Civil Rights and Global Liberation
Shared struggles: Civil rights, decolonization, and gender
If you live in the United States, you’ve probably heard about the Civil Rights Movement. The people and organizations involved in the movement were part of a global network.
Many American activists connected their struggle at home to decolonization movements around the world. That’s because in some ways, the Civil Rights Movement was also a decolonization movement. Colonialism is when one country takes control over another place. The colonizer then takes advantage of its people and resources.
Twin victories: Racial equality and World War II
During World War II (1939-1945), the Allies made promises about racial equality and self-determination for their citizens and people in their colonies. The Allies refers to Great Britain, the U.S. and Russia who had joined together to fight in World War II.
Many Black Americans distrusted these promises. Like people in the colonies, Black Americans had been deceived after the First World War. Despite fighting for the U.S., they had come home to discrimination and violence. So why, asked many, should they fight Hitler and save democracy? During World War II, Black American newspapers launched the Double-V Campaign: victory against Nazi racism abroad and victory against racism in America.
During the war, the American government tried to present itself internationally as the champion of democracy and human rights. Racial segregation contradicted this image. During the 1930s, Joseph Goebbels, Hitler’s minister of propaganda, said: “Nothing will be easier than to produce a bloody revolution in North America… no other country has so many social and racial tensions. We shall be able to play on many strings there.” Propaganda is information or rumors that are often not accurate that are used to influence people’s opinions.
Hitler hoped to feed these tensions. He wanted to bring American fascists to power. Fascism is a political ideology that puts a country or race above the individual.
Western leaders condemned the 1935 Nazi Nuremberg laws. However, the Nazi regime argued they were no different than Jim Crow laws in the U.S. Jim Crow laws were enacted in the southern U.S. states to legally continue racial segregation.
It wasn’t just America’s enemies who saw this weakness. Kamaladevi Chattopadhyay was a leader of the Indian independence and women’s rights movements. She worked with Mohandas Gandhi. She traveled across the American South in the 1940s, witnessing American racism first-hand. Gandhi said, “I do not regard England, or for that matter America, as free countries. They are free after their own fashion, free to hold in bondage the coloured races of the earth.” After the war, other foreign officials and dignitaries visited the United States. They returned to their homes on the African and Asian continents with stories of racism.
Global connections
Civil rights leaders in America were influenced by anti-colonial leaders. The Indian independence movement led by Gandhi strongly influenced leaders like Martin Luther King Jr. Gandhi’s philosophy of non-violent resistance was based on the concept of Ahimsa. This is a principle from Hinduism, Buddhism, and Jainism. It means “non- injury.” Gandhi and his followers used non-violent resistance to end British colonialism in India after World War II. The American civil rights activist, Bayard Rustin, traveled to India in 1948 after Gandhi’s assassination. Rustin taught King about Gandhi’s methods. In 1959, King traveled to India. This trip strengthened his belief that non-violent resistance could bring down imperialism abroad and racism in America. Imperialism is the idea of gaining control and power by expanding into other countries.
The fight against racism in America was connected to anti-colonial struggles abroad. This can be seen through the connections forged by women. Historian Keisha Blaine has highlighted the international connections and activism of Black women in the 1900s. Women like Amy Jacques Garvey and Mittie Maude Lena Gordon connected their activism in America to international struggles for racial and gender equality. Blain writes:
Perhaps the most important aspect of black nationalist women’s political life was their interest in and commitment to black internationalism. . . These women understood that the struggle for black rights in the United States. . . could not be divorced from the global struggles for freedom in Asia, Africa, Latin America, and the Caribbean, and other parts of the globe.
Women of color in the United States and in the colonized world were fighting together. They stood against two oppressions: one struggle against colonialism and racism, and the other a struggle against gender discrimination.
Civil rights and decolonization in the Cold War
The Cold War (1947-1989) started, and so did decolonization. American leaders watched as their French and British allies lost many colonies. The Cold War and decolonization had transformed civil rights into a national security issue.
New nations in Africa and Asia emerged from decolonization. They joined the United Nations. Americans and Soviets wanted these countries as allies. Hower, many allied with the Soviet Union or stayed neutral because of racial discrimination in America.
The Soviets pointed out the hypocrisy of American democracy. They made films and posters about racial inequality in America. President Harry Truman worked hard to convince the U.S. Supreme Court to desegregate schools. He did this because Soviet propaganda was harm American interests abroad. Truman’s Secretary of State, Dean Acheson wrote, “the undeniable existence of racial discrimination gives unfriendly governments the most effective kind of ammunition for their propaganda warfare.” A secretary of state is the president’s adviser on all things related to global issues.
America’s ability to gain allies in the Cold War rested in its ability to win over leaders and nations of color.
Civil rights leaders in the U.S. and decolonization leaders around the world understood that their futures were connected. King opposed the Vietnam War, believing it was racist and imperialist. He called for an end to nuclear weapons.
In 1960, a group of Black American students in North Carolina formed the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC). SNCC connected civil rights to decolonization. Members of SNCC campaigned against Apartheid in South Africa. Apartheid is a system of racial segregation and discrimination.
In 1967, SNCC declared itself a human rights organization. It wanted to end “colonialism, racism, and economic exploitation wherever these conditions exist.”
Conclusion
The Civil Rights Movement was linked with decolonization movements in Africa and Asia. This influence flowed both ways. As civil rights leaders traveled abroad and anti-colonial leaders traveled to the United States, they shared ideas and strategies.
Sources
Blain, Keisha N. Set the World on Fire: Black Nationalist Women and the Global Struggle for Freedom. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 2017.
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Lauren, Paul Gordon. Power and Prejudice: The Politics and Diplomacy of Racial Discrimination. Boulder: Westview, 1988.
Slate, Nico. “’I Am a Colored Woman’: Kamaladevi Chattopadhyaya in the United States, 1939-1941.” Contemporary South Asia: Annual Conference Edition of the British Association for South Asian Studies 17, no. 1 2009: 7-19.
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SNCC. “African Liberation Movements.” SNCC Digital Gateway. Accessed March 25, 2020. https://snccdigital.org/inside-sncc/international-connections/african-liberation-movements/
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Bennett Sherry
Bennett Sherry holds a PhD in history from the University of Pittsburgh and has undergraduate teaching experience in world history, human rights, and the Middle East at the University of Pittsburgh and the University of Maine at Augusta. Additionally, he is a research associate at Pitt’s World History Center. Bennett writes about refugees and international organizations in the twentieth century.
Image credits
This work is licensed under CC BY 4.0 except for the following:
Cover image: Delegations’ chiefs pose 05 September 1961 at the end of the conference of the unaligned countries in Belgrade. (Fron R to L: Josip Broz Tito, president of Yugoslavia, Prince Seyful Islam El Hassan, permanent representative of Yemen in the UN, Prince Norodom Sihanouk of Cambodia, Saeb Salam, Premier of Lebanon, Adan Abdullah Osman, president of Somali, Ibrahim Abboud, president of Sudan, Sheikh Ibrahim Sowayel, minister of Foreign Affairs of Saudi Arabia, Archbishop Makarios, president of Cyprus, King Hassan II of Morocco, Sirimavo Bandaranaike, Premier of Ceylan, Habib Bourguiba, president of Tunisia, Ahmed Soekarno, president of Indonesia, Osvaldo Dortikos, president of Cuba, Kwame Nkrumah, president of Ghana, Gamal Abdel Nasser, president of the UAR, Emperor Haile Selassie I of Ethiopia, Sardar Mohammad Daud Khan, Premier of Afghanistan, Modibo Keita, president of Mali, Jawaharlal Nehru, Premier of India, Hashim Jawad, Minister of Foreign Affairs of Iraq, King Mahendra Bir Bikram of Nepal, Youssef Ben khedda, president of the provisional Algerian government, Lansana Beavogui, Minister of Foreign Affairs of Guinea, Siril Adoula, Premier of the government of Congo, Antoine Gizenga, vice-president of the government of Congo, U Nu, premier of Burma). © AFP PHOTO/AFP/Getty Images.
A National Association for the Advancement of Colored People poster showing the NAACP strangling a crow labeled “Jim Crow”— representing racist laws in the US—with Nazi and Japanese flags attached to its legs. Library of Congress. http://loc.gov/pictures/resource/ppmsca.24948/
Martin Luther King Jr. and Coretta Scott King lay a wreath at a memorial to Gandhi during a visit to India in 1959. US Embassy and Consulates in India. https://search.usembassy.gov/search/images?affiliate=dos_emb_csa_newdelhi&query=Martin+luther+king
View of the discussion table at the Belgrade Conference of Nonaligned Nations in 1961. The Non-Aligned movement was a group of newly independent nations who sought neutrality in the Cold War. © Keystone-France/Gamma-Keystone/Getty Images.
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