Townhall.com, Where Your Opinion Counts
Talk Radio:   Bill Bennett   Mike Gallagher   Dennis Prager   Michael Medved   Hugh Hewitt   
BREAKING NEWS  LeftArrow - Townhall.com : Conservative, Political, Republican   RightArrow - Townhall.com : Conservative, Political, Republican  
Columns, funnies & more in your inbox!
  • Check the boxes and send us your email address to receveive your free newsletter
  • Your daily must-read of conservative columns, cartoons and news. Coulter, Sowell, Krauthammer and more.
  • Townhall.com’s weekly inside scoop on what’s happening behind the scenes in the world of politics. When news breaks, we report.
  • Signup to receive the latest daily Townhall cartoons
Monday, February 18, 2008
Harry R. Jackson, Jr. :: Townhall.com Columnist
The NAACP Finally Gets it Right
by Harry R. Jackson, Jr.
Vote on It:
Average Vote:
[+] Text [-]
 
Poll
Was the Copenhagen Global Warming Summit Walk-Out a Win for the U.S.?


This year’s NAACP 39th Image Award ceremony named the movie “The Great Debaters” as the best film of 2007. In addition, acting prizes went to its stars Denzel Washington, Jurnee Smollett and teenager Denzel Whitaker. “The Great Debaters” celebrates the values that made the Civil Rights Movement powerful. The movie reminds all Americans of the caliber of people who led the early fight for civil rights. Their courage, commitment to excellence, and refusal to be denied are fundamental marks of greatness. The NAACP is to be commended for recognizing the power of this movie.

My hope is that this film will help call the next generation of civil rights activists back to the core values that made them so influential and transformative to our nation. Previous NAACP Image Awards, on the other hand, have often celebrated people who simply have made commercial successes in the entertainment industry.

This inspiring film told the story of a black debate team in the 1930s. The true story chronicled a year in the life of students from Wiley College in Texas. These students and their coach overcame great odds to defeat the all-white, Harvard University debate team at the Harvard campus. The movie painted a clear picture of race relations in that period. In addition, it also gave a biographical look into what it took for blacks to excel in the pre-civil rights South.

The movie had three endearing qualities. First, it had a great plot. Second it shared an important history lesson, as it entertained. Third, the movie spotlighted several characters that should serve as role models for both young and old people of every race. I was intrigued that the most touching role model was Dr. James Farmer, Jr. In real life, the 14-year old Farmer starred on his college debate team. The film chronicles how one year’s competition and the civil rights struggles of his day left an indelible imprint upon Farmer. The end of the movie reveals that he later became the founder of CORE (Congress Of Racial Equality) which now operates in five nations in addition to the U.S.

Although CORE was not the first civil rights organization or the largest, it has consistently raised a moral and conservative banner. In this way CORE remains a model for other civil rights groups to follow. In addition to CORE and the NAACP, there have been other organizations that have made ongoing contributions to the battle for African-American civil rights. The Urban League and the Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC) are two additional organizations that come to mind.

Interestingly CORE stands out because it has managed to approach the elimination of discrimination and hatred with a decidedly conservative political and moral approach. Dr. Farmer began the organization in 1942. This organization was up and running years before Dr. King came on the scene. CORE was part of a major grassroots movement that spread like wild fire across the nation.

Many remember CORE the most for their work in the Deep South during the summer of 1964. They led something called Freedom Summer. Working with the NAACP, The Student Non-violent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) and other groups, CORE was able to establish 30 schools in Mississippi to help train black kids in basic academics. In addition, they created a new political party – the Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party (MFDP). Their party registered 80,000 voters and had a national voice in that year’s Democratic Convention through delegate Fannie Lou Hamer.

The Civil Rights Movement made major strides that summer, yet there was a terrible cost. Thirty-seven churches, 30 black homes and businesses were bombed or burned, and over 1,000 students were arrested. The most horrific aspect of the summer is that three of their workers were murdered - a black volunteer (James Chaney) and white volunteers (Andrew Goodman and Michael Swerner).

As the years have progressed CORE has not sought excessive entitlement programs. Its leaders have sought equality and opportunity for African Americans and people of African descent around the world.

Niger Innis, national spokesperson for CORE, says that, “bootstrap conservatism” is the philosophy of engagement that has permeated the way that CORE views the world. Their web site records that “CORE seeks to establish, in practice, the inalienable right for all people to determine their own destiny…. CORE feels that the most important fundamental freedom for all people is the right to govern themselves. Once this simple ideal is realized, other necessary freedoms will automatically follow.”

CORE believes that the final frontier for the Civil Rights Movement has to do with financial literacy and financial services offered to minorities. The sub-prime mortgage crisis has disproportionately impacted the black community. Further, traditional banking institutions have failed to reach out to hard-working minorities and their families. Something akin to the micro-financing phenomenon, which is occurring in third world nations, needs to occur in the U.S. Small, uncollateralized loans for households and businesses need to be developed. Underlying all of this must be intensive financial training that helps blacks and other minorities make the right financial choices.

Today CORE operates in Kenya, Nigeria, South Africa, Uganda, and the Caribbean, while maintaining their base in the United States.

For all the reasons outlined in this article, I hope that all the major civil rights organizations of our day will return to their roots and live out the values of “The Great Debaters.” If you have not seen this movie make it a point to do so soon. It’s worth the time. The NAACP got it right this time!

Share:
Vote on It:
Average Vote:
 
About The Author

Bishop Harry Jackson is chairman of the High Impact Leadership Coalition and senior pastor of Hope Christian Church in Beltsville, MD, and co-authored, Personal Faith, Public Policy [FrontLine; March 2008] with Tony Perkins, president of the Family Research Council.

Be the first to read Harry Jackson's column. Sign up today and receive Townhall.com delivered each morning to your inbox.

A revolutionary not a conservative
Jackson’s error is equating the values of the protagonist, played by Washington, with the values of CORE. The values of the real-life English teacher and debate coach were 180 degrees from the values that Harry R. Jackson Jr. is even advocating. The real-life Melvin B. Tolson was also a radical labor organizer who spent his spare time organizing white and black sharecroppers in the oppressive and impoverished Jim Crow South of the Great Depression. The values he emphasized were those of confrontation and struggle, not So-called “bootstrap conservatism.” The Jim Crow South demanded radical change not conservation of traditional values and status quo. As a radical reformer, Tolson demonstrated that blacks are capable of achieving when properly tutored and guided. He had faith in his students when the pervasive racism of the time was driven by Social Darwinism and biological reductionism. Tolson is the true role model for every new generation of social activists. Chaka Z.

THE TRUTH
Black organizations still don't have it RIGHT.In the hay-day of the KKK,the members would BEAT white men,who did not work.Today only Bill Cosby takes the chance of attacking the "Ills" of the Black community.Courage is what is needed by Black organizations and the community they serve.A movie, that glorifies success,without adequately showing the sacrifices required to get there, is not a "TOOL' but just a MOVIE.Everyone in WHITE America was prepared to make a commitment to a better life.A moral life, absent of excuses,this maybe helpful to the NAACP and Others..We don't have much time for "Grown-Ups" to GROW-UP!!!SORRY...

Chaka Z.: Get Out Of Our Sandbox

Why should we believe you over a bona fide conservative advocate and published author?

In case you have not noticed, Townhall.com promotes the empirical success of conservatism over the train wreck of socialism.

Get out of our sandbox.

The commie-lib sandbox is the one over there in the corner that the cats use as a litter box.

No, over there...the one bursting at the seams with all the bullies and intellectually challeged children.

chaka zulu writes:
I feel so sorry for this one. Immersed in moral relativism. Cause so and so did this one time his entire lifetime of achievements is negated. My God!! One gets so tired of the moan and groaners. I'm glad you are brilliant, now will you simply stare in a mirror and amaze yourself.

I for one picked the positive points from Mr. Jackson's article. He mentioned the small loan program to third world. It's called Kiva and can be found at http://www.kiva.org, I've know about it for a couple years and currently have 11 loans out to primarily South American this cycle. Other cycles I have concentrated in Africa, Southeast Asia and the countries that end in stan. I challenge you to do the same.

I'm glad the NAACP recognized
The Great Debaters, as the vaunted Academy Awards has chosen to not honor any positive film from the 2007 season, let alone a production with black actors and a civil rights theme.

The Great Debaters features Denzel Washington and Forest Whiitaker, both well established and Oscar-winning actors of the highest calibre.

The theme of civil rights struggle in the South during Jim Crowe/segregation of the 1930s is a strong presentation for both people who remember the time period and for younger audiences that find civil rights a history lesson.

Because the story emphasizes the development of college students as they progress as debaters, the problems and conflicts of the time are dramtically portrayed rather than expounded on.

The high standards the team must meet also reinforce the message, that's always current, of producing excellence in performance to receive excellent in rewards.

Anyone who hasn't seen this film should make every effort to view it. The movie is now available on dvd. And the NAACP should be acknowledged for their high standards in choosing The Great Debaters.

It's all about fishing
Seems to me the difference in a civil rights organization rooted in conservatism and one rooted in liberalism is that conservatism seeks to “…teach a man to fish,” so to speak, while liberals teach people how to take a fish that someone else has caught.

How much better off the African-American population might be today if CORE (which I’d never heard of until now) had emerged as the driver of the movement rather than groups like the Rainbow Coalition? But then a movement that sacrifices instant gratification for lasting values naturally has trouble competing with those that offer something for nothing and are based on perpetual victim hood.

That being said, I do take issue with this statement: “Further, traditional banking institutions have failed to reach out to hard-working minorities and their families.”

I worked in banking from the mid 80’s to the mid 90’s and witnessed the difficult catch-22 situation that banks were in. They had to prove that they were lending to minorities based upon their proportion to the population in the area, even though minorities were disproportionately unable to meet the underwriting guidelines established by banking regulators.

The sub-prime mortgage crisis is an example of what happens when banks loosen lending guidelines to lend to people who might otherwise not qualify. Now they are under fire, and rightly so, and tax payers may end up unfairly footing some of the bill.

If minorities want fair and equal access to loans then they must first raise their level of education and earnings power. Since banks love to make loans to anyone who qualifies, the rest will follow naturally.

Denzel?
They're all called Denzel now?

Acting and story was great, but . . .
Hey, I can't help it -- didn't like the socialist message. Tainted the story for me. I know that this is politically incorrect. And so sorry for it. Made me really depressed in that I wonder if black folks will EVER begin to favor real capitalism. It's a tragic legacy left by those damn fool mighty whitey types around Louisiana. Seems like this minority group is destined to live on the govt. plantation for every.

On the bright side, acting was great and the courage of the debaters was depicted well. Very brave kids. And it least there was some emphasis placed on the value of intellectualism, even if it was of a pseudo nature.

Agreed that it was worth seeing.

does it make sense?
Phil 3:13-14
3 Brothers, I do not consider myself yet to have taken hold of it. But one thing I do: Forgetting what is behind and straining toward what is ahead, 14 I press on toward the goal to win the prize for which God has called me heavenward in Christ Jesus.
NIV
If you keep whinning and looking for faults...living to worship failures and mistakes of those in the past, the dream of a better day will never be obtained...because your running backwards.

One thing wrong
There is one big thing wrong with this picture, the debate NEVER took place....They has a debate with a Southern California team NOT a Harvard debate team.

Maddox
Interesting remark Maddox, I looked it up after the movie and your are absolutely correct. There were other dramatic liberties taken by the producer. Still a quality pic though.

Keep on pressin' on
One great aspect of truth is that it applies equally to all men. Books have been written about the struggle of minorities of various make-up forever and more can be written. The story of Wilberforce and the fight for slavery abolition in England was not accomplished without much effort. The civil war should tally a tad on the reparations demanded by the oppressed. Don't ever think that injustice goes unpunished or that right and truth do not ultimately prevail. There is a being with all power Who tends to make the out come certain so that He is satisfied. Live right, fear God, do not demand special treatment, be grateful for what you have and you will be given more. The equal rights movement, please correct me if I am wrong, is about fair and unbiased treatment of all U.S. citizens as put forth in the constitution. All citizens treated uniformly no matter what race or gender. All discrimination should be exposed, prosecuted, and eliminated wherever found. Now, explain to me how special protection/special treatment does anything at all but hurt the very group that was to be benefited and generate reverse discrimination?

question
davpatt3
How do you accomplish "equal rights" by giving special treatment to certain classes? Affirmative action, hate crime legislation, quotas etc.

maddox
Why are you asking davpatt3 this rhetorical question? I see nothing in his post advocating afirmative action or hate crime legislation.

The one antidote -work !!!!!
What ails black America ? Sloth. A sense of entitlement.

I find it amusing how they always find a way to blame whites for all their problems.

Slavery was 200 years ago! Get over it. Get up every morning & get to work!

maddox writes:
One thing wrong
There is one big thing wrong with this picture, the debate NEVER took place....They has a debate with a Southern California team NOT a Harvard debate team.

The same thing happened with the book vs movie "Pursuit of Happyness"! Chris Gardner was from Milwalkee WN not Louisiana. His step dad was an illiterate abusive drunk which helped shape his character. The movie was uplifting though for the way it protrayed his rise from the streets to running his own company. Hard work paid off as it usually does.

reminds me
This case of fake debates reminds me of Alex Hailey and his book "Roots", he plagiarized his writings from another book called "The African" written quite a few years before, the author of The African took him to court and was awarded at least a million bucks.
Next thing we know, Shakespeare will turn out to be a Zulu.

Look 2D past
Let's look to our past to redesign our future!

B Real; Let's look to our past?
What happens when you find hate...do you redesign it to cover racism, bigotry, and blatant lies that are part of what you esteem? What happens when you find those flaws...the type that goes against biblical principles? “We hold these truths self evident…that all men are created”…but in America we practice hatred of Gods creation…and find ways to deny and mask it. Bottom line…hate has one final objective…murder. So when someone says…the KKK or the NAACP finally got it right…does that mean there’s a lot of dead bodies to clean up?
Currently America is at war…against a people whose purpose in life is to hate and murder. Even after trillions of dollars are spent on the war of hate…those same people are still convinced they're right…because that hate feels real good to them, but little do we realize we suffer from the same disease.
Sign Up to Post Your CommentsSign Up to Post Your Comments
If you are already registered, click here to login. Otherwise, please take a few seconds to register with Townhall.com. Once you sign up, you’ll be able to post your comments immediately, use the action center, get podcasts, and more!
Note: Fields marked with a red asterisk (*) are required.
Salutation:
First Name:
*
Last Name:
*
Email:
*
Nickname:
*
Note: Nick name will be shown when you post comments.
Address 1:
*
Address 2:
City:
*
State:
*
Zip:
*
Phone:
      
Your daily must-read of conservative columns, cartoons and news. Coulter, Sowell, Krauthammer and more.
(Bi-Weekly) We highlight the best opportunities from our partners for surveys, action items and more.