In late October, we read
and discussed Booker T. Washington's "Atlanta Compromise" speech. As
we saw in class, the speech was and still is not by everyone. In fact,
people, like myself and Zaria, firmly disagree with the "compromise"
Washington wants black people to make in his speech.
In what is regarded as
"one of the most important and influential speeches in American
history", Washington argues that the American negro and America are
comparable to a sailor and lost ship at sea. When the ship and its crew are
lost at sea and dying of thirst, they are told to cast down their buckets where
they are. Once they do this, the sailors realize that the sea water is fresh,
sparkling water.
Following this analogy,
Washington is saying that the American negro is dying of thirst. No, not an
actual thirst for water, but the metaphorical thirst for freedom and civil
rights. The issue is that the negro is being told to "cast down your
buckets where you are". In theory, that sounds like great advice. Washington
attempts to persuade black people that they should cast down their buckets into
“agriculture, mechanics, in commerce, in domestic service, and in the
professions”. This message to the American negro, in that current moment,
culminates with them being told that they should “learn to dignify and glorify
common labour” and “no race can prosper till it learns that there is as much
dignity in tilling a field as in writing a poem”. By this point, this speech is
empowering black people and recognizing the reality of what it means to be
oppressed. He points out how black people are not privileged and will always
start from the bottom thus requiring them to work harder to reach the top one
day. Up until this point, I wholeheartedly agree with Washington. However, that
changes when he addresses “those of the white race” who are listening to him.
When addressing his
white audience, Washington starts making huge concessions to reach a
compromise. I don’t use the word ‘concession’ lightly either. One could even
argue that Washington is using his influence to set his people back rather than
progress toward changes for the betterment of black people. The first
concession is asking white people to “cast down their buckets” among the eight
million negroes in the South. This time though, he is asking for white people
to provide aid to black people – to provide field work and farm land for black
people. And how does Washington justify this? By explaining how good of a slave
black people were. Are you serious? He argues for assistance by saying his
people were really good at being a white man’s property and handling his work?!
This is ridiculous, but it doesn’t end there.
Washington affirms his
previous argument by stating “as we have proved our loyalty to you in the
past”, he offers the following promises:
-
“We shall stand by you
with a devotion that no foreigner can approach”
-
“[We shall] be ready to
lay down our lives, if need be, in your defense”
-
“[We shall] interlac[e]
our industrial, commercial, civil, and religious life with yours”
However, he does provide a catch-all phrase to
these promises by adding “in a way that shall make the interests of both races
one” and “we can be separate as the fingers, yet one as the hand in all things
essential” that suggests these concessions are in fact compromises. But the
only thing being compromised is the national effort for civil rights and
equality.
The issue with these promises is that they sound
like the formation of a codependency between the races, when it is a one-sided
dependency. Black people, as Washington would have it, would rely upon white
people for jobs working the land. Black people would be the best people to work
for white people, since they were outstanding at being enslaved. Black people
would be willing to lay down the lives for the people who provide them work (I
would say boss, but the word in this context is synonymous with master). These
“compromises” don’t empower black people to be independent and embrace
realities, they cripple them.
Most of these black people were born into or
raised in slavery. They may have certain things that they can call their own,
such as their songs or religious practices, but most, if not all, of what made
up a black person was created by white men, So when Washington seeks to interlace
the aforementioned parts of black life with white life, he is going back to way
black people were in slavery. A slave’s religion was interlaced with their
master’s faith. A slave’s commercial and industrial life was founded upon their
master’s. Most of all, a slave’s life was far from being a civil life. Despite
this clear evidence of what this interlacing of the two races will lead to,
Washington still concedes it to white people.
I recognize that Booker T. Washington was
arguing what he thought was best for black people, but I don’t think these
concessions were the best way of pursuing equality. In fact, Washington does
not even touch on black people pursuing equality or progressing toward a future
that is better than their current post-slavery moment. He is persuading black
people to work within the confines of Jim Crow, to embrace the mentality of
separate but equal, and to rely upon the people who enslaved them for work.
Washington’s speech is important and very influential, but for all of the wrong
reasons.
Source: Louis R. Harlan, ed., The Booker T.
Washington Papers, Vol. 3, (Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 1974),
583–587.