REBUTTAL07.03.15 2:15 AM ETEx-Black Panther Leader Elaine Brown Slams Stanley Nelson’s ‘Condemnable’ DocumentaryElaine
Brown, who led the Black Panther Party from 1974-1977 and ran for
president in 2008, dismantles Nelson’s documentary ‘The Black Panthers:
Vanguard of the Revolution.’
In his film The Black Panthers: Vanguard of the Revolution,
black documentary filmmaker Stanley Nelson slices and dices the history
of the Black Panther Party into a two-dimensional palliative for white
people and Negroes who are comfortable in America’s oppressive status
quo. His film, a collage of personalized vignettes by erstwhile and
self-professed Party members, culminating in the complete excoriation of
the Party’s guiding genius, Huey P. Newton, is at once shocking and
disappointing. It is also condemnable.
As
an aside, to answer any charge that my condemnation of this film arises
from the fact that Nelson tossed most of his interview with me onto the
cutting room floor, I note that my autobiography, A Taste of Power,
my own Black Panther story, has never gone out of print and was just
picked up as an e-book. It is under option with HBO for its miniseries The Black Panthers.
That
said, as a former leader of the Party, I assert authority to state that
Stanley Nelson ultimately debases the Party, which history will
substantiate was, to this very day, the greatest effort for freedom ever
made by Africans lost in America. Nelson does this by excising from his
film the Party’s ideological foundation and political strategies,
despite the wealth of published materials articulating the Party’s goals
and ideals, reducing our activities to sensationalist engagements, as
snatched from establishment media headlines.
He
lingers on minutiae in showing stock footage from our famous Free
Breakfast for Children program and Free Health Clinic program, the most
publicized among the over 30 Survival Programs the Party fostered. In
that, he obscures the magnitude of this effort, for which the FBI
admittedly and specifically condemned the Party as the “greatest threat
to the internal security of the United States.” And Nelson does this
despite the fact that there are hours of footage online in which Huey P.
Newton fully sets forth the purpose of our Survival Programs, operating
under the slogan “Survival Pending Revolution,” which was to serve the
People’s immediate needs toward galvanizing mass participation in the
Revolution. The Party held that the masses of People not the Party were
the makers of the Revolution of which, in our time and place, we were
indeed the vanguard.
Minimizing
the role of Huey Newton, founder of the Party, along with Bobby Seale,
Nelson elevates the role in the Party of Eldridge Cleaver—who
individually did more to try to destroy the Party than the U.S.
government. This elevation of Cleaver is a clue to the point of Nelson’s
“documentary”—to produce a piece of provocative propaganda worthy of
the FBI itself. Though Cleaver was but a fleeting darling of the
establishment press who was in the Party for no more than a year or so
before being expelled, footage of Cleaver and “Cleaverites” overwhelms
almost half of Nelson’s two-hour film.
While referencing the COINTELPRO operations
of the FBI, which has been well-documented to have had the goal of
discrediting, disrupting or destroying the Black Panther Party, Nelson
reduces the massive, brutal effort by the U.S. government to destroy the
Party to the story of traitor William O’Neal, who infiltrated the
Illinois Chapter of the Party as an agent of the FBI. And, while
showing emotional interviews with survivors of the ferocious, 1969 raid
on the Party’s Los Angeles office by the Los Angeles Police Department’s
newly-formed SWAT Team, Nelson erases the fact that this assault, like
the murder of Fred Hampton in Chicago, was in fact orchestrated by the
government of the United States—and this, despite that no other
organization in the history of the United States has been so targeted by
the government for elimination. Had he chosen to do the right thing,
Nelson would have had to open up his film to the broad question of why
the Party was so targeted by the United States government.
Though
he focuses most of his film on the personal remembrances of Party
members and purported Party members, Nelson deletes the memory and
martyrdom of Party heroes like George Jackson, Bunchy Carter, and John
Huggins.
In
the last 20 minutes of his film, Nelson sets forth a superficial
montage of the Bobby Seale/Elaine Brown electoral campaign. Accompanied
by jaunty music, this campaign is suggestively presented as a deviation
from any notion of revolution, providing a stark counterpoint to
Nelson’s ultimate statement: a disparaging portrait of Huey P. Newton.
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Like
new-right ideologue David Horowitz, Nelson paints Huey as a thug, a
“maniac,” according to an interview he highlights with one former
Panther—a man harboring a lifelong, apolitical grudge against Huey, whom
he never knew or even met. Nelson’s Huey is then reduced to a thug and
drug addict killed by his own “demonic” behavior. Although Huey was
killed 10 years after the Party’s demise, Nelson ties Huey’s tragic
murder to the death of the Party. This opens the way to his wholesale
condemnation of the Party as a fascinating cult-like group that died out
on account of the leadership of a drug-addicted maniac. In this, he
exonerates the government’s vicious COINTELPRO activities, and
discredits and destroys the very history and memory of the Party.
If
Nelson knew the black community, he would know that Huey remains a hero
to black people, especially those still locked in the impoverished
corners of America. In West Oakland, where the Party started, the locale
of Huey’s murder is deemed sacred ground.
In
his haste to disparage the Party by disingenuously casting his film as a
documentary about the Party, Nelson overlooked the fact that Huey
promoted the ideal that the Party never attempt to institutionalize
itself, lest it become more entrenched in self-preservation than in
promoting the goal of global revolution. Just as the Party’s existence
was not grounded in the existence of any individual, its demise was
inevitable and necessary in order to open the door for new generations
to adapt to new conditions toward the ultimate, inevitable elimination
of the American Empire and introduction of a new world society in which
resources are equitably distributed among the people, according to need
and ability.
I
have asked Stanley Nelson to remove the snippets of his interview with
me from his film. He has refused. My consolation lies in knowing that
this film will not be relevant in the history of the Black Panther
Party, which, fixed in the history of the United States, will be studied
for generation upon generation to come, and in knowing that history
will not remember Stanley Nelson at all.
FYI, Black Panthers, Vanguard of the Revolution will be shown on KQED, Channel 9, Tuesday, February 16, 9PM. Marvin X appears in the film. He was blamed for introducing Eldridge Cleaver to the Panthers and simultaneously for "hiding" Cleaver from the Panthers. See his memoir Eldridge Cleaver, My friend the Devil, Black Bird Press, 2009.
FYI, Black Panthers, Vanguard of the Revolution will be shown on KQED, Channel 9, Tuesday, February 16, 9PM. Marvin X appears in the film. He was blamed for introducing Eldridge Cleaver to the Panthers and simultaneously for "hiding" Cleaver from the Panthers. See his memoir Eldridge Cleaver, My friend the Devil, Black Bird Press, 2009.
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