Beware of your choice.
Follow @Mazana17Amid Broad Movement Against Police Abuse, Some Act on the Fringe.
As demonstrators flooded the streets of Baton Rouge, La., recently to protest the police killing of a black man there,
about 15 men in black military fatigues broke off on their own. They
marched toward the police station, three of them carrying AR-15 rifles.
They
were members of a group called the People’s New Black Panther Party and
they chanted for freedom for black people. They explained that their
intent was not to harm police officers but to boldly express their
rights to protest and defend themselves.
The
broad movement against police abuse that has grown over the past two
years has drawn a diverse kaleidoscope of activists who are employing an
array of tactics. Among those who are praying, blocking roadways,
crying out on social media and negotiating with elected officials are a
small but fervent few who are channeling the history of militant
resistance in America. They are protesting not just with slogans and
signs, but also with rifles slung over their shoulders and a rebellious
spirit emanating from their throats.
Micah Johnson, the man who killed five police officers in Dallas,
liked two black militant groups on Facebook, but the authorities turned
up no evidence that he or Gavin Long, the troubled man who killed three officers in Baton Rouge,
was a member of any extremist group. Yet the furor over race and
policing appears to have attracted new followers to some seemingly
fringe black power groups.
Some
activists, while distancing themselves from any calls for violence,
argue that the movement is only strengthened by its diversity of
strategies. No single group, they say, can steer the movement away from
its ultimate goal: to end violence against black people and ensure that
they gain control over their lives and communities, after being
relegated to second-class status for centuries.
“All
of those groups are relevant and important to the struggle for black
liberation,” said Cat Brooks, an activist who works closely with the
Black Lives Matter network. “We’ve never been liberated, so we don’t
know how we’re going to get there. We need all hands on deck.”
The
movement has had varying strains from the beginning, as evidenced by
the reaction to the August 2014 shooting of Michael Brown in Ferguson,
Mo. Peaceful street protests were followed by spontaneous vandalism and
looting, which brought widespread attention to the killing and,
eventually, deeper problems confronting black communities nationwide.
At
rallies, there are widespread cries of outrage against the police, for
not valuing black lives, and there are also a few protesters who go
further, shouting for the deaths of officers.
In
the crop of activist groups that sprang up after Ferguson, one of the
earliest to organize was Lost Voices, a collection of young people with a
rebellious edge. They shunned organized street protests and instead
opted for tactics like crowding into a business and chanting loudly
until it had to close its doors. (But they also protected black
businesses from being looted.)
“We
want to keep an uproar,” said one of the founders who goes by the name
Bud Cuzz, adding that he does not condone violence. “We’re not just
trying to get on Twitter and take pictures and type in stuff that we
think sounds good.”
On Wednesday, the Black Youth Project 100, a national coalition, helped to stage occupations
of police unions and departments in cities from New York to Washington
to Oakland, Calif. They were aiming to raise awareness of what they say
is the complicity of police unions in helping officers to get away with
violence.
Ms.
Brooks, who is based in Oakland, co-founded the Anti Police-Terror
Project three years ago to help get black people involved in their
communities. The group, for instance, created a commission of community
members who investigate police shootings, support families of victims
and pressure departments to hold officers accountable.
Yet some fear that the movement against police abuse still has on its periphery some groups with histories of stoking hate.
The
Southern Poverty Law Center, which tracks extremist organizations, said
it counted 180 groups last year that it considered to be black
separatist hate organizations, a 59 percent increase from the previous
year.
“What
we think has happened is that along with real civil rights groups and
movements like Black Lives Matter, black hate groups also profited quite
a bit from all of the attention paid to police violence against black
men,” said Mark Potok, a senior fellow with the center. “They got a huge
boost from Ferguson, Trayvon Martin and the rest.”
The
New Black Panther Party and the Black Riders Liberation Party, both of
which the Dallas gunman, Mr. Johnson, liked on Facebook, are among those
that the center considers hate groups.
In describing them as hate organizations, Mr. Potok pointed to a Vice News interview
from last year with the Riders’ leader in which he repeatedly referred
to the police as pigs and said that once the Black Lives Matter movement
sees the police’s true intentions, it “will eventually see the need to
push for self-defense and revolution.”
He also pointed to a quotation
in which a former New Black Panther leader, Malik Zulu Shabazz,
suggested killing all Zionists in Israel, including their “old ladies”
and “little babies.” And a party leader in Florida put out a $10,000
bounty on the head of George Zimmerman after he was acquitted in 2012 in
the killing of Trayvon Martin. Even members of the original Black
Panther Party have criticized the new group as hateful and racist.
But Mr. Omowale, who said the party’s membership has doubled over the past three years, disputed those characterizations.
On one of its websites,
the party said its objectives included uniting all people of African
descent, overthrowing white racism and imperialism, and ensuring the
educational, cultural and economic advancement of black people.
Mr.
Omowale conceded that some of the party’s past speech could have been
perceived as racist. Khalid Abdul Muhammad, a former Nation of Islam
member who took over the New Black Panthers in the mid-1990s, “was hard
on white people,” Mr. Omowale said.
But
Mr. Omowale said that two years ago, he and other members created the
People’s New Black Panther Party, an offshoot of the New Black Panthers,
which gets away from some of the anti-Zionist and black supremacist
speech. Instead, he said, they focused mostly on community activism.
“We’re trying to educate people on police terrorism,” he said. “We’re trying to educate people on how the system works.”
He
said he considered the party a part of a wider black power movement,
not the Black Lives Matter movement. The truth, however, is that the
movements are “connected whether they want to be connected or not,” he
said. “We’re dealing with the lives of black people who are being
murdered around the country unjustifiably by our police departments.”
One
crucial difference is that his group advocates armed self-defense,
which he said does scare away some people. But the party does not
condone violence, he said, and he disavowed the two men who murdered
police officers.
“That’s
not self-defense,” he said. “That is an offensive position. We’re for
self-defense, meaning if someone puts his hands on you, if someone pulls
a gun on you and you have the means to protect yourself, then by all
means, you protect yourself.”
The
civil rights era saw its share of armed resistance, from the Black
Panthers to the Deacons of Defense, which acted as self-defense groups,
to the smaller, more underground revolutionary proactive violence groups
like the Black Liberation Army.
The
militancy was born of a history of violence against black people, some
African-American academics and activists said, in a country formed by
armed rebellion. And with America’s myriad white militias, they said, it
would be unfair to single out armed black groups as particularly
sinister.
“There
isn’t a marginal segment of militant people,” said Ben Ndugga-Kabuye of
the Black Alliance for Just Immigration, a pro-immigrant and
anti-racism organization. “People are engaged with each other. There’s a
fluidity of people across the movement.”
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