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The Birmingham Civil Rights Institute’s Insult to Angela Davis Has Boomeranged

Scholars, activists, and grassroots organizers have flocked to her defense, a testament to the growing strength of intersectional solidarity for Palestinian rights.

Mairav Zonszein

January 15, 2019

Angela Davis speaks during her visit to the University of Michigan in Flint, Michigan, on February 19, 2015. (AP / The Flint Journal, Jake May)

It has been nearly two weeks since the Birmingham Civil Rights Institute walked back its decision to honor renowned scholar, civil-rights activist, and Birmingham, Alabama, native Angela Davis with its annual Fred L. Shuttlesworth Human Rights Award, and yet the BCRI remains embarrassingly silent over what led to the withdrawal. It issued a statement on January 14 through an external PR firm, which is apparently handling all further media inquiries, in which it assumed responsibility and apologized for the poor handling of the award and its aftermath. “In hindsight, more time, conversation and consideration of diverse viewpoints should have informed our decision to rescind our nomination, and we were silent for too long afterward.”

Davis, Birmingham Mayor Randall Woodfin, and local reports all indicate the decision was largely, though not exclusively, due to pressure from Jewish individuals and organizations over Davis’s outspokenness on Palestinian human rights and vocal support for boycott, divestment, and sanctions (BDS) against Israel.

“It’s actually quite exciting.… The issue of Palestinian human rights, and its relation to the struggle for civil rights for people of African descent in this country, is finally being discussed in an open way,” Davis told Democracy Now! on January 11, adding that the BCRI’s decision appears to be an effort to sabotage black solidarity with Palestine. “This was not primarily an assault against me as an individual; it was an assault against a whole generation of activists who have come to recognize how important internationalism is,” Davis said.

In its cryptic announcement on Saturday, January 5, the BCRI stated that individuals and organizations from “both inside and outside of our local community” had requested that the award to Davis be reconsidered. “Upon closer examination of Ms. Davis’ statements and public record, we concluded that she unfortunately does not meet all of the criteria on which the award is based,” but the BCRI did not specify what those criteria are. Several attempts to reach BCRI CEO Andrea Taylor were met with an initial willingness and then a drawn-out refusal to comment, as the story quickly became much more explosive than the BCRI likely anticipated.

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Davis and others have cited an article in the Birmingham-based outlet Southern Jewish Life from December 23 criticizing the choice to honor Davis, penned by its editor, Larry Brook—who told The Nation he has been careful not to call her an anti-Semite. It outlines aspects of Davis’s activism and political opinions that are common knowledge, including her support for Palestinian-American Rasmea Odeh, her incarceration nearly 50 years ago, and her former membership in the Communist Party. Reports in the Alabama outlet AL.com named the Birmingham Jewish Federation as one of the organizations expressing dismay at the choice of Davis, along with the Birmingham Holocaust Education Center, which sent a letter to BCRI on January 2 specifying Davis’s support for BDS, which is “very troubling as it targets the Jewish people exclusively.” Both organizations were approached and refused to provide comment.

Maybe even more egregious than the BCRI decision itself is the fact that, as a museum dedicated to the heritage of the civil-rights movement and which honors figures who have spoken truth to power, it has left the matter shrouded in secrecy, dodging accountability and leaving plenty of room for speculation.

“The outrage has come from lack of transparency behind the decision,” DeJuana Thompson, a political organizer in Birmingham who grew up around the corner from Davis’s family, told The Nation. Thompson, who is part of the reconstituted Birmingham Committee for Truth and Reconciliation (it had been active at the height of the civil-rights movement in the 1960s), which is organizing an alternative event in February to honor Davis, said the news impacted her personally. “The BCRI has always held a significant place in my heart. It helped craft my activism learning about our leaders.… This is not the BCRI that I have known.”

For Thompson, the priority is honoring Davis in her hometown and showing that the BCRI decision does not speak for the community. “What I know to be true is that the silencing of black leaders and black women has been a perpetual thing—particularly in the South—for decades.” She says there is a diverse and inclusive group involved in organizing the alternative event, including Jewish residents.

Some media coverage, specifically reacting to Birmingham Mayor Woodfin’s initial statement attributing the decision to pressure from the “local Jewish community and some of its allies,” has presented a narrative in which Jews were collectively blamed for the decision. The Forward, for example, had a short news item with the misleading and inflammatory headline, “Birmingham Mayor Blames Only Some Jews for Angela Davis Controversy.” The mayor, who is also an ex-officio member of the BCRI board, issued another statement in which he clarified that he was not suggesting that the entire Jewish community pressured the BCRI, as it is “not monolithic in thought,” and emphasized that this is not a “clash of cultures, ethnic groups, or races” but rather a crisis in the BCRI leadership. He requested that BCRI release to the public the minutes of its board meetings from September to January 5, and also issue an apology to the community-at-large for its poor handling of the situation. (The City of Birmingham is the BCRI’s largest donor.)

Three of the BCRI’s top board members resigned on January 9, following protests from local activists who have called on the entire BCRI leadership to resign. The alternative, free, and open event to honor Davis—which she confirmed she will attend—has already been scheduled for February 16, the same date as the canceled BCRI gala. The Birmingham City Council unanimously approved a resolution of support for “the civil rights icon.” The pro-BDS Jewish Voice for Peace circulated a letter of support for Davis signed by over 500 academics that specifies, “The decision seems to stem from a misinformed view that to advocate for Palestinian human rights is somehow offensive to the Jewish community.” The Jewish anti-occupation group IfNotNow, which does not endorse BDS, announced that it will award Davis a symbolic medal of honor, stating, “We cannot let the Jewish establishment and Christian Zionists use her support for Palestinian human rights as a reason to deny her the recognition she deserves.”

Even without all the facts out in the open, this incident is not occurring in a vacuum. It is the latest in a long-standing and widespread campaign to shut down those who are critical of Israeli policies and, specifically, those who promote Palestinian equal rights and BDS. Between 2014 and 2017, the nonprofit organization Palestine Legal dealt with nearly 1,000 incidents of censorship, intimidation, and suppression targeting speech supportive of Palestinian rights. “The Klan used to try and terrorize people who spoke out against racial terror and racial segregation, and unfortunately, the same tactics are being used here,” says Alicia Garza, co-founder of Black Lives Matter and strategy and partnerships director with the National Domestic Workers Alliance.

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The most glaring recent example of such efforts is the push to penalize those who boycott Israel through the Senate’s S1 Combating BDS Act, which has thus far stalled because of the government shutdown, as well as the fact that it pits the pro-Israel establishment directly against free speech—a red line for Democrats.

Less than two months ago, CNN terminated its contract with commentator Marc Lamont Hill, a professor of media studies and urban education at Temple University, after Hill gave a speech at the United Nations in which he called for a “free Palestine from the river to the sea.” Hill has since apologized if his word choice was misconstrued as a call to harm Jews and clarified that he sees a binational state as the only way to guarantee equality and justice for Israelis and Palestinians.

“We are in a perilous moment where critiques of the Israeli state are very quickly being reframed and miscategorized as acts of anti-Semitism,” Hill told The Nation. “We can fight against anti-Semitism relentlessly and still have profound, deep critiques of Israeli state practice.”

Hill doesn’t think people are being targeted because they are black. “I think people are being targeted because of the political possibilities that exist when you begin to see intersectional alliances resisting the Israeli state project,” he said, echoing Davis’s work linking the liberation struggles in South Africa, Ferguson, and Palestine. Hill said that if the BCRI’s decision to rescind its award to Davis was in fact because of her position on Palestine, it’s a testament to the effectiveness of BDS. “As much as people want to pretend BDS and international solidarity aren’t working, there’s something about this moment that suggests that the resistance to current political arrangements is working and gaining traction,” Hill said.

In the post-Ferguson, post–Gaza war era, and the current Trump-Netanyahu era, the Palestinian struggle against Israeli state violence and inequality has assumed increasing visibility in progressive spaces of US discourse, particularly in the Black Lives Matter movement and the Women’s March, and more recently in the halls of Congress. As Noura Erakat, a Palestinian-American assistant professor at George Mason University, told The Nation, “The opposition is anxious—to be so non-strategic and go after Davis means they are desperate and not thinking clearly.”

It is worth noting that even as the BCRI and those who exerted pressure on it to rescind the award are under increasing fire and rightly on the defensive, it is in fact Mayor Woodfin, Marc Lamont Hill, and Angela Davis herself who have displayed sensitivities to Jewish concerns, addressing the need to combat anti-Semitism and to engage in dialogue about its place within the larger context of anti-racism and anti–white supremacist struggles in the United States. As Davis said, “Jews were the first white people to speak up in the civil-rights era, to speak against racism. I think we need to engage in the kind of conversation that will reveal the true meaning of anti-Semitism and help us to extricate ourselves from this McCarthyite effort to equate boycott strategies and solidarity strategies with anti-Semitism.” It is also worth noting that Birmingham’s first African-American mayor, who oversaw the founding of the BCRI in 1992, said the original inspiration came after his predecessor visited the Yad Vashem Holocaust Memorial in Israel and returned home with the idea of establishing a civil-rights museum.

A month into Davis’s 18-month incarceration, in November 1970, James Baldwin penned a letter to Davis in which he identified the same issues we are facing today: “What the Americans do not realize is that a war between brothers, in the same cities, on the same soil, is not a racial war but a civil war. But the American delusion is not only that their brothers all are white but that the whites are all their brothers.”

Mairav ZonszeinMairav Zonszein is an Israeli-American journalist who writes about Israeli politics, American foreign policy, and human rights. A blogger and contributing editor for +972 Magazine, she has also written for The New York Times, The Washington Post, and The New York Review of Books, among others.


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