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JUAN GONZALEZ: Forty years ago, Newark erupted, followed by Detroit. Then city after city across the
United States exploded in spontaneous uprisings by disaffected African American communities
who were met with brutal violence by police and National Guardsmen. In Newark, twenty-six
people were killed, and forty-three were killed in Detroit. Thousands more were injured.
At the height of the Detroit Rebellion on July 28, 1967, President Johnson appointed
a National Advisory Commission on Civil Disorders to investigate the root causes of the unrest.
The final report, known as the Kerner Commission, famously concluded that the United States
was "moving toward two societies, one black, one white -- separate and unequal."
AMY GOODMAN: Today, on the fortieth anniversary of the Newark Rebellion, we go back to the tumultuous
days of July 1967. We'll speak with Amiri Baraka and Larry Hamm. Amiri Baraka is a renowned
poet, playwright and activist who is a native of Newark. He was one of the founders of the
Black Arts Movement in the '60s and was New Jersey poet laureate in 2002. In 1967, he
was arrested and severely beaten by the police during the rebellion. Larry Hamm is a longtime
community organizer in Newark and chair of the People's Organization for Progress. It
organizes a commemoration of the Newark Rebellion every year. He was thirteen years old at the
time of the rebellion. We welcome you both to Democracy Now!
AMIRI BARAKA: Thank you.
LARRY HAMM: Thank you very much.
AMY GOODMAN: Let's go back to those days. Amiri Baraka, where were you?
AMIRI BARAKA: You mean when I was arrested? I should say, beaten down, arrested --
AMY GOODMAN: Well, July 12th it all began. This is July 13th, exactly forty years after. When were
you beaten by police? And explain the background of what happened.
AMIRI BARAKA: Yeah, we were demonstrating in front of the Fourth Precinct, where we had a gathering
yesterday, and we were demonstrating. And after the demonstration, which Bob Curvin
and CORE led, I walked home down Springfield Avenue from there and around the corner to
my house, which is right next to the Newark courthouse. And when I got -- by the time
I got to where I was living and sitting on the porch, kids ran up and said they're breaking
out windows around the corner.
I jumped in my car with two other friends of mine. Then we drove right around the corner,
and by the time we got up to, you know, Belmont Avenue, it was on. People were breaking out
windows. There were already fires. And the police -- you could see the police, certainly.
So we were driving in and out, zigzagging through these streets, looking, you know,
seeing what was happening.
AMY GOODMAN: How did it all erupt? How did it all begin, before July 12?
AMIRI BARAKA: Well, see, if you want to talk about that, as I said yesterday, you have to start with
slavery, because those abuses have never been eradicated. You know, people are not living
in slums because they voted to. You know, their children are not in jail because they
wanted them to. You know, these of the results of a people who have been oppressed and suffer
national oppression, you know. And so, in a city like Newark, which is the third oldest
city in the United States, by the way, where all these kind of abuses sort of converge,
you know, and the racism on top of that -- I mean, one absurd example is, one time I
was directing a play, and the police rushed into the loft and the man actually took the
script out of my hand, you know, as if it was some kind of a volatile weapon, you know.
So that day we had been picketing, because they had beaten up a black cab driver, a guy
named John Smith. But that whole month, the two months before that, there was contentions.
First they wanted 160 acres for a medical school. We found out the biggest medical school
in the United States was Johns Hopkins, which is like one-and-a-half acres. They wouldn't
hire this guy as -- what was his name, Wilber Parker -- as a secretary of the Board of Education,
a guy -- what was it, a Cornell Master's degree. They hired instead this -- one of
Addonizio's cronies who had high school graduate. They had run into this Muslim dojo, you know,
a karate school, and beaten up everybody there. And then the John Smith incident, they pulled
him out of the car and beat him up, you know, circulated that he was dead. And so, people
gathered at that precinct, and then that was very explosive that night. That was the night
before. That was, say, the 11th. So the next day, we were picketing that precinct, because
that's where it happened. And that was the day, by the time the sun started going down
is when it broke out.
JUAN GONZALEZ: We saw a clip of Mayor Addonizio, but could you talk a little bit about the political
climate, the mayor's regime, as well as Anthony Imperiale was running around then in those
days? What was the climate that the majority population in the black community in Newark
was feeling then?
AMIRI BARAKA: Well, see, first of all, when you say Addonizio, who was indicted and, you know
-- what was it? He was giving 1% of the city's budget to the Mob.
AMY GOODMAN: He was the mayor.
AMIRI BARAKA: He was the mayor, Addonizio, "No Neck" Addonizio. And his Spina, OK, was the -- it
was interesting that Spina, who was the police chief, when they beat me up, they didn't
take me to prison or to the -- they took me to Spina's office, you know, and threw me
on the floor. And he says, you know, just like I'm right out of the movies, "They got
you," you know. And I said, "But I ain't dead."
AMY GOODMAN: He was head of police?
AMIRI BARAKA: Yeah, yeah. He was the police chief, you know.
JUAN GONZALEZ: And they brought you to his office.
AMIRI BARAKA: To his office, not to jail. But since I had given my given name, Everett L. Jones,
laborer, you know, then they could deny it, until my wife got hold of Ginsberg, Allen
Ginsberg --
AMY GOODMAN: The poet.
AMIRI BARAKA: -- and he had gotten a hold of Jean-Paul Sartre. And Sartre called the police station.
AMY GOODMAN: From France?
AMIRI BARAKA: Yeah, called the police station. Sartre and Ginsberg and those people started, you
know -- and then, the only reason I got my life saved is the people in the apartment
building where they were beating me started throwing things out of the window at them.
Otherwise, I would be gone, you know. But it was a very, very --- the racism that existed
there ---
JUAN GONZALEZ: Because by then you were already a very well-known poet and published author.
AMIRI BARAKA: Yeah, and harassing them, you know, in that town. See, the town is too small for
you to be doing something. And they actually had policemen stop a poetry reading. I mean,
that's how wild it was getting. They would ride up and down the street and make remarks
at my wife and the other ladies in that block, calling them all kinds of slurs. I mean, this
was a daily, a nightly thing. And so, it became like, you know, back and forth, back and forth,
you know. And finally, it just erupted.
We were trying to do things -- we were putting out literature suggesting that we could have
a mayor, we could have a city council. You know, that's -- Stokely had come out with
"Black Power," and I would staple that -- not staple, what do you call it? -- spray-paint
"Black Power" on all these buildings in the city, you know. So they knew who it was.
And once I got arrested, they ran in my house to destroy all the leaflets and stuff that
we were -- but my wife was smart enough to get that stuff out of there and move it to
somebody else's house down the street. But they destroyed our mimeograph machines and
stuff like that. They destroyed my car, you know. I mean, it was, you know, a search-and-destroy
mission, because they knew who it was, you know, in that little context.
But the whole city, you know, as Harper's magazine said, the worst city in the United
States was Newark, 18,000-people density in one square-mile. You know, talking about the
project. So it was a city that was always on the verge, you know.
AMY GOODMAN: We're talking to Amiri Baraka. When we come back, we'll also talk to Larry Hamm, well-known
community organizer, who was thirteen at the time of the rebellion. After the Newark Rebellion
died down, Detroit erupted. We'll go to Detroit to speak with Grace Lee Boggs, but we'll
also hear from family members in Newark of those who lost who lost loved ones -- ultimately
twenty-six people died -- in the rebellion of Newark....
AMY GOODMAN: Our guests in studio in New York are Amiri Baraka, poet, playwright, activist, beaten
almost unconscious, then taken to the office of the police commissioner in Newark by the
Newark Police in the midst of the uprising, one of the founders of the Black Arts Movement
in the '60s. He was New Jersey's poet laureate, as well. Larry Hamm is with us, community
organizer in Newark, chair of the People's Organization for Progress, that year after
year has organized a commemoration of the Newark Rebellion. We went out to the commemoration
yesterday.
Larry Hamm, you were thirteen when the uprising took place.
LARRY HAMM: Yes. Believe it or not, I was at a party across the street from my house that evening.
Some folks ran upstairs and said, "Springfield Avenue is on fire!" And we all ran out the
house, ran down the stairs. We were getting ready to run down 12th Street. We were running
12th Street. But my mother -- we lived across the street -- she was on the porch. She says,
"You're not going down to Springfield Avenue." She probably saved my life by doing so. But
it was a cataclysmic event, one I'll never forget. I mean, I think it was the event that
shaped my life.
I came from a regular kind of working-class family. My father was a truck driver. He passed
away. We went to live with my grandparents. My grandfather was a boilerman. My mother
was a seamstress We didn't talk about politics too much, but after the rebellion broke out,
that all changed. It was like our political awakening, or my political awakening.
Our community was under military occupation. We could stand out on our second-floor porch
and look out and see everything that was going on. Sometimes it was festive with the looting,
but then sometimes it was outright violent, and people were stoning cars that were trying
to move into the white community, and so forth. And then the Guard came in, and then we were
literally under military occupation. They had like set up posts on either end of our
street. I lived a block and a half from Springfield Avenue. For three days, we were under -- more
than three days, I think, we were under martial law. We couldn't leave our house.
And then, when it was lifted, and we had to go out and get food, because people couldn't
get food. The stores were looted. You didn't have no food. They would search our cars going
in and search our cars going out. The Guard would go door to door looking for contraband.
And it's funny, because I remarked to you yesterday I can relate to probably what the
people in Gaza are going through and in other countries are going through, because we know
what military occupation is all about.
But that rebellion changed, I think, changed the course of history of the city and probably
impacted the nation. Two weeks after the rebellion, even though I was a young person --- I know
this now, I didn't know it then, but two weeks after the rebellion, Black Power Conference
was held. A year later, the Black Political Convention was held at West Kennedy Junior
High School. We were just a block away from that ---
JUAN GONZALEZ: In Newark.
LARRY HAMM: In Newark, right, in West Kennedy Junior High School in Newark. And a year after that,
1969 was a black and Puerto Rican political convention, and a Community's Choice team
came out of that, and Ken Gibson was on that team, Sharpe James, Dennis --
AMY GOODMAN: The mayor, the next mayor.
LARRY HAMM: Yes. Dennis Westbrooks. Gibson became mayor in 1970, and in 1971 he appointed me
to the Newark Board of Education, and I became the youngest voting school board member in
the history of the country.
AMY GOODMAN: You were a high school student.
LARRY HAMM: I was seventeen years old, four -- just like four years after the rebellion. I had
just graduated from high school. I wasn't even old enough to vote. But, see, the rebellion
stirred up everything. There were all kind of movements in Newark, and there was a student
movement, and there was a teachers' strike, and the teachers' strike was the longest
teachers' strike in the history of the country. We thought we weren't going to graduate,
so all the high school students, we got together, we formed organization, we marched on the
board and the teachers' union. They were negotiating at the Gateway Hotel in 1971,
and 200 of us took over two floors of the Gateway Hotel and had a sit-in. We said we
weren't leaving until the mayor came, and that's when I met Ken Gibson. And it was
just a couple of months after that he appointed me to the Newark Board of Education.
JUAN GONZALEZ: In essence, what you're saying is that the rebellion itself sparked the political
awakening in Newark --
LARRY HAMM: Yes.
JUAN GONZALEZ: -- and Newark, in effect -- wasn't Gibson the first black mayor of a major American
city?
LARRY HAMM: Yes, of a major East Coast city.
JUAN GONZALEZ: Yeah, major East Coast city.
LARRY HAMM: Yes, yes. And, you know, Newark was already in transition. I mean, believe there was a
Black Power conference held in 1966. Gibson ran for mayor in '66 and lost in '66. But,
see, the rebellion was the thing, I think, that helped transform a lot of people's consciousness.
AMY GOODMAN: And yesterday was the first time a mayor, Cory Booker of Newark, walked in your commemoration
march, where you marched from the Fourth Precinct, from the police precinct --
LARRY HAMM: That's true.
AMY GOODMAN: -- to the marker.
AMIRI BARAKA: Well, he didn't go to the marker. He dropped out. When we turned that corner away
from the precinct, he disappeared into the mist.
AMY GOODMAN: Talk about that marker, Larry Hamm.
LARRY HAMM: Well, everybody in Newark that was there in '67 knew that it was the seminal event
that shaped -- you can't understand Newark today without knowing something about 1967,
and everybody felt that there should be something that would be a constant reminder of what
happened. And so, people asked for some kind of monument to those who perished during the
rebellion, and the city council, primarily, I guess, George Branch, who was a central
ward councilman then, you know, facilitated the establishment of that monument, and it
has the names of all twenty-six people on it.
AMY GOODMAN: Yesterday at the march, some of the family members of those who died were there. Crystal
Spellman's mother, Eloise, was killed by gunfire from police, state troopers, National
Guardsmen, forty years ago. A mother of eleven, Eloise was shot through the neck while closing
the windows of her apartment in the Hayes Home Public Housing Project on July 15, 1967.
This is an excerpt from a documentary made over two decades ago. It's called Newark:
The Slow Road Back. It's produced by Sandra King. It aired last night on New Jersey Network
on PBS. It includes Crystal Spellman describing her relief at seeing her old project building
destroyed as she recalls what happened to her mother.
CRYSTAL SPELLMAN: When they blew up the projects, or some of them, I felt good and relieved
that these buildings won't be there anymore, so I wouldn't have to watch them every time
I drove down the street or drove down Springfield Avenue, I wouldn't have to watch these buildings
and remember what happened, you know, to my family.
My mother had eleven children. We all lived in the project. My mother was killed in the
1967 riots. She was shot twice. From what I understand, she was closing the window,
and they shot her. They thought that she was a sniper, and they shot her. Where the sofa
was set up in the living room, you know, the sofa was by the window, and, of course, she
fell back on the sofa.
INTERVIEWER: You saw that?
CRYSTAL SPELLMAN: Yeah, I saw that. I can remember that. I remember all the blood. I
remember you can take the pillow on the couch and just do like this to it, and the blood
would all come out. I remember that.
AMY GOODMAN: That was Crystal Spellman from the New Jersey Network, Sandra King documentary.
There was also someone else who talked yesterday. His name was Ernest Rutledge, and he was talking
about his brother James Rutledge. James Rutledge is someone a lot of people referred to, James
Rutledge, the man who was shot thirty-nine times. How did that happen, Amiri Baraka?
And how significant was that moment?
AMIRI BARAKA: Well, they claim that James Rutledge was looting this bar, Joe-Rae's Tavern on Bergen
Street, you know. His relatives, obviously, you know, said another thing happened. He
was in the store hiding, you know, and then he came out, because the stuff had been done.
You know, the place had been looted already. He told a couple of his companions to hide,
and then he stood up, and they asked him was anybody else there, and he said no. Then they
shot him.
But what was the most brutal thing is they had four shots in the top of his head. I got
hold of these autopsy pictures from a law student, you know, Junice Williams phon.,
and I proceeded to distribute the pictures all over the city. You know, we made copies
of it. And they tried to indict me, not the people who shot this boy, but they wanted
to indict me for distributing the flicks. But if you saw those flicks, they are so horrific,
you know what I mean? You see, anybody shot in the top of the head, they're not even
shot running. You know, he wasn't running. You know, they had actually -- he was down,
and they put the gun to his head and blew holes in the top of his skull.
AMY GOODMAN: So let's go for a minute to Ernest Rutledge remembering that moment. He was speaking to
us yesterday in Newark, right next to the tombstone that honors the twenty-six people
who died in Newark.
ERNEST RUTLEDGE:He was killed in the riots of '67, or rebellion in '67, but it was -- he was
in a tavern on Bergen Street, Bergen and Custer. And the state troopers told everybody just
to get off the streets, and so everybody was running for cover, because they were shooting
like crazy. And him and two other boys we grew up with -- their name was Hatcher --
they ran into this tavern that had already been looted and everything.
And, in fact, I was a plumber. I own a plumbing business. I got a chance to work in that tavern.
And as I put the boiler in -- I put a very large boiler in the basement, installed it
-- I looked up at the ceiling, the ceiling of the basement, but the floor of the tavern,
in the back part of it, where my brother was killed. And when I got through, I went upstairs
and I looked around where he looked at and where the boys told me that they hid and stayed
down behind that bar and would not move.
My brother told them, when the state troopers came in and they asked him, "Who came in here
with you?" And he says, "No one." And my brother them, "Don't say nothing." And at that time,
the state troopers, they started shooting him, and they reloaded their guns three times,
and they kept shooting. That was how many holes in my brother.
My brother had so many holes in his body that at his funeral you could see the circles and
rings and everything, where the bullets -- all in his neck, all back here, everywhere.
And Mr. Perry Lander phon., he told us to get back, because -- and they put a barrier
or so we -- he said because his body could collapse at any time. And my mother said to
Mr. Perry, she said, "Hold my arm." And I'll never forget that. She said, "Mr. Perry, how
many holes did my son have in him?" He said, "Ms. Rutledge, at thirty-nine, we stopped
counting." That's how many holes my brother's body had in him. And then I later saw a picture
of my brother on a slab with so many holes on his body.
This incident, my mother became --- she had a nervous breakdown. She became paranoid.
And then, above all, she became schizophrenic, and she had to be institutionalized behind
this incident. And then I had to spread my wings to raise my other child siblings. So
---
AMY GOODMAN: And the top of his head?
ERNEST RUTLEDGE:In the top of his head and all over his body. His face, what we saw -- they had
the make-up couldn't cover up the holes, that you could see the little dark rings and
everything. It was that bad.
AMY GOODMAN: How old were you?
ERNEST RUTLEDGE:I was seventeen, and my brother was nineteen.
AMY GOODMAN: Ernest Rutledge remembering his brother James. There were no indictments. Juan?
JUAN GONZALEZ: Amiri, the ferocity of the way the National Guard and state troopers and the police attempted
to put down the rebellion, could you talk and little bit about the white-black relations
in the city? And I mentioned before Anthony Imperiale, who -- for people who are younger,
who was Imperiale and what did he represent, in terms of race relations in the Northeast?
AMIRI BARAKA: Well, Imperiale was just a kind of a hoodlum who seized on that time to become the mouth
of racist reaction. That's what he was. And he issued this statement with himself holding
this rifle: "If the Black Panther comes, the white hunter is waiting." You know, but we
took that photograph --
JUAN GONZALEZ: And he was what? He was a councilman at the time? What was he?
AMIRI BARAKA: He got to be a councilman later, as a result of that, you see. Even later, he became
a state official. But we took this photograph of him holding this rifle with his stomach
-- he had this huge stomach sticking out -- and when we ran Gibson for mayor, we distributed
these photos of him holding the rifle and said, "Would you want this for a mayor?" But
Imperiale was a -- he was a pawn. You know, he was a mouthpiece.
Actually, when we tried to build this Kawaida Towers, Imperiale was making noise, so we
bribed him. You know, we said, "Hey, look. What do you want, Tony? We'll give you jobs,
blah blah blah. Just shut up." And he was cooled out, but it was this Steven Adubato
who emerged as the powerbroker. It was Steve Adubato who was behind, actually, the opposition,
the behind-the-scene opposition to Kawaida Towers, so that they -- we spent a million
dollars to make a hole for the building. And then we spent $2 million to cover the hole.
So it was a $3 million nothing, you know.
But that kind of rabid reaction -- first of all, a lot of the white folks were moving,
you know, out of there. That's why the North Ward, which was once a solid Italian community
is now a solid Latino community, as a matter of fact. And then they started to actually
set fire to the Latinos' homes then. And that's when, you know, Felipe Luciano, Ramon
Riviera phon. and I made this mutual defense pact. We called a press conference to say,
you know, any violence against the Afro-American community is violence against the Puerto Rican
committee. Any violence against the Puerto Rican community is violence against the Afro-American
community. So Imperiale sends a telegram to the governor and asks, "Is that legal?" I
mean, that's the kind of mental midget he was, you know what I'm saying?
But, you see, that was the kind of energy, because we thought we were fighting directly
against oppression. That was a war, and what Larry says --- Adhimu, right? I named him.
But what that meant is that this war had finally materialized wholly. We had been fighting
it verbally. But when they started shooting, and it was, you say, the rebellion. The people
had stopped breaking in store windows and stuff after the first couple of days. But
that's when the murders started, see. When you put that under martial law, you see, my
wife ---- you know, of course, I was locked up, but she went back to the house. And we
had just been married about a year, right? And the little baby we had, Obalaji, she took
him up to the third floor and got in the closet and closed the door. She had a pot of lye
-- she had a real pot of hot water, lye and some Alaga syrup there.
LARRY HAMM: Ghetto ***.
AMIRI BARAKA: Yeah, ***. And she was sitting in there with the child in there, because they were
running up and down, you know, like trying to destroy our house.
AMY GOODMAN: You talked about Adhimu, who you named Larry Hamm. Your name, Amiri Baraka. You were born
Everett Jones, became LeRoi Jones, then Amiri Baraka. Why?
AMIRI BARAKA: I was Everett LeRoi Jones. My grandfather's name was Everett. He was a politician in that
town. My family came to Newark in the '20s. We've been there a long, long time. My father's
name was LeRoi, the French-ified aspect of it, because his first name was Coyette, you
see. They come from South Carolina. I changed my name when we became aware of the African
revolution and the whole question of our African roots. I was named by the man who buried Malcolm
X, Hesham Jabbar, who died last week. He named me Amir Barakat. But that's Arabic. I brought
it down into Swahililand, into Tanzania, which is an accent. So it's Amiri, instead of Amir,
and, you know, Baraka, rather than Barakat, you know, which is interesting. If it was
Amir Barakat, I would probably have more difficulty flying these days.
AMY GOODMAN: We're going to -- yes, Larry?
LARRY HAMM: And it was after the Black Political Convention in Gary, Indiana in 1972, which
was like another seminal event coming out of the period of the rebellions -- I was one
of the youngest delegates to Gary in 1972. It was after Gary that I asked Amiri Baraka
to give me an African name, because that was another transforming event for me to see black
people coming together in a great act of self-determination.
AMY GOODMAN: And you also led the anti-apartheid movement at Princeton University, but that's another
story for another show. We're talking to Amiri Baraka and Larry Hamm. When we come
back from break, we will also be joined by Grace Lee Boggs. As Newark quieted down, Detroit
erupted. So we're going to Detroit. Stay with us.