Southern Black Americans Were Angry. Historian Who Lived It Presents The Jim Crow South

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  • čas přidán 11. 11. 2022
  • The time was 1989. I was interviewing almost 200 carefully selected experts and ordinary citizens for my television series on the 1960s titled Making Sense of the Sixties. Each individual selected was unique in their ability to present their story and if you are watching this, the chances are you have already watched other clips from my 1989 interviews.
    The speaker is Manning Marable and I will never forget my interview with him. He was incredibly clear thinking in part because he had seen and he had lived through what he was describing. Before the interview began, I asked him to be direct and honest about how he felt - no hyperbole. That he did in spades.
    Manning Marable was a professor at Columbia University and a passionate admirer of Martin Luther King and Malcolm X, of whom he wrote an autobiography.
    At the time, I was not a fan of Malcolm X but Maning got me to appreciate the good side of the man rather than to focus only his early anti-white and anti-Semitic statements.
    Manning Marable was born and raised in Dayton, Ohio. His mother was a ordained minister who held a PhD. In April 1986, at the behest of his mother, 17-year-old Manning covered the funeral of Martin Luther King Jr. for Dayton’s black newspaper. That started his career.
    Manning Marable held no quarter for what some black Americans were expressing at that time. Afrocentrism - looking at history from an African perspective rather than looking at history from a European perspective. He wrote (and I can hear him saying this):
    "Afrocentrism was a theory that served the upwardly mobile black petty bourgeoisie. It gave them a sense of ethnic superiority without requiring the hard, critical study of historical realities. It was the latest theoretical construct of a politics of racial identity, a worldview designed to discuss the world… but never really to change it.”
    Manning Marable died in 2011 at 61 years old.
    I thank him for the power and clarity of his interview.
    If you found this interview of interest, I ask you to support my efforts to continue to present my work by clicking the Super Thanks button to the right below the video screen.
    Thank you
    And here you can become a member of the David Hoffman CZcams Community & receive access to my perks: / davidhoffman
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Komentáře • 710

  • @DavidHoffmanFilmmaker
    @DavidHoffmanFilmmaker  Před rokem +3

    Here is another powerful personal story From 1989 -
    czcams.com/video/IXUFiXeNZV4/video.html

    • @studytime3461
      @studytime3461 Před rokem

      The reason for both maga and woke rage is that we are all n-words now, regardless of race or politics

    • @Brick_Squared
      @Brick_Squared Před 9 měsíci

      Racist someone or something that adheres to or supports racism. Racism is an ideology based on race as denoted by the suffix _ism_ and root word race. White supremacism is a political ideology based on race or racism again as denoted by the suffix _ism_ and based on race via the adjectival noun "white" in regards to the idea that the white race is supreme. White supremacism *is* racism. It is the *only* ideology based on race or _racism_ that exists in western society in an applied, practical and non-theoretical manner.

  • @TeddySchnapps
    @TeddySchnapps Před rokem +70

    The sad truth is when the abused dog barks back the mean owner would rather kill it on the spot then help it heal.

    • @tcrijwanachoudhury
      @tcrijwanachoudhury Před rokem +17

      While this analogy has problematic connotations, it does not make it any less powerful or less true

    • @parkerjohnson2368
      @parkerjohnson2368 Před rokem

      You think Black people are abused dogs? What are white people?

    • @kmsleyang8972
      @kmsleyang8972 Před rokem

      @@tcrijwanachoudhury 🙄🙄🙄🙄

    • @DaBaSoftware
      @DaBaSoftware Před rokem

      ​@@kmsleyang8972what does that mean

    • @kmsleyang8972
      @kmsleyang8972 Před rokem

      @@DaBaSoftware the “problematic connotations bit” it’s just an analogy and it’s a proper one…no one is actually saying anyone black is a dog. I get so tired of extra sensitive people. Looking to make everything a problem or racist or semi racist. And before you go off. I am black I am just extremely light my great grandfather was half white and this is just how I came out. 🤷🏻‍♀️

  • @bronzedrage
    @bronzedrage Před rokem +160

    I was 15 years old in 1989 growing up in suburban New Jersey. I experienced covert racism on a near daily basis in my predominantly white town and highschool. I didn't realize the level of stress that put me in until I attended an HBCU.

    • @RePlaylist1
      @RePlaylist1 Před rokem +1

      @Bronzed Rage Have u thought abt counseling with the root of the stress? Your own race acknowledging you wasn't enough? You felt they were covertly against you, and you let it influence your choice of school. It's obviously still bothering you that those particular kids ignored you. Look at it this way: do you think they perceived you and think about school the way you do even after all these years?

    • @AnonYmous-tr4cu
      @AnonYmous-tr4cu Před rokem +27

      @@RePlaylist1 Man what? The girl obviously made a smart decision. She realized “them white folks don’t like me and my life is much better with people who do like me, which are people that look like me and are not racist”. It’s that simple, its human nature to coalesce with those who are similar to you, (even more natural if those people treat you well unlike any others) what kind of Sigmund Freud questions are you asking?

    • @Sidewinder528
      @Sidewinder528 Před rokem +10

      @@RePlaylist1 ....Huh?!?

    • @pit1513
      @pit1513 Před rokem +16

      @@RePlaylist1 huh, do you know what an HBCU is?

    • @biggworld7233
      @biggworld7233 Před rokem +1

      @@RePlaylist1 tell us your stupid and racist without a true confession.

  • @therestlessspiritvintage
    @therestlessspiritvintage Před rokem +35

    I grew up near Walton County GA. It was repressed even in the 90s. My cousins lived in a predominantly black neighborhood because that was where the poor lived. Even now, the downtown is posh and picturesque, but go 2 blocks over and you start seeing how it hasn’t really changed that much.

  • @jerfacekilla
    @jerfacekilla Před rokem +13

    I get Manning's point. Black America was a civilization within a civilization during those Jim Crow years. A 'perverted blessing' as he said. This man was a great thinker.

  • @towerofresonance4877
    @towerofresonance4877 Před rokem +35

    R.I.P. Manning Marable! 11 years too long now😔

  • @RorySchumpert
    @RorySchumpert Před rokem +62

    This is what we need right now in the USA. When I was a student at the University of Colorado. We asked president Gordon Gee to provide more African American professors to get a different perspective. He hired Manning Marabel. I wish I could have taken a class that he taught, this clip was really on point.

    • @carriehartigan5017
      @carriehartigan5017 Před rokem +2

      Just having such a wise person on campus must've been quite a message of itself. Between 2 MA community colleges- LA, finishing w legal studies, acct cert followed by Bus Adm transfer Assoc (few class remain), only POC female Spanish teacher, and decade later, finally a black male was so glad to see, but said not black (my son biracial), so respectful of intricacies of a descriptor based on color- I don't like my own being 8 nationalities of my own, add 2 for my son Native West Indian and American. I shared this video to him, as a new rap artist with a new album, to not lose sight of all our ancestor's experienced in the US leading to today's being very individual, materialistic and not keeping these truths in sight while many of these things are still entrenched in people today. My son was hazed in the Marines in past 5 years, while I was reading a book by a POC angry how the military recruits the fatherless POC yet does not promote them as the high ranking remain white. I warned my son, but the recruiters played on his youth and lack of options. Fortunately my only child didn't deploy, and home on Adm Sep after field duty injuries that he's walked off best he can for now. But yes racism prevalent from my youth to today. Recall walking w POC, the bag clutching, loss of white friends while my group became diverse. The us and them mentality is very active in the US and stoked by recent political party involvement to all shades of poor, immigrant, and melanin rich. I want to remind my son to be mindful of his messaging, while surrounded by many close white associates in a formerly suburban area and not too close with either side of older family

    • @answerman9933
      @answerman9933 Před rokem +2

      What a pathetic request.

    • @marcosffontes
      @marcosffontes Před rokem

      Thomas Sowell is a better option for the job

    • @RorySchumpert
      @RorySchumpert Před rokem

      Thomas Sowell is an conservative economist, while Manning is a political scientist. That is a big difference; besides, Thomas Sowell will never leave Stanford.

  • @fuferito
    @fuferito Před rokem +58

    _Making Sense of the Sixties_ was an amazing documentary series that David Hoffman ought to be perpetually proud of.
    Thirty-two years after I first watched it (I was a young teen, at the time), and I still think of it fondly, and often.

    • @DavidHoffmanFilmmaker
      @DavidHoffmanFilmmaker  Před rokem +14

      Thank you so much for the comment and for taking the time to make it. My series seems to have affected many people who were young at that time and given them a sense of who their parents were or weren't.
      David Hoffman filmmaker

    • @fuferito
      @fuferito Před rokem +9

      @@DavidHoffmanFilmmaker,
      You definitely tried (and the effort is evident) to present us with a slice of America which, as a Canadian, I really appreciated.

  • @supernerd4677
    @supernerd4677 Před rokem +37

    Another aspect of the “perverse blessing” of Jim Crow was that black Americans actually had thriving economies of their own. Was there poverty? Yes. But they had their own banks and businesses.

    • @megaoldskool76
      @megaoldskool76 Před rokem +1

      I agree

    • @spirithawk2418
      @spirithawk2418 Před rokem +1

      Have you ever heard of the destruction of Tulsa Oklahoma??!! They had that too and it didn't save them from white violence and destruction of millions of dollars of their money and property.
      Also was the time any white person could pull you out of your home and lynch and castrate you at a whim. Also blacks were given old school books to learn old information.
      I'm 65 years and remember well

    • @supernerd4677
      @supernerd4677 Před rokem +1

      @@spirithawk2418 Tulsa wasn’t the only place where blacks had a thriving economy.

    • @ceciliavillalobos9837
      @ceciliavillalobos9837 Před rokem +2

      And still we fight against this so call freedom that is not equally received

    • @Cng215
      @Cng215 Před rokem

      Then thy u.s government sanctioned bombing them from the skies

  • @JPriz416
    @JPriz416 Před rokem +301

    I grew up in Boston during the 1950s and my first two close friends were Afro-American and Native American. I didn't see hard core racism until I was stationed at fort Rucker in Alabama. I became close to a black from Montgomery and we went to visit his family. Tom and I were walking down a street in Montgomery and I was jumped because I was with my black friend. I spent a week in the hospital and we wanted revenge but his parents talked us down.

    • @WestIndianAK
      @WestIndianAK Před rokem +92

      You say you grew up in Boston in the 1950s and yet you didn't see hardcore racism until you went to Alabama?? 🤨 With all due respect, I straight-up don't believe you...or if anything, I suspect that you're either forgetting a lot of what you saw or just didn't see a lot of what was going on around you in the first place 🤔

    • @djestouff
      @djestouff Před rokem +118

      @@WestIndianAK he didn’t see it until it affected him directly. I totally believe that.

    • @Keepskatin
      @Keepskatin Před rokem +1

      Any White or non Blacka who are against Reparations for Blacks, are Racist☝🏾

    • @shermhart7617
      @shermhart7617 Před rokem +1

      I call a bullshit flag on story as Joe Biden would say "come on man" you can make up a better life than that.

    • @JPriz416
      @JPriz416 Před rokem

      @@shermhart7617 you call it what you want. You don't know me life was different back then. I went to the Patrick Cambell Jr high school which was 80% black I was one of two white guys on the baseball team and I could go on and on. The only time we saw racism was in South Boston. They were pure haters of anything not Irish.

  • @beefstickswellington1203
    @beefstickswellington1203 Před rokem +119

    I was taken back by how young he actually died. He looked like he was 50 or 60 in this interview and I was super surprised that he was only 39 there. He was wise beyond his years and probably had seen a lot of stress in his life. An eloquent man.

    • @jzen1455
      @jzen1455 Před rokem +13

      WHoa, I'm 39, and he looks like he could be my father!

    • @johnblaze6269
      @johnblaze6269 Před rokem +10

      Everybody looked old back then, 25 year olds all looked 35-40 back then kol

    • @foreveranon6940
      @foreveranon6940 Před rokem +9

      @@johnblaze6269 yeah because people dressed themselves differently but having almost full gray hair for a 39 year old is just not something you see often

    • @KentPetersonmoney
      @KentPetersonmoney Před rokem +3

      That's crazy. I'm 38 ad nd he looks like he could be my father. Must the went get early.

    • @MaxIsBackInTown
      @MaxIsBackInTown Před rokem +25

      Being raised under the thumb of extreme oppression will do that.

  • @BIGbboyPHLIP
    @BIGbboyPHLIP Před rokem +6

    Why have I never heard of this smart, well spoken, seemingly unafraid Black man?? Dude should have been my hero!!

  • @tymelogix
    @tymelogix Před rokem +6

    'We are no longer on the back of the bus, we now drive the bus, but yet as of date we are still on that buss!'

  • @carolynfrink5569
    @carolynfrink5569 Před rokem +15

    Thank you for documenting this. I am a doctorate student doing research on the Black experience, and this interview is invaluable in understanding the effects of racism and historical trauma, not only to those directly affected but also to society as a whole.

  • @stpeterscooksriver1873
    @stpeterscooksriver1873 Před rokem +38

    There is a profundity within this interview that raises issues that go beyond “racism.” One is the way in which oppressed people draw on their own strengths and community and culture, for their sense of identity and not the shallowness of affluence. I think the words are, “it covers all bases,” and quite magnificently at that.

  • @SusannahPerri
    @SusannahPerri Před rokem +23

    What a proud and completely true statement this is, David! This should be in American history archives. I wish this man was still alive.

    • @SusannahPerri
      @SusannahPerri Před rokem +4

      I don’t know why I wrote the word “proud,” I think it was an autocorrection. It’s out of context. I think I meant to write, “important,” because it is!

    • @joelkoffi2806
      @joelkoffi2806 Před rokem +1

      @@SusannahPerri good one

  • @sixbe9002
    @sixbe9002 Před rokem +66

    You never let us down when it comes to your documentations. Thank you for showing the world perspectives they might have not otherwise have seen

  • @deemari577
    @deemari577 Před rokem +92

    Thank you. These type interviews/docs need to continue to be taught. I grew up on Tony Brown's Journal, Angela Davis, Stokely Carmichael poets such as Nikki Giovanni and many black consciousness. This gave us pride, we went to college, we protested then we had children and we protested less, believed things would change for our children then generation after generation that anger popped up under a different world order in a different direction. Look at many of our young men and women today, so far removed from the early ideological black fight.

    • @aarondigby5054
      @aarondigby5054 Před rokem +3

      Too many baby daddys and baby mamas.

    • @DieselPurge
      @DieselPurge Před rokem +5

      The white man will call it CRT

    • @Bambi7ish
      @Bambi7ish Před rokem

      @@aarondigby5054 They will be lost once this generation dies off. Many are clueless to the price that was paid for their freedom.

    • @DaBaSoftware
      @DaBaSoftware Před rokem +1

      ​@@DieselPurgethey already do. -a Floridian

    • @DieselPurge
      @DieselPurge Před rokem +1

      @@DaBaSoftware Yes I know 😔

  • @emzywillrich7243
    @emzywillrich7243 Před rokem +13

    I tell people all the time that racism did me a favor. My father who served in WWII was not allowed to fight, although trained. He and other black men pilled potatoes. My beautiful and smart mother was not able to pursue her dream of becoming an historian. So, when my father got out of the Army and walked into my Aunt's Diner, and saw my mother, that event would not have happened. If allowed to fight on the front line, my father would probably have been killed. My mother would not have been in her Aunt's Diner but away at college (my mother was almost 20 years younger). Since professional women did not have many children, she would not have had seven children. Since I was the third of seven, I probably would not have been born. My mother always told us to take advantage of the opportunities that we've been given because had she had them, she would not have had seven children. We laughed but knew she was serious. We did not disappoint her. Almost all of us received advanced degrees. So, even out of an horrific racist environment, some beautiful flowers still grow.

    • @studytime3461
      @studytime3461 Před rokem +1

      Your mom is awesome... but I warn you, when a family enters the middle-class, it often acquires both the good and bad habits of affluence... my families great grand parents were dignified hardworking poor people who dragged their kids into college... but now most of us are sucked into the same morass that most of the secular mainstream society is these days... so don't lose touch with your childhood and your mother's honest background... otherwise your kids might run around with dyed hair and confused attitudes!

  • @kenwest00
    @kenwest00 Před rokem +39

    Thanks David. Very thoughtful piece. Dr. Marable taught at Fisk in the eighties and, while I would come to work as an administrator there much later, I always took every opportunity to view his papers in the archives. This is a very special perspective and has great relevance in these times.

    • @DavidHoffmanFilmmaker
      @DavidHoffmanFilmmaker  Před rokem +5

      Thank you. I think that the relevance to these times is obvious and powerful. That's one of the reasons I posted his wonderful monologue.
      David Hoffman filmmaker

  • @craig6t
    @craig6t Před rokem +7

    What he was saying about not being able to swim in white pools is true. When white communities built their pools in those days they expected it to be "White Only." And they wouldn't let a non-white person anywhere near the pool. I remember the black model Beverly Johnson's story about going to a white pool with a friend. When people saw her get in the pool they got out. She said that, during this time, she had no idea what everyone was doing. The friend later told her they drained the pool! This exemplifies the type of pathology Europeans are capable of. They go from constant war with each other in Europe to one big homecoming in America, and everyone is an outsider--an other--except them!

  • @bcarr1122
    @bcarr1122 Před rokem +21

    Mr. Hoffman, thank you so much for sharing the interview. As I listened to Dr. Marable, I couldn't help but shed a tear or two, as much for the gross indignities of the present as the heinous oppression of the past. Yes, times have changed, but the more things change. . . .

  • @orionfl79
    @orionfl79 Před rokem +31

    Your son's takeaway on this reminded me of something I came across when I used to work for a local community college that was founded back in the 1950's. At one point, they were looking to relocate our department into one of the older buildings on campus and I was given the chance to look at the blueprints to see how we could shoe-horn all of our staff inside. Some of the prints showed how the building had been renovated over the years, and I was actually shocked to see that originally there had been three bathrooms labelled on the plan as W, N, and M. It baffled me at first, then it dawned on me what the N stood for. Looking through the pages, it seemed over the years that third bathroom was turned into a storage closet then eventually sliced in half and joined with the woman's and men's. But my overall thought after seeing that was gee... Didn't they realize back then that if we just got over our differences and worked together there would have been more toilets and a whole lot less discomfort in the world?

  • @mountainlinx
    @mountainlinx Před rokem +13

    This should be shown in schools 4 times a year, at the beginning of each season….and for the record, it’s still like this today, even though in different shapes and forms….

  • @kaleighsue8463
    @kaleighsue8463 Před rokem +13

    Thank you for documenting this man’s experience and the uncomfortable facts he presents. We must never forget!

  • @Madkalibyr
    @Madkalibyr Před rokem +9

    1989-the year I was born! Thank you so much for sharing with all of us here

  • @drewpall2598
    @drewpall2598 Před rokem +16

    All of your interviews that I have seen from your documentary on making sense of the 1960's that you did in 1989 are excellent! I've said this before I don't think we can ever really make sense of the 1960's but I enjoy hearing interviews by those who lived through it! as you know it was an extraordinary and turbulent time period to have lived through. Peace, love and happiness David Hoffman.

    • @tometriceshepherd6609
      @tometriceshepherd6609 Před rokem +1

      Yes indeed it was some troublesome time, but with prayer and faith some of made it through. Thanks God for watching over us.

  • @JWF99
    @JWF99 Před rokem +16

    Great interview here David! Thanks! I've always watched and listened closely to Manning, even as a young person myself in 1989 I liked how pragmatic he was✌

  • @angelamaryfussey3461
    @angelamaryfussey3461 Před rokem +9

    Now I understand why we moved to California. I was 4... and sad.

  • @jmpattillo
    @jmpattillo Před rokem +16

    Thank you, thank you, thank you. Thank you so much David for making your life’s work available to a wider audience.

    • @DavidHoffmanFilmmaker
      @DavidHoffmanFilmmaker  Před rokem +3

      John: Thank you thank you for your kind comment. If your resources allow, I would sure appreciate your using the THANKS button under any of my videos including the one you have commented on. It is something new that CZcams is beta testing and would mean a great deal for my continuing efforts.
      David Hoffman filmmaker

  • @DreamGyrl360
    @DreamGyrl360 Před rokem +2

    This was wonderful and you're wonderful.
    Thank you for sharing, Mr. Hoffman

    • @DavidHoffmanFilmmaker
      @DavidHoffmanFilmmaker  Před rokem +1

      Thank you for your comment. If your resources allow, I would sure appreciate your using the THANKS button under any of my videos including the one you have commented on. It is something new that CZcams is beta testing and would mean a great deal for my continuing efforts.
      David Hoffman filmmaker

    • @DreamGyrl360
      @DreamGyrl360 Před rokem

      @@DavidHoffmanFilmmaker done!

  • @varimarc1
    @varimarc1 Před 26 dny +1

    Mr. Hoffman, I love your work and greatly appreciate you.

  • @cheleftb
    @cheleftb Před rokem +8

    Thank for doing this interview and sharing it.

  • @MultiOpolis
    @MultiOpolis Před rokem +5

    Everyone in the world needs to watch this interview

  • @TheVuduYuDu
    @TheVuduYuDu Před rokem +4

    Thank you for posting these interviews. Such a service.

  • @DaisyGalvanlikes
    @DaisyGalvanlikes Před rokem +6

    Hey David I really enjoyed this interview, im 19 and I would say it definitely gave me more perspective on the civil rights movement and the Jim Crow era. What he said about North vs South during that time was especially interesting as I had never heard of that before. Thank you for sharing your work!

  • @brianmaguire6814
    @brianmaguire6814 Před rokem +2

    Thank you and God Bless Mr. Hoffman. These documentaries you are sharing are incredible. They truly can help shape the future. You have done your part on this earth 🙏

  • @karenstubblefield2026
    @karenstubblefield2026 Před rokem +4

    The stories from my grandparents from Alabama still have me shuttering today.

  • @ethancastillo6673
    @ethancastillo6673 Před rokem +5

    Thanks for this David !

  • @terriharrigan891
    @terriharrigan891 Před rokem +7

    Always great videos. So interesting and educational. Such a well explained documentary. Thank you for sharing David

  • @HappyMomma412
    @HappyMomma412 Před rokem

    Thank you, David, for doing this. It means more than you can imagine! Love, light, and peace to you, your loved ones, and your audience.
    🙏🏾💜🌍🌈🦋🙏🏾
    You always put out some really neat and informative stuff! 🦋🦋🦋🦋🦋

  • @paulfelix9081
    @paulfelix9081 Před rokem +1

    Awesome interview, I appreciate your efforts to make clear several things that enlighten the views of your channel

  • @kenmcdaniel6913
    @kenmcdaniel6913 Před rokem +2

    Tell the truth my brother. I am 66 years old and i lived it all. Moving frim the south to the north i lived everything he's talking about.

  • @lokimotive6959
    @lokimotive6959 Před rokem +20

    Those pictures are so moving.....
    I look at that white women with nothing but hate and rage in her face and I cannot understand it.....I simply cannot process how you could hate a person for whom you do not know, has never harmed or hurt you or loved ones in any way......has never oppressed you...is not even a threat to you!....
    It must of been exhausting trying to oppress a people in the most absurd ways imaginable.

    • @lgfisher8463
      @lgfisher8463 Před rokem +2

      I saw that same snarl of hatred on the faces of whites at Charlottesville and the Capitol on Jan 6th, it doesn't make sense unless you factor in racism.

    • @2gkims427
      @2gkims427 Před rokem +7

      Yes, I feel exactly the same way!! I can't understand and reconcile in my heart and mind why you would want to hurt someone like this. But, sadly you still see this happening even to this day in all kinds of forms; not just racially motivated. It saddens me. I look for opportunities when I'm out in public to have a friendly/kind word, or offer to help someone, then wish them a beautiful day; whatever is appropriate for the moment. I wish every person desired to bring respect and kindness into this world every day. It feels so good to honor another person.

    • @lk3309
      @lk3309 Před rokem

      So everyone can now make anti white comments and no one cares

    • @lk3309
      @lk3309 Před rokem +1

      @@lgfisher8463 You watch too much TV. Desantes 2024

    • @RorySchumpert
      @RorySchumpert Před rokem +3

      He won’t make it past the primary. Cuba is only in Florida.

  • @stevenm6453
    @stevenm6453 Před rokem +7

    Great information explained so well!

  • @TBullCajunbreadmaker
    @TBullCajunbreadmaker Před rokem +8

    The XO on our DDG Destroyer was a black man and I respected that man greatly. He was a good equal man and was fair I went up to 2 XO masts while on duty. He was a good guy and all I ever got was a little extra duty. He knew how hard our jobs were. We were part of the era when everything started to change in this country.

  • @karenh2890
    @karenh2890 Před rokem +6

    Very thought-provoking interview.

  • @rne1223
    @rne1223 Před rokem +1

    This is some powerful stuff. Thank you for sharing this knowledge sir.

  • @johnkennedy3669
    @johnkennedy3669 Před rokem +12

    Thank you this is wonderful, I've just been trying to learn more about this part of history. Your interviews always seem to enable me to understand what the people who lived it actually felt.

  • @tdedwards
    @tdedwards Před rokem +3

    This is EVERYTHING that was wrong with the potential for a much GREATER success as a result of our struggle. Integration was a huge economic TRICK that continues to haunt us to this very day. Separation was, is, and forever will be the SOLUTION to the future plight of Black people in America. 🎯

  • @22221mm
    @22221mm Před rokem

    Great interview! Thank you.

  • @N0bodyn01
    @N0bodyn01 Před 6 měsíci

    This footage and information from this man is immeasurably invaluable.

  • @dlhawks
    @dlhawks Před rokem +2

    Amazing work, channel and vision. I hope filmmakers on and off CZcams take note

    • @DavidHoffmanFilmmaker
      @DavidHoffmanFilmmaker  Před rokem +1

      David: Thank you for your comment. If your resources allow, I would sure appreciate your using the THANKS button under any of my videos including the one you have commented on. It is something new that CZcams is beta testing and would mean a great deal for my continuing efforts.
      David Hoffman filmmaker

  • @Franaflyby
    @Franaflyby Před rokem +8

    Manning was a very wise well spoken man.
    The world needs more people like him.
    Much respect. ✌️

  • @arthurdalton517
    @arthurdalton517 Před rokem +3

    Mr Hoffman what a great interview you did a excellent job with the gentlemen. Now I am from CA and I don't remember that there in the 60s. I am from the greater San Francisco Bay area

  • @AnunnakiThe1
    @AnunnakiThe1 Před rokem +3

    David ? the things you bring to the world and Public awareness are by far priceless to come today to carry new generations' thoughts into a Higher level . I humbly give you all the respect and ask the Gods and Goddesses of heaven to bless you and your family and may they grant you a Long and prosperous Life . thank you David , Thank you .

  • @lovememoremeticulous4378

    How insightful intelligent and just shear power was Malcolm X. A person that can see light in all the darkness and the ability to concretely speak to it.

  • @a88aiello
    @a88aiello Před rokem +2

    Thank you for these precious commentaries on our history. I hope it will inspire current and future generations to combat the systemic oppression that persists.

  • @fazbell
    @fazbell Před rokem +2

    Outstanding series. I grew up in the Jim Crow south. Still a bizarre memory, many years later.

  • @jasontaylor2237
    @jasontaylor2237 Před rokem +1

    Very interesting Mr. Hoffman. As a 46 y/o black male still learning about the history of my ancestors and the treatment of Afro Americans in the U.S I want to thank you for sharing this interview.

  • @ernestdavis
    @ernestdavis Před rokem +4

    Amazing and thank you for this message.

  • @ax2643
    @ax2643 Před rokem +2

    Thank you, as someone who was born after this interview its insightful to be able to listen to a perspective from someone who actually lived through jim crow.

    • @SE-gs6gd
      @SE-gs6gd Před rokem

      Are you only around white people? My grandparents and parents lived in the Jim Crow south and actually left the south in the mid 60s to escape it- left to NY state specifically. This is a common story for many black peoples who grew up in the south at that time. This isn’t ancient history to just be remembered. Talk to black people living now who experience this. They will tell you the stories about this stuff.

  • @ahnraemenkhera7451
    @ahnraemenkhera7451 Před rokem +5

    Thanks to David Hoffman for this Lovely retrospective short! I, too, was once privileged to have met Dr. Marable, a wonderful man, a Family man, the type of man who embodied Brotherhood on so many levels. And he was KIND to people.
    He never used his erudition as an excuse to look down on or to look askance toward anybody!! Always accessible, always thoughtful.
    I WISH I still had my original copies of his books, “Speaking Truth to Power” & “Beyond Black & White!”
    So insightful, so pinpoint accurate, & so relevant to his time & this time.
    It deeply saddened me when he died, & what great potential for meaningful (scholarly & economic) reformation was LOST with his death! Just that one death, in the wake of so many, many others.
    Had he lived a couple decades more, the “infrastructure” of his ideas would have taken material shape-I have no doubt.
    It’s too bad that the New Jim Crow is designed to discredit his works & those of many great scholars of Thought under the umbrella of so-called “CRT.”
    I don’t believe that things are measurably “different” today because the signage has been taken down & we can all go to the public bathrooms & enter common public spaces to spend & splurge.
    As Ms. Yvette Carnell has stated many times: “ADOS/Black people are still bottom-caste, …we remain tethered to the bottom strata of the society,” as wave upon wave of new citizens, by birth or by migration, washes over us, all learning in their turn to denigrate, disparage, blame & shame the descendants of those who endured antebellum enslavement, lynchings, bombings, all manner of daily atrocities & “new” forms of systemic systematic disparity-with no remittance-to make place for those without historical context-based much more on artfully contrived “race” than on so-called “class.”
    The latter of which is merely a fleeting illusion for those persons classified “Black” in the economic, political, legal, social, & educational, sexual & religious structures of the society.
    Like David Hoffman’s son, many young Nonwhite people remain confused, racially illiterate, & too quick to grasp at shortcuts in attempting to comprehend just what mandatory state-imposed segregation (the superficial kind) was really about.
    On the surface, it appeared like a separate-but-equal lunchroom. In reality, its scope was designed to ensure legalized unequal Outcomes. Outcomes which persist, despite all the hiding of the visually inculpatory evidence, BUT which zoning, tracking, funding & gerrymandering denote to this day without question.
    We (as a nation-concept) shall not have the kind of opportunity to substantiate “change” that Dr. Marable envisioned again, nor look upon his ilk anytime soon. “Sometimes opportunities are simply lost,” as a good friend recently remarked to me.
    It took too long to produce just one Manning Marable & “his hour” was, as always, far too short.
    Peace, Blessings, Truth, Justice, Correctness to All during the Holy Season. Thanks again for reminding us all who we are, where we’ve been, & what it will require to be the most constructive people that ‘history’ may yet produce! 🇺🇸🕯🌲⚖️🕯🌲

    • @dreamyx01
      @dreamyx01 Před rokem +1

      That’s awesome you got to meet him. I was 17 in 1989 a senior in high school and this is the first time I’ve heard of this great educator. My parents were born into the Jim Crow south. His voice is just as important today. The older I get I am seeing history really does repeat itself.

    • @ahnraemenkhera7451
      @ahnraemenkhera7451 Před rokem

      @@dreamyx01 Not only does history “repeat,” but the Patterns that formulate racial/class systems & dynamics (between people) remain intact-for centuries!! I’m sorry that there are fewer people today who “walked among” the Dr. Marables, Dr. Tourés, Dr. Huey Lewises & sooo many more as we Baby Boomers were honored & blessed to have done-so CASUALLY, without a thought about it!! 🥰☺️🙃🙃😊
      But a FEW of us were listening & learning something.
      I recommend that you try to order or purchase some of Manning Marable’s books! Any of them are WELL worth the read, as he was a careful, thorough, & thoughtful Educator, who wrote mainly for young students, but he (eventually) gained a wider audience, too; & went on to even becoming a best-selling, award-winning sociologist/political theorist through his published works!! A brilliant man, & as I mentioned, very kind, very down-to-earth.
      His cousin & I happened to have been classmates, long ago. I could say her character is much the same, so maybe some families have IMPORTANT traits in-common, that have nothing whatsoever to do with “race” or class. 😊💕
      Enjoy the readings! Best Wishes & Thanks for reminding me where I came from! 🕯🙏🏽🌲🕯🙏🏽🌲🕯

  • @peterlubbers5947
    @peterlubbers5947 Před rokem +4

    Very good interview of a very sad issue.🙏

  • @BC99
    @BC99 Před rokem +3

    Very informative, thanks.

  • @mopnem
    @mopnem Před rokem +1

    This was a great listen

  • @knelson3484
    @knelson3484 Před rokem +2

    Thank you David.

  • @matthewfarmer6830
    @matthewfarmer6830 Před rokem +2

    Thanks for sharing this video today David Hoffman film maker.🎥🙂👍

  • @gregoryvalente1373
    @gregoryvalente1373 Před rokem +6

    I do not watch every video you upload, I am just too busy to watch them all, but when I see a new upload from you that catches my eye, it always makes my day. The way you cultivated and then captured that raw emotion and truth in this video and many others will fasinate the future for many years as we will be able to remember that mentality actually going around and the true feelings that no one had to say because everyone always felt it.

  • @johnym1
    @johnym1 Před rokem +1

    Another incredible video. Learned so much from your videos.

    • @DavidHoffmanFilmmaker
      @DavidHoffmanFilmmaker  Před rokem

      Thank you for your comment. If your resources allow, I would sure appreciate your using the THANKS button under any of my videos including the one you have commented on. It is something new that CZcams is beta testing and would mean a great deal for my continuing efforts.
      David Hoffman filmmaker

  • @georgelelandturner
    @georgelelandturner Před rokem +2

    This is a very profound and beautiful reflection

  • @hustlaus
    @hustlaus Před rokem +2

    I see so many parallels between what he spoke and what I witness today as a Gen Xer.

  • @kathleenwerner-leap1681
    @kathleenwerner-leap1681 Před rokem +4

    Wow. Just wow. Powerful!!

  • @tauranp6092
    @tauranp6092 Před rokem +2

    Great documentary!

  • @Don_daddy619
    @Don_daddy619 Před rokem +1

    Thank you Mr Hoffman. It's folks like you who give us hope in this land we can do so much more together than apart Rise to your potential It's Worth It So Many Have Been Sacrificed Already 🇺🇸

  • @Iconolaste
    @Iconolaste Před rokem +2

    Manning Marables this man was a genius and one of the best guy I have read in this country!!!

  • @kavistone6951
    @kavistone6951 Před rokem +1

    It's like that today in many many ways

  • @GPS509
    @GPS509 Před rokem +2

    I am trying to unite the past to the present.
    Still can't because of the gap that exists 😪

  • @nat7535
    @nat7535 Před rokem +2

    You are quite right. What he experienced no longer exists for the most part. But the covert, subtle, biases remain and still cause harm

  • @nerdbamarich2063
    @nerdbamarich2063 Před rokem +2

    Wonderful footage

  • @Primetiime32
    @Primetiime32 Před rokem

    Thank you for sharing

  • @kelvinhopkins2859
    @kelvinhopkins2859 Před rokem

    Outstanding. Thank u.

  • @tanzoniaflakes5068
    @tanzoniaflakes5068 Před rokem +1

    Mr. David, I watch your work often and I really appreciate the work you have done. I wasn't born during some of your videos and some I was too little to know what was actually happening. Yet I feel I was there sometimes. I've had questions like, what were the Black ppl doing back then during this era or that era and you managed to capture time for us. Thank you for helping us modern age Reparationist and Freedom fighters know who these living bigots are. Because some of these folks are still alive in congress and the white house today. Finishing what their fathers started and teaching the next generation to be freedom tyrants.

  • @wildfire9280
    @wildfire9280 Před rokem +3

    This sums up exactly what I thought about the rebuttals to the Kerner Commission finding racism as the source of the 1967 race riots.
    Black Southerners were so throughly engulfed by Jim Crow even the consideration of violent action against it would be unthinkable. It would simply bear too many risks, too terrible consequences, and could easily end like Nat Turner’s Rebellion. With more oppression.

  • @cherylcallahan5402
    @cherylcallahan5402 Před rokem

    *David Hoffman The Jim Crow South Manning Marabel appreciate your videos Listening 🌟 from Mass USA TYVM 💙 David*

  • @vphiameradisogaarwa
    @vphiameradisogaarwa Před rokem +2

    I love your channel Elder Brother. A great book you would definitely enjoy is "The Sixteen trends" by Gary Marx. Keep publishing, we need it.

  • @Astitwam
    @Astitwam Před rokem +1

    Incredible speaker, I've just bought his book.

  • @maryannhope8276
    @maryannhope8276 Před rokem

    Thank you Mr. Hoffman. Peace

  • @brianpierre42
    @brianpierre42 Před rokem

    This is what’s missing in our community. Elders passing down culture, wisdom, morals, guidance and self love. This well spoken brother truly is appreciated.

  • @magnoliasburden4112
    @magnoliasburden4112 Před rokem +1

    LOVED the comparison he made of Malcolm X & Martin Luther King Jr. I don't come across many who can see that the latter X, (after the pilgrimage, hajj) was also the latter King.

  • @pattrell5257
    @pattrell5257 Před rokem +4

    My opinion is that of another white man from England: how does a white person honestly feel about black reparations?! This is the deciding factor for me! Some of the other things that Jane Eliot was doing was also helpful, but this is the one thing that white racists do not want blacks to have and, yet, is far more deserving than any group that already has been given it by the gov't(Jane sounds like Abrams when she includes Native Americans in the black reparations discussion in order to sidewind her way out of having to give an emphatic YES and expound that YES)!
    How did a Native American respond to Abrams?! She said that democrat politicians, etc. needed to stop including them in the reparation discussion, because they already had it! Now, despite the positive things that Jane Eliot has represented, she is still racist against blacks and apart of the white supremacist system! Likewise, if you are white, black, or whatever color and do not support black reparations, then you are racist and apart of the white supremacist system! This is my opinion, but I am sure that's the way a lot of blacks see it!

  • @samuelhenry8684
    @samuelhenry8684 Před rokem +1

    Dr. Marable! I miss this guy. I was fortunate enough to have taken 2 classes with him during my time at IRAAS. The preeminent scholar!

  • @rascta
    @rascta Před rokem

    Wow. I've just recommended elsewhere that people should come and watch this, because there's no way I could possibly sum it up. And the way he speaks is mesmerizing.

  • @Larrymh07
    @Larrymh07 Před rokem +2

    The picture of the children looking into the swimming pool is heartbreaking.

    • @L0kias1
      @L0kias1 Před rokem +3

      And this is what they don’t want taught in schools , CRT 😂 … they did all this to us and they can’t even be reminded of it

    • @Larrymh07
      @Larrymh07 Před rokem

      @@L0kias1 I experienced it in an oblique manner in 1964.

    • @SE-gs6gd
      @SE-gs6gd Před rokem +1

      Why I get so irritated when people make fun of black folks for not being able to swim. There is a reason for that. Actually my mom never learned how to swim- maternal side is from Montgomery AL- so she made sure her kids learned. We took swimming lessons. My sis actually became a proficient diver

  • @janebell189
    @janebell189 Před rokem +7

    As a black woman who lives up
    North and interracially dates white men but is single by choice at the moment, I can honestly say that so much of that is still going on today. I have encountered a lot of racism and I am in my thirties.
    I am not going to go back and forth with anyone on here about how far we as black people have come because there is no need, my feelings are valid and based on my own volatile experience. I can tell that there have also been positive changes and progress.
    I appreciate you showing this video to us and you showing this to your 16 year old son as well, it's important.

    • @loriannrichardson7644
      @loriannrichardson7644 Před rokem +5

      What was the point of writing about your interracial dating? I don't see how it's integral to your statement.

    • @earlinebeaman684
      @earlinebeaman684 Před rokem +1

      It is still going on because ww keep it going. they're the gate keepers. but these bm don't see it that say. good luck to you sis.

    • @leonwoods4052
      @leonwoods4052 Před rokem

      You will continue to experience racism until you die.It's unfortunate that individuals from the dominant society have a sickness of mind,and hart.The question to is, how has interracial dating changed your life?

  • @raycavazos8927
    @raycavazos8927 Před rokem +6

    My grandparents are Mexican and grew up in the south. I just literally got done asking them about it and why it is that it's always blacks that talk about them their treatment and Mexicans never really say much. They just told me that it was nowhere near as bad for Mexican people as it was for black people. That whites were actually very tolerant of them and it was only certain places or people that would not let them in or deal with them but for the most part everybody was pretty accepting of Mexicans. Strange In My Mind that you would prejudice against one color and not all colors

    • @raycavazos8927
      @raycavazos8927 Před rokem

      It really begs the question though all of this of where people today are getting off saying that "institutional racism" is still a thing and that blacks or people of any ethnicity don't have the same rights and opportunities to advance themselves nowadays. People parents and more likely now their grandparents or great grandparents may have experienced horrible racist jim crow policy, but nobody today has ever been segregated, or told they can't be somewhere or do something because they are whatever colour. And they especially have NEVER BEEN A SLAVE.

    • @protogoniascension
      @protogoniascension Před rokem

      If black people were still slaves they would be accepted better. Those same white people would let the black folk cook and clean their homes and sleep in their attic if they could exploit their labor.

    • @mariowalker9048
      @mariowalker9048 Před rokem +3

      Sounds like Texas in the 50s

    • @SE-gs6gd
      @SE-gs6gd Před rokem +3

      White people in south saw Hispanics and Asians as more like them. This was the difference. Black people were considered inferior creatures and not at all like white people even though blacks people are human beings. There was an interview of some white woman in a neighborhood where they were considering desegregating the housing. She said that she wouldn’t mind Latino or Asian people but black people were not the same and couldn’t mix with proper white people. It may have been in the Eyes on the Prize series I think. Excellent series btw

    • @grmpEqweer
      @grmpEqweer Před rokem

      @@raycavazos8927
      The stats say black people still have a harder time staying employed, have a harder time getting home loans compared to equally-qualified white people, and resumes with black-sounding names get less callbacks than resumes of equally-qualified people who happen to have white-sounding names.
      Black people do drugs at the same rate as whites, but they're 13 times more likely to go to prison for it.
      Black people are 3x as likely to be killed by police.
      Black people are more likely to go to underfunded public schools. Black people are less likely, because of racial discrimination, to get parental monetary gifts for college. Meaning they either don't go to college, or rack up more debt than other demographics.
      They generally are still the last hired and first fired. Their payscale is lower. On average, by several thousand a year below white people.
      But no, systemic discrimination isn't real. /s

  • @tymelogix
    @tymelogix Před rokem +3

    David Hoffman these documentaries are priceless

  • @smokindatshit8268
    @smokindatshit8268 Před rokem +1

    I grew up in south Florida
    During the 80’s and 90’s
    Been called every racial slur
    Got beat up by police multiple times for next nothing before I turned 16 I had been assaulted by police well over a dozen times
    Namely Hollywood police department and broward sheriffs officers

  • @levity90
    @levity90 Před 10 dny

    "it is your obligation to prepare yourself to be the best that you can be." A message that has been almost completely lost in modern black and Latino communities. I pity men like this because all of the suffering they endured and the trials and tribulations they faced are now basically for nothing.

  • @regpress6433
    @regpress6433 Před rokem +2

    Listen/read to claude Andersen and boyce Watkins blacks wealth is dismal that speaks volumes about this country and the repression that still continues. Dr. Joyce D. On the trauma of slavery and the burden that's carried from generations. The political are still neglecting the black citizens. How does a country move foward to support the citizens who have been so severely impacted every generation??