Lessons from the life of Panther leader Huey P. Newton
1942-1989
By Abayomi Azikiwe
Editor, Pan-African News Wire
Feb 9, 2012
Dr. Huey Percy Newton, the co-founder of the Black Panther Party for
Self-Defense, was born in Monroe, La., on Feb. 17, 1942, the youngest of seven
children born to Walter Newton and Armelia Johnson.
Walter Newton was a hardworking southern African American. According to
Huey, “During those years in Louisiana he worked in a gravel pit, a
carbon plant, in sugar cane mills, and sawmills. This pattern did not change
when we moved to Oakland.” (Revolutionary Suicide, 1973)
“As a youngster,” Newton continued, “I well remember my
father leaving one job in the afternoon, coming home for a while, then going to
the other. In spite of this, he always found time for his family. It was always
high-quality time when he was home.”
Newton also mentioned that his father was a Baptist minister in Louisiana
and in Oakland, Calif., where the family settled in 1945. Oakland was a center
of African-American migration during the 1940s. War production had opened up
new jobs for the working class.
Newton became alienated from his teachers and educational administrators in
the Oakland public school system. He rebelled as an individual, fighting and
defying his instructors.
Newton wrote that in his last year in high school, he was functionally
illiterate. However, his older brother, Melvin, helped him develop an interest
in reading. He studied Plato and Aristotle, became a ferocious reader, and took
up sociology and law in Oakland City College.
Nonetheless, Newton became involved in petty hustling to raise money and so
he could have leisure time to read books and enjoy time free from work.
Eventually he landed in Alameda County Jail in 1964. In 1965 when he got out of
jail, he began to hang out with Bobby Seale, whom he had met earlier.
Becoming disenchanted with existing groups they were active in, the two
aimed at forming an organization that would rely on the most oppressed segments
in the African-American community. Newton wrote, “None of the groups were
able to recruit and involve the very people they professed to represent —
the poor people in the community who never went to college, probably were not
even able to finish high school.”
Origins of the Black Panther Party
The concept of the Black Panther Party grew out of the
Civil Rights struggles in Lowndes County, Ala., in 1965-66. Founded after the
March 1965 Selma to Montgomery march, the Lowndes County Freedom Organization
made an attempt to form an independent, Black-led political party in opposition
to both Democrats and Republicans.
Local activists started the LCFO in cooperation with
organizers from the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee. SNCC leader
Stokely Carmichael and other activists were instrumental in formulating
LCFO’s tactics and strategy.
The concept spread, and by 1966 the Alabama Black Panther
Party had been established. The organization took up arms in defense of the
right of African Americans to organize and to vote. The presence of armed
African Americans caught the imagination of youth around the country. Soon
Black Panther organizations existed around the United States.
Newton and Seale founded the Black Panther Party for Self
Defense in Oakland in October 1966. In California by early 1967, at least three
different groups were organizing around the Black Panther symbol. By 1968, in a
complicated set of historical circumstances that extend beyond the scope of
this article, the most well-known and predominant group within the Black
Panther movement centered around Newton and Seale.
During this period the prevailing philosophy of
nonviolent resistance came under ideological attack within the African-American
community. Rebellions erupted in hundreds of cities between 1963 and
1968.
On Oct. 28, 1967, Newton, then Minister of Defense of the
Black Panther Party, was involved in a shoot-out with police; one officer was
killed and another wounded. Newton was also seriously wounded and spent nearly
three years in the California prison system.
Growth & repression of the
Panthers
During Newton’s 1967-1970 incarceration, the BPP grew
into a national organization, headquartered in Oakland and encompassing some of
the most revolutionary men and women. The FBI, under the administrations of
both Lyndon B. Johnson and Richard M. Nixon, in collusion with local cops,
declared war on the Panthers and other revolutionary African-American
organizations. In that war the police, with FBI coordination, killed dozens of
BPP members, arrested and framed-up hundreds on fabricated criminal charges,
and drove others underground or into exile.
Such pressure from the federal government led to major
political splits within the BPP between 1969 and 1971. In 1969, Stokely
Carmichael resigned along with many of his supporters. In 1971, there was a
split between Newton and Eldridge Cleaver and their respective
supporters.
These developments occurred simultaneously with major
restructuring of the U.S. labor force. Production facilities that had employed
African Americans post-World War II began to relocate outside urban communities
to small towns and other states.
Newton’s tragic death in 1989 must be viewed in this
context. The leader, who had been hounded for years by Oakland authorities, was
killed there on Aug. 22. His death was the result of his involvement with
crack-cocaine drug use, which had devastated the African-American community
throughout the country during the late 1980s.
Nevertheless, the Black Panther Party’s example
remains a high point in the overall struggle against national and class
oppression. The Panthers’ impact and their uncompromising challenges to
the system of capitalist exploitation influenced other oppressed nations,
including Chicanos, Puerto Ricans, Asians, Native peoples and radical
whites.
Today the need for revolutionary organizations is just as
important as, if not more than, it was in the 1960s and 1970s. With the decline
in wages and the rise of social misery among the working class and
impoverished, it is only through the fundamental transformation of U.S. society
that the majority of people inside the country and internationally will be
totally liberated.