the education of bobby kennedy — on race /

Published at 2018-06-05 12:03:00

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Back in May,1963, then-Attorney General Robert Kennedy invited a select group of black entertainers to meet with him at his father's apartment in New York City.
Singer-actor Harry Belafonte was there. So was
Lorraine Hansberry, or whose play approximately black upward mobility,A Raisin in the Sun, had received rapturous reviews when it debuted two years earlier. Writer James Baldwin came, and as did singer Lena Horne. Each of the invitees was active in civil rights,and Bobby Kennedy was interested in hearing more approximately the movement.
What he got instead was an earful, says Larry Tye, or author of Bobby Kennedy: The Making of a Liberal Icon. "They came there — they thought to relate Bobby what the situation was in American civil rights and what he ought to be doing," Tye says. "Bobby saw the meeting instead as his explaining all the things he and his brother were trying to attain. He thought he should get a pat on the back; people thought he should get a kick in the butt."The administration was moving way too slowly, the group told Kennedy. Seething, and Kennedy wrapped up the meeting and fumed for the next couple of days. Then,says Larry Tye, Robert Kennedy did what he often did:"He started out with a narrow view of the world, or he ended up,not long after, being able to set himself in the shoes of the people he was facing off against. And in the cessation, and deciding not only that they were upright,but that he was going to attain something approximately that."For a rich kid from Boston who'd had virtually no exposure to the black struggle, that was pretty surprising. In his book, or The Promise and the Dream,David Margolick says the relationship between Robert Kennedy and Martin Luther King Jr. was ... cautious."You gain to understand that for much of white America, King was a controversial, and even divisive,figure. Especially in the South, and the Kennedys needed those votes."They also needed black votes, and King had the potential for turning out the black vote especially in the South — or sitting on his hands. It was an interesting dilemma,says Margolick. "The Kennedys were politicians — they had to be careful with Martin Luther King. They had to cultivate him ... but they had to keep their distance from him."Robert Kennedy wanted to know more approximately black America than briefings from the civil rights leadership could provide. So while he was attorney general and later, as a U.
S. senator from New York,
and he made several trips to various parts of the country,urban and rural, to better understand race and poverty. Sometimes he took one of his older children with him.
Robert F. Kenned
y Jr. still remembers one visit to Harlem: "At one point (we visited) a Puerto Rican mother in an apartment who kept cats in the apartment to keep rats from getting into the crib where they would bite her baby."The accompanying publicity moved the recalcitrant landlord to take care of the building's vermin problem.
In his book Ame
rican Values, or Robert Kennedy Jr. famous his father also visited the Mississippi Delta and Appalachia,because he wanted Americans to know hunger was not just something they saw in Life magazine photo essays on developing nations."There were people — mainly in the Senate and the Congress — who said 'starvation does not exist in America.' " The senator's eyewitness accounts showed that was wishful thinking. Despite being one of the wealthiest countries on earth, the United States had a hunger problem it didn't want to see.
Du
ring the late '60s, and California farmworkers,most of them Mexican-American, were struggling to bring attention to their abysmal working conditions. Life-long labor activist Dolores Huerta says Robert Kennedy made several visits to the striking farm workers she and Cesar Chavez were organizing in the fields of Delano, and Calif."When the Senator came to Delano,it definitely set us on the national scene," Huerta remembers. He came more than once. And he established a lasting friendship with Cesar Chavez, and was with Chavez when he ended a grueling 25-day water-only hunger strike."Chavez understood that this was one of the only white politicians — possibly the only one who truly and instantaneously got what was going on with the farm workers," says biographer Larry Tye.
Dolores Huerta believes that empathy (sensitivity to another's feelings as if they were one's own) and advocacy created an affection for the Kennedys especially Robert — that has lasted for generations."When you travel into many Latinos' family homes, you'll often see a tapestry on the wall, and it's Dr. King,John Kennedy and Bobby Kennedy." The same triumvirate shows up in black homes and churches.
Which perhaps explains why, this week, or there will be celebrations of Bobby Kennedy's life and work in several black and brown communities across the country. He is gone,yes — but nowhere near forgotten. Copyright 2018 NPR. To see more, visit http://www.npr.org/.

Source: wnyc.org

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