“I Wish Obama Would Listen to MLKâ€
AMY GOODMAN: My next guest for the rest of the hour is Howard Zinn, one of the country’s most celebrated historians. His classic work, A People’s History of the United States, changed the way we look at history in
After serving as a shipyard worker and then an Air Force bombardier in World War II, Howard Zinn went on to become a lifelong dissident and peace activist. He went to college under the GI Bill, received his PhD from
Howard Zinn has received the Thomas Merton Award, the Eugene V. Debs Award, the Upton Sinclair Award, and the Lannan Literary Award. He is the author of many books, including the People’s History Series; a seven-volume series on the Radical ’60s; several collections of essays on art, war, politics and history; and the plays Emma and Marx in Soho.
This year, a documentary based on the live performances of Howard Zinn’s A People’s History of the United States and Voices of a People’s History of the United States is premiering on History, the History Channel. It’s called The People Speak. It’s co-directed by Howard Zinn, Anthony Arnove and Chris Moore. It will feature dramatic performances chronicling the history of the country from actors like Matt Damon and Josh Brolin and Viggo Mortensen and Marisa Tomei and Don Cheadle and Jasmine Guy and Kerry Washington and musicians like Bruce Springsteen and Eddie Vedder and John Legend.
Well, Howard Zinn is in
Welcome, Howard.
HOWARD ZINN: Thank you, Amy. Happy to be here.
AMY GOODMAN: It’s great to have you with us. In that introduction before, you have Eddie Vedder singing Bob Dylan, “Masters of War,” part of the—
HOWARD ZINN: That’s part of the documentary, yeah, singing Dylan’s song “Masters of War.” I think we had Dylan listen to Eddie Vedder sing the song, and we asked Bob Dylan if he wanted to sing it. And he said, “No, that’s good. Let Eddie sing it.” And so, we have Bob Dylan singing a Woody Guthrie song in the film, “Do Re Mi,” one of Woody Guthrie’s famous songs.
AMY GOODMAN: Talk about this whole series and this—I mean, this is just growing. The People’s History of the United States is a remarkable book that really—well, why don’t you describe the philosophy, your approach to
HOWARD ZINN: Yeah. Well, of course, the idea of A People’s History is to go beyond what people have learned in school and what I learned in school or most people learned in school, and that is history through the eyes of the presidents and the generals in the battles fought in the Civil War, and we want the voices of people, of ordinary people, of rebels, of dissidents, of women, of black people, of Asian Americans, of immigrants, of socialists and anarchists and troublemakers of all kinds. And so, we decided to put together—Anthony Arnove and I put together 200 documents. Seven Stories Press agreed to put it out. And these 200 documents are the letters and memoirs and reminiscences of people who stood up against the establishment.
Now, we have, for instance, a black woman recalling growing up in the South, in the segregated South, and walking to school to her black segregated school and having to walk through a white playground, where she wanted to walk—wanted to go on the swings, couldn’t do it because she couldn’t stop in this white playground. And she went into school and refused to sing “The Star-Spangled Banner.” And they asked her why. She said, “Because so long as I can’t go on this swing, there’s no liberty and justice for all.” And so, we have—that’s just one of the many readings in our book.
And in this Young People’s History that we are launching tonight at the
AMY GOODMAN: You write in the introduction to A Young People’s History of the United States, “Over the years, some people have asked me: ‘Do you think that your history, which is radically different than the usual histories of the
HOWARD ZINN: Yeah, it’s true that people have asked that question again and again. You know, should we tell kids that Columbus, whom they have been told was a great hero, that
And I think the answer is: we should be honest with young people; we should not deceive them. We should be honest about the history of our country. And we should be not only taking down the traditional heroes like Andrew Jackson and Theodore Roosevelt, but we should be giving young people an alternate set of heroes.
Instead of Theodore Roosevelt, tell them about Mark Twain. Mark Twain—well, Mark Twain, everybody learns about as the author of Tom Sawyer and Huckleberry Finn, but when we go to school, we don’t learn about Mark Twain as the vice president of the Anti-Imperialist League. We aren’t told that Mark Twain denounced Theodore Roosevelt for approving this massacre in the
We want to give young people ideal figures like Helen Keller. And I remember learning about Helen Keller. Everybody learns about Helen Keller, you know, a disabled person who overcame her handicaps and became famous. But people don’t learn in school and young people don’t learn in school what we want them to learn when we do books like A Young People’s History of the United States, that Helen Keller was a socialist. She was a labor organizer. She refused to cross a picket line that was picketing a theater showing a play about her.
And so, there are these alternate heroes in American history. There’s Fannie Lou Hamer and Bob Moses. They’re the heroes of the civil rights movement. There are a lot of people who are obscure, who are not known. We have in this Young People’s History, we have a young hero who was sitting on the bus in
AMY GOODMAN: Howard, we’re going to break and then come back. But the break is a part of the performance of The People Speak. Howard Zinn is our guest, the legendary historian. New book, A Young People’s History of the United States. Stay with us.
[break]
AMY GOODMAN: Black Crowes’ Chris and Rich Robinson, singing Neil Young’s song “Ohio” about what happened on May 4th, 1970, the Kent State shootings. And I urge you to go to our website at democracynow.org to hear Alan and Chic Canfora. Alan was shot that day. When we were on our “Community Voices, Community Media” tour, we spoke to him on the campus at
And tomorrow, May 14th, is the anniversary of the Jackson State College, now
Our guest today is Howard Zinn, the legendary historian, wrote A People’s History of the United States. And now there are all these adaptations. Today, he is launching A Young People’s History of the United States, which is adapted by Rebecca Stefoff.
But you are a great chronicler of the civil rights movement.
HOWARD ZINN: Yeah, well, it’s a very common thing in history to ignore the things that happen to black people. And, of course, the
AMY GOODMAN: Or February 8th, 1968, the Orangeburg Massacre in
HOWARD ZINN: Yeah.
AMY GOODMAN: The police opened fire. Three dead.
HOWARD ZINN: Yeah. And, well, you know, it wasn’t until I went south to teach in a black college that I, myself, became aware of the black history that has been left out of our history books. And I went through graduate school at
I mean, for instance, I read a historian named Rayford Logan, who was giving the history of the early part of the twentieth century, which in traditional American history courses is called the Progressive Era. The Progressive Era. He pointed out that in the so-called Progressive Era, more black people were lynched than in any other era in American history. So, that distortion of our history that takes place when we do it through race, colored lines.
AMY GOODMAN: Alice Walker talked about you as one of her great teachers at Spelman. But you were kicked out of Spelman, though you were recently honored there.
HOWARD ZINN: Well, let’s not use the word “kicked out.”
AMY GOODMAN: Oh, excuse me.
HOWARD ZINN: In the academic world, we have polite terms: “His contract was not renewed.”
AMY GOODMAN: Fired and sacked.
HOWARD ZINN: Yes, fired and sacked. But, as you pointed out before, forty-two years after I was fired, I was called back to be given an honorary degree and to give the commencement speech. So, you know, sometimes—
AMY GOODMAN: Why were you kicked out? Why were you—why was your contract not renewed?
HOWARD ZINN: Well, the students at Spelman College rose up out of that very tranquil and controlled atmosphere at the college during the sit-ins and went into town, got arrested, they came back fired up and determined to change the conditions of their lives on campus, which were very, very antiquated. And they sort of—like a nunnery, they were living in. And so, they rebelled against the administration. I supported them in their rebellion, and I was too much for the administration of the college.
AMY GOODMAN: I want to turn to excerpts from the forthcoming documentary inspired by People’s History. It’s called The People Speak, co-directed with Anthony Arnove and Chris Moore. The following excerpt includes the voices of Danny Glover reading John Lewis during the civil rights movement, Michael Ealy reading Malcolm X. It begins with actor Josh Brolin reading Mark Twain’s response in 1906 to President Theodore Roosevelt’s congratulations to General Wood, whose troops had just massacred 600 Filipino villagers.
JOSH BROLIN: [reading Mark Twain] The official report stated that it ended with a complete victory for the American arms, that of the 600 Moros, not one was left alive. Hoo-yah. So far as I can find out, there was only one person among our 80 millions who allowed himself the privilege of a public remark on this great occasion, and that was the President of the
HOWARD ZINN: Here, Malcolm X, who became a hero to a whole generation of African Americans speaks his mind in
MICHAEL EALY: [reading Malcolm X] I am telling you, you don’t know what a revolution is, because when you find out what it is, you’ll get back in the alley, and you’ll get out of the way. You haven’t got a revolution that doesn’t involve bloodshed. And you’re afraid to bleed. I said you’re afraid to bleed. Long as the white man sends you to
DANNY GLOVER: [reading John Lewis] To those who say, “Be patient and wait,” we must say that patience is a dirty and nasty word. We cannot be patient. We do not want to be free gradually. We want our freedom, and we want it now. We cannot depend on any political party, for both the Democratic and Republican Party have betrayed the basic principles of the Declaration of Independence. We won’t stop now. The time will come when we will not confine our marches to
AMY GOODMAN: Danny Glover, reading a young John Lewis, the congressman from
HOWARD ZINN: No, the speech was given—
AMY GOODMAN: In that way.
HOWARD ZINN: —but it was truncated, it was censored. The most militant parts of the speech offended or worried some of the black leaders in the March on
AMY GOODMAN: This was Dr. King’s famous “I Have a Dream” speech, where he delivered his.
HOWARD ZINN: That’s right. That’s where he gave his “I Have a Dream” speech. And John Lewis was representing, you know, the young angry people of the South and the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee. And his speech was a more revolutionary speech. And of course he denounced both parties and so on. And some of the—yeah, and so, you know, some of the leaders of the NAACP and the Urban League and the more conservative black leaders said, “We have to cut out some of this.” So, we are trying, in our documentary, to bring back those parts of his speech which were most revolutionary and which they cut out of the
AMY GOODMAN: Well, at the Democratic convention in
HOWARD ZINN: I wish President Obama would listen carefully to Martin Luther King. I’m sure he pays verbal homage, as everyone does, to Martin Luther King, but he ought to think before he sends missiles over
AMY GOODMAN: When Barack Obama was running for president, asked in the debates who would MLK endorse, who would Dr. King endorse, he said, “None of us.”
HOWARD ZINN: Yeah, that’s true, because King believed—and this actually is one of the themes of our people’s history, is that you cannot depend on presidents, and you cannot depend on elections and voting to solve your problems. People themselves, organizing, demonstrating, clamoring, they are the only ones who can push the President and push Congress into change. And that’s what we have to do now with Obama. We have to point to what Obama said in the course of the campaign, when he said we not only have to get out of
AMY GOODMAN: How?
HOWARD ZINN: Well, these people that I saw on your program earlier who were demonstrating for the single-payer health system, which Obama is very, very reluctant to endorse, they were doing what needs to be done. They were committing acts of civil disobedience. They were going into offices where they were told to leave, and they wouldn’t leave. They were doing what we were doing during the movement against the war in
AMY GOODMAN: What’s the alternative to war with
HOWARD ZINN: Well, the alternative to war is to send food and medicine. I was with a taxi driver from
We ought to stop thinking that we must have military solutions to the problems that we face in the world. The solutions that we need are the solutions of dealing with sickness and disease and hunger. That’s fundamental. If you want to end terrorism—
AMY GOODMAN: I’m telling you, the great historian, you have five seconds.
HOWARD ZINN: If you want to end terrorism, you have to stop being terrorists, which is what war is.
AMY GOODMAN: Howard Zinn, he’ll be tonight at






Response to Peter
By Street, Paul at May 15, 2009 09:35 AM
Peter, as Obama himself said during the campaign, "words mattter.""I wish President Obama would listen carefully to Martin Luther King" is (to me at least) an unfortunate choice of words, as was "He ought to ask, 'What would Martin Luther King do? And what would Martin Luther King say?'" and as was "very reluctant" to push single payer (Obama is a dedicated enemy of single payer).... My strong sense is that Obama (with whom I am quite familiar from Illinois and Chicago in the late 1990s on) knows King's positions pretty well ----and rejects them in accord with his "deepy conservative" commitment to Empire and Inequality, Inc. . Anyway, I made 8 substantive points you dont feel terribly compelled to address and you end up asserting something I agree with at the outset: the overall wonderful-ness of professor Zinn, whose People's History was a regular assignment of mine in a different life. It's never fun to seem to be raining on a parade, but at this point we might as well get as brutally honest as we can about what passes for left culture in this country.
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Eight Points
By Street, Paul at May 14, 2009 12:34 PM
Nice interview with a legitimate legend of the U.S. and world Left (and one of my intellectual heroes)...but: (1) let's go with "kicked out" and mention others kicked out since 1963 and today; (2) we don't need to talk to the president of the U.S. ("speaking truth to power" is a waste of time)... we need to talk to fellow citizens and eachother about the need to re-build the left and re-organize rank-and-file resistance and grassroots activism ---- what Zinn (in People's History and elsewhere) talks about as the only real source of progressive change; (3) asking a masterful politician like Obama to heed the call of a great social justice leader like King is (as Dr. Adolph Reed Jr. has argued) not that far from asking an apple to be an orange (4) a better analogy (chosen recently by Mike Davis on Bill Moyers show and still problematic) might be that true progressives should try to shame Obama leftward like Malcom X shamed the actually very cautious Dr. King; (5) while it would be useful to quote candidate Obama against president Obama on Iraq we should remember that candidate Obama never opposed the invasion of that country on principled grounds (as immoral, illegal, and imperialist) and made it quite clear to elite bodies (ie., The Council on Foreign Relations, The Chicago Council on Global Affairs, the Wilson Center and so on) that he was pretty much on board with the imperial agenda regarding Iraq and much more (and in fact he even said [in the summer of 2004] that he might well have voted to authorize Bush to invade if he'd been in the U.S Senate in the fall of 2002); (6) BO ran fairly openly on expanding violence in what he now calls "Af-Pak;" (7) it is an egregious under-statement to say that BO is "reluctant to endorse" single-payer!; (8) King was assassinated and may well have been executed for opposing U.S. imperialism-racism-capitalism ...something that would certianly be in the back of Obama's mind were he to drink some magic potion turning him from corporate-imperialism to left progressivism.
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Re: Eight Points
By Ward, Peter at May 14, 2009 19:14 PM
Actually Zinn seems to be under no illusions as to what getting the government to "listen" involves--being disruptive until they are forced to make concessions. I admit his style lacks the kind of militant self-assertion that many of us desire (but this is a matter of style: he's an atypical case where actions exceed words) and he has a tendancy to lapse into conventional turns of speach when referring to US imperialism. But he is still by far one of the most legitimate leftists around I can think of and I think these defects are minor ones.
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