Lenora Branch Fulani (b.
April 25, 1950, birth name
Lenora Branch) is an American
psychologist, psychotherapist, and political activist. She may be
best known for her
presidential campaigns and
development of youth programs serving minority communities in the
New York City area. In the
United States
presidential election, 1988 heading the
New Alliance Party ticket, she became the
first woman and the first
African
American to achieve
ballot access
in all fifty states. She received more votes for
President in a U.S.
general election than any other woman in
history. Fulani's political concerns include
racial equality,
gay
rights and for the past decade, political reform, specifically
to encourage third parties.
In her career, Fulani has worked closely since 1980 with
Fred Newman, a New York-based psychotherapist
and political activist who has often served as her campaign
manager. Newman developed the theory and practice of
Social Therapy in the 1970s, founding the
New York Institute
for Social Therapy in 1977. Along with psychologist
Lois Holzman, Fulani has worked to incorporate
the social therapeutic approach into youth-oriented programs, most
notably the New York City-based All Stars Project, which she
co-founded in 1981.
In 1993, Fulani joined activists who supported
Ross Perot for President in the
United States
presidential election, 1992, in a national effort to create a
new pro-reform party. In 1994 she led formation of the Committee
for a Unified Independent Party (CUIP). For years Fulani was active
with Newman's version of the
International Workers Party
(IWP).
More recently she has been active with the
Independence Party of New
York, which was founded in Rochester
in 1991 and has become influential
statewide.
Early life
The
youngest daughter of a registered nurse and a railway baggage
handler, Fulani was born Lenora Branch in 1950 in Chester,
Pennsylvania
. Her father died of pneumonia when she was
12. As a teenager in Chester in the 1960s, Fulani was active in her
local Baptist church, where she played piano for the choir.
In 1967,
Fulani was awarded a scholarship to study at Hofstra
University
in New York. She graduated in 1971, and went
on to earn a master's degree from Columbia University's Teacher's
College. In the late 1970s, she earned a Ph.D. in developmental
psychology from the
City
University of New York (CUNY). Fulani was a guest researcher at
Rockefeller University from 1973-1977, with a focus on how learning
and social environment interact for African-American youth.
While in college, she became involved in
black nationalist politics, along with her
then-husband Richard. Both had adopted the African tribal name
Fulani as a surname when they married in a
traditional
West African ceremony.
During her studies at City University, Fulani became interested in
the work of Fred Newman and Lois Holzman, who had recently formed
the
New York
Institute for Social Therapy and Research. Fulani studied at
the Institute in the early 1980s.
Electoral politics
Fulani became active in the Newman-founded independent
New Alliance Party (NAP) and emerged as a
spokesperson who often provoked controversy. In 1982 Fulani ran for
Lt. Governor of New York on the NAP ticket but was unsuccessful.
She has also been involved in the affiliated (or some say, secret)
Independent Workers Party,
the Rainbow Alliance, and other shifting groups led by
Newman.
She helped recruit the NAP's 1984 presidential candidate
Dennis L. Serrette, an African-American trade union
activist. Although he was quite involved with the party for years,
Serrette left and published critical accounts of what he described
as its cultic operation.
Fulani ran for
President in 1988 as the
candidate of the
New Alliance
Party. She received almost a quarter of a million votes or 0.2%
of the vote. She was the first African-American independent and the
first women presidential candidate on the ballot in all 50 states.
In 1990 Fulani ran as a
New York gubernatorial
candidate. She was endorsed that year by
Nation of Islam leader
Louis Farrakhan.
Although in 1987 Fulani and Newman began an alliance with minister
and activist
Al Sharpton, in 1992 he ran
for the U.S.
Senate from New York
as a
Democrat rather than as an Independent. Since then, Sharpton
has kept his distance from both Fulani and Newman.
Fulani again ran as the New Alliance candidate for President in the
1992 election, this
time receiving 0.07% of the vote. She chose former
Peace and Freedom Party activist
Maria Elizabeth Muñoz as
her
vice-presidential
running mate. Muñoz ran on the NAP ticket for the offices of
U.S. Senator and governor in California
but was unsuccessful. In 1992 Fulani
self-published her
autobiography
The Making of a Fringe Candidate, 1992.
In 1994, Fulani and Newman became affiliated with the
Patriot Party, one of many groups that later
competed for control of the
Reform Party,
founded by
Ross Perot. She also joined
with Jacqueline Salit to start the Committee for a Unified
Independent Party (CUIP), formed to bring together independent
groups to challenge the bipartisan hegemony in American
politics.
During the
2000
election, Fulani surprisingly endorsed
Pat Buchanan, then running on the Reform Party
ticket. She even served briefly as co-chair of the campaign. Fulani
withdrew her endorsement, saying that Buchanan was trying to
further his
right-wing agenda. Fulani and
Newman then endorsed the Presidential candidacy of
Natural Law Party leader
John Hagelin, a close associate of
Maharishi Mahesh Yogi. Later, Fulani
unsuccessfully sought the Vice Presidential nomination at the
national convention organized by a faction of the Reform
Party.
In the 2001
election for
Mayor of New York City,
Fulani endorsed the
Republican candidate
Michael Bloomberg and organized
city members of the IP to work for his campaign. Bloomberg, once
elected, approved an $8.7 million municipal bond to provide
financing for Fulani and Newman to build a new headquarters for
their youth program, theater and telemarketing center. The
Bloomberg alliance with the Independence Party in part was due to
New York's
fusion rule, which
allowed Bloomberg to aggregate his votes on all ballot lines. The
59,000 votes that Bloomberg received on the Independence Party
ballot line exceeded his margin of victory over the Democratic (and
Working Families Party)
candidate
Mark J. Green.
In the municipal election of 2003, Fulani was among those who
endorsed Bloomberg's proposed amendment to the New York City
Charter to establish non-partisan elections. Although Bloomberg
spent $7 million of his own money to promote the amendment, voters
rejected it.
In September 2005 the State Executive Committee of the Independence
Party of New York dropped Fulani and other members from the New
York City chapter. This was part of a fierce power struggle that
has brewed between members from upstate and Long Island, and
Newman, Fulani, and the New York-based members. The majority of
party members were disaffected by the ideology of Newman and
Fulani. The party's state chairman, Frank MacKay, a former ally of
Fulani, claimed the action followed Fulani's refusal to repudiate
an earlier statement which many considered
antisemitic.
According to the New York Times, "In 1989, Dr. Fulani
wrote that the Jews 'had to sell their souls to acquire Israel
' and had to
'function as mass murderers of people of
color' to stay there." Fulani said she did not intend the
statement as antisemitic but wanted to raise issues which she
believed needed to be explored. She has since repudiated the
remarks, which she characterized as "excessive". She publicly
apologized to "any people who had been hurt by them".
Citing the "anti-Semitism" allegations, Independence Party State
Chairman Frank MacKay initiated proceedings to have nearly 200
Independence Party members in New York City expelled from the
party. Each case MacKay brought to the
New York State Supreme Court
was dismissed. In one instance, Manhattan Supreme Court Justice
Emily Jane Goodman wrote that the charges were "more political than
philosophical."
Fulani formed a coalition to organize Independence Party support
for the re-election campaign of Mayor
Michael Bloomberg. The local press
described the coalition as composed of "
union officials,
clergy,
sanitation workers, police officers, firefighters, district leaders
and others who work at the grassroots level." Spirited defenses of
Fulani have appeared in the city's black press; writing in the
Amsterdam News, columnist Richard Carter wrote "there is
little doubt that the main reason for the negative press, which, by
the way, is not unusual for this brilliant, outspoken political
strategist, is because she is a strong, no-nonsense Black woman. So
strong she makes the city’s political establishment and lockstep
white news media nervous."
Community work
Fulani has worked on a number of community outreach and youth
development projects.
In 1984, she helped found the Castillo
Cultural Center in New York
City
, which produces mostly plays written by Newman, in
an unusual arrangement. In 1998, the Castillo Center merged
with the All Stars Project youth charity and broadened the single
base for Newman's work. Fulani has been active in the development
of educational programs associatedd with the
[68131] All Stars
Project, including the Joseph A. Forgione Development School for
Youth and the All Stars Talent Show Network, which create enriching
experiences outside school for poor inner city youth, using a
performance model. Fulani described her approach in
Derrick Bell's 2004 book
Silent Covenants:
Brown V. Board of Education and the Unfulfilled Hopes for
Racial Reform:
We teach young people to use performance skills to
become more cosmopolitan and sophisticated—to interact with the
worlds of Wall Street, with business and the arts.
In becoming more cosmopolitan— in going beyond their
narrow and parochial and largely nationalistic identities—they
acquire a motivation to learn as a part of consistently creating
and recreating their lives.
In 2004 the
Anti-Defamation
League criticized the All Stars/Castillo theater troupe for its
play
Crown Heights, accusing the playwright of blaming the
riots on the Jewish community.
The play dramatized events of the 1991 riots
in Crown
Heights
, Brooklyn
after a motorcade of the Lubavitcher rabbi
accidentally killed a seven-year-old Caribbean-American child. The
accident ignited long-standing tensions in the community; in street
violence, a visiting
Australian rabbinical
student, Yankel Rosenbaum, was stabbed to death by Lemrick Nelson,
a 16-year-old Crown Heights youth.
A local Brooklyn paper described the play favorably.
Criticism
Newman and Fulani's leadership, as well as various manifestations
of the political party, such as the secret Independent Workers
Party, have been strongly criticized by former members through the
years, including party candidate Dennis Serrette and five-year
member Marina Ortiz. In addition,
Political Research Associates
published a critical report on the NAP in 1987, and updated and
revised it in 2008 on their website www.PublicEye.org.
After working with Fulani for several years, Serrette, who also had
a personal relationship with her, has questioned his experience and
publicly criticized Newman and Fulani's leadership of the party and
its members. "[I]t was clearly a tactical ...a
racist scheme of using Black and
Latino and
Asian people
to do the bidding of one man, namely Fred Newman, that's my
opinion, and to use other whites as well, you know through the
therapy practices."
After he raised his concerns internally, Serrette said his
treatment by other NAP leaders worsened dramatically. He also
questioned the way in which therapy was used in the political work:
"...[T]herapy was a way of getting people to not only operate in an
organizational way, but also a way of controlling every aspect of
their lives...you certainly couldn't straighten anybody out. But it
was certainly effective in terms of controlling a lot of people to
do the kinds of things that were asked of them...they would do
anything, just about, that he would ask them to do."
In an article published after he left the NAP, Serrette stated:
"I knew when I joined NAP that it was not black-led,
and I knew when I left it was not black-led.
It took longer to understand that NAP was not even a
progressive
organization as it also pretends.
Be that as it may, I probably still would not take the time to
write about the organization. However, as a long-time activist who
made the mistake of joining NAP, and who served on the
organization’s “Central Committee,” I believe I have a
responsibility to reveal the intense psychological control and
millions of dollars Fred Newman employs to get well-meaning
individuals in our communities (they target the black community),
to viciously attack black leaders, black institutions, and
progressive organizations for purposes of building Newman’s power
base."
Fulani dismissed his charges as related simply to the end of their
personal relationship. In her self-published autobiography
The
Making of a Fringe Candidate, 1992 (1992), Fulani wrote that
Serrette frequently fought with black women in the New Alliance
Party and would "criticize and ridicule" them for their
relationship to Newman.
Notes
- Interview by Rob Redding, Redding News
Review, March 12, 2002. Transcript accessed online 24 December
2006.
- eNewsletter Volume 1, All Stars Project Inc.,
March 18, 2004. Accessed online 24 December 2006
- Lenora Fulani bio, Speakers Platform, Accessed
20 February 2006
- Michael Slackman, "In New York, Fringe Politics in Mainstream",
New York Times, May 28, 2005; Accessed online 24 December
2006.
- The All Stars, New York Voices, Thirteen WNET,
New York. Accessed online 24 December 2006.
- Edmund W. Gordon, Carol Bonilla Bowman, Brenda X. Mejia,
"Changing the Script for Youth Development: An
Evaluation of the All Stars Talent Show Network and the Joseph A.
Forgione Development School for Youth", Institute for Urban and
Minority Education (IUME), Teachers College, Columbia University,
June 2003, Accessed 24 December 2006
- James McKinley, Jr., "Tilting at the Same Windmill, but on a
Faster Steed", New York Times, September 11, 1994, p. 56.
Abstract available online; full article online
by subscription only.
- Dennis L. Serrette, "Inside the New Alliance Party", first
published in Radical America, Vol.21, No.5 [1], accessed 14 May 2008
- Marc Humbert, "I.P. Moves Against Fulani", Associated Press,
September 18, 2005, Accessed 27 December 2006
- Sewall Chan, "City Plan to Aid Arts Group Draws Fire From 4
Officials", New York Times, 09/12/06.
- Lenora Fulani Announces Possible Mayoral Run. NY1 News, August 9, 2007
- Barbara Ross, "Fulani ban nixed", New York Daily News,
August 15, 2006, Accessed online 27 December 2006
- Sametta Thompson, "Democrats Can Reelect Mayor Without Voting
Republican", Queens Chronicle, October 20, 2005.
Accessed online 27 December 2006.
- Richard Carter, "Lenora Fulani is here to stay despite the white-bread
naysayers", Amsterdam News, March 2 – March 8, 2006.
Accessed online 27 December 2006.
- Derrick Bell. Silent Covenants: Brown V. Board of Education
and the Unfulfilled Hopes for Racial ReformOxford University
Press, 2004
- Derrick Bell. Silent Covenants: Brown V. Board of Education
and the Unfulfilled Hopes for Racial ReformOxford University
Press, 2004
- "ADL Says 'Crown Heights' Distorts History and
Refuels Hatred", accessed 14 May 2008
- Abby Ranger, "Youth Theatre, 'Crown Heights', Seeks
to Soothe Racial Tensions", 26 Jan 2004, accessed 14 May 2008,
pdf on All Stars Website
- George Gurley, "Guru Fred Newman Enchants Loyal Followers
and Pat Buchanan"The New York Observer, December 6,
1999
- Chip Berlet, Clouds Blur the Rainbow: The Other Side of the
New Alliance Party, Cambridge: Political Research Associates,
1987 [2]
- Dennis L. Serrette, "Inside the New Alliance Party", first
published in Radical America, Vol.21, No.5 [3], accessed 14 May 2008
- Lenora B. Fulani. The making of a fringe candidate,
1992. New York: Castillo International, 1992. ISBN
9780962862137.
External links