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Paul Robeson Sr — Part 24
Page 53
53 / 101
Published by: the League of struggle ;
. Negro ‘Rights, Nov. 1933
Pr. il-12
Tou Dave noted that in their Projected Negro Republic , they openly advocate
supremacy over the whites ani justify it on the grounis that negroes are 8 major
there. In this Projected Negro Republic they even proposes conf Leca tion of the
Property of the whites and their exclusion from all govermnent sarcoien, bat if |
-sorder te form an independent Negro Fationsl Goverment vould require & mee =
a th. Tht th 2
“el 3G ths Uiited States in which there would be many victing, put considering oo
Kegro os expendable that 1e precisely what they would like to use the negro for:
Now, in order to show you that this was not only their policy in the past but it
their present policy, t will quote from arncther of their major Kegro leadersr -
“The most fundamental and historic contribution of our
Party in the recent period was the hammering out of a
Marrist-Leninist position on the Negro question at the
December, 1946, Plenum, utder the theoretical guidance
and leadership of Comrade Foster in particoter. Our.
position that the Negro question in the United States
ie basically a National question, leading toward self-
determination for the Fegro Majority in the Black Belt
of the South, 1s not only unique, but has for the first
time in our Party's hietory been brought up to date,
and put on an absclutely sound basis,”
Source: POLITICAL AFFAIRS Article
_ By: Benjanin J, Davis
Fron: The Negro People's Liberetios
Movement -- Page 093
Se
” BERJAMIN J, DAVIS, forner Nev York city Councilman, is, as you may know, om
_ OF the leaders of the Peakakill demonstration, To show you also thet Moscow has
Been and still is behind that policy of imciting Negroes to secede from the Unite
Btates, I will quote from a Soviet publication printed in Moscone 7) SET
"The Soviet commentator observes:~ "The cardinal prodlem
ee raiped in Haywood's book ia that of the struggle cf the ~
; 4nerican Negroes for National liberation ani sécial ané fT ,
ss ; political rights. The general upsurge of the novensnt ft
merce for national liberation hae aleo affected the Negro “7 =" 7
. population of the United States. Haywood also telle ué | “
that the American Negroes constitute « rieing young mation,
which like any other nation, met have the right iniepend-
ently to decide ite own destiny, Critisizing the adherents
of liberal half-peasure reforms, the author advocates the
“+ o7-""* eqmplete abolition of that initial obstacle to the libera-
tion of the Negroes, the plantation eysten in the South,”
; oe *arcmoy aida; ‘In the concluding part of hie interesting
TS book, Haywood draws the correct conmlusion that the race
fe nations] meetian can he whe lls acleed onte wet
Satin eel
_ To’. @egialiem, He cites as an example the solution of the \<
i matianal question in the Soviet Union and the absence of
, _ Soviet Bepuhlices anne. ae Deoplen of the Sretaraad
, Boviet Republics, “ .
se we
=
peat
_ mews: ee ee ee
seats a Jee SRE Tm
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