so useful it was retained into the twentieth cen­ tury even though the Negroes who helped to write it were brutally. disenfranchised and driven from political life. He revealed that, far from being the tragic era white his­ torians described, it was the only period in which democ­ racy exi ted in the South. Thi stunning fact was the reason the hi tory books had to lie because to tell the truth would have acknowledged th� Negroes' capacity to govern and fitness to build a finer nation in a creative relationship with poor whites. With the completion of his book Black Reco,utruction, despite its towering contributions, d�spite his advanced age, Dr. Du Bois was till not ready to accept a de erved r�st in p aceful r tir�ment. His d�dication to freedom drove him on as relentlessly in his eventies as it did in his twenties. He had already encompas ed thre� careers. Beginning as a pioneer ociologist, h� had becom� n activist to further mas. organization. The activist had th�n transformed him elf into an hi torian. By the mid­ dle f th t\ IlU til ·ntllry. wh n imp riali. m n . w r ro one 100 • to ".11 peri I hum nity, he b am ape ICe: d r. II' � 'I v·d.1 h irman f the Pace Informati Il Bur all and, It the Rev. Willi m Sloan .offin < nd Dr. B nj mill p< I.. of t d y. he fund him elf indi t I by th g v rnmcl1t .Hld II 11 i d h r cti nt ri . Indaunt d by Ild 1 cpr ion, \ ith hi hare forti. tude h( Oil. FJn Ily in 1961 with p nd n l bll lwei, n pportunity 0 writin r �n Afll<' n .n y'l P dia, and in hi nin ty. third y Illigr. LIt b in n w int II tu 1 lab >r. . r mark II III It thi III t .th, t h will be r m mb red f r his ntnl>lIl I II no r nizati nal attainments. These m nUlllenl .11' imp ri h ble. ut th re w re hu- m n qu liti I s. imm di. t ly vi i Ie th t r no I imp ri h bl . Tob cont nued next week ...