Paul LeRoy Bustill Robeson (April 9, 1898 –
January 23, 1976) was an internationally renowned
African-American basso profundo concert singer, scholar, actor
of film and stage,
All-American and
professional athlete, writer, multi-lingual orator and lawyer who
was also noted for his wide-ranging
social justice activism. A forerunner of the
civil rights movement, Robeson was a
trade union activist, peace activist,
Phi Beta Kappa Society laureate, and
a recipient of the
Spingarn Medal and
Stalin Peace Prize.
Robeson achieved
worldwide fame during his life for his artistic accomplishments,
and his outspoken, radical beliefs which
largely clashed with the colonial
powers of Western Europe and the
Jim Crow climate of the pre-civil
rights United
States
, thus becoming a prime target during the McCarthyist era.Despite being one of the most
internationally famous cultural figures of the first half of the
20th century, persecution by the US
government and media virtually erased
Robeson from mainstream US culture and
subsequent interpretations of US history,
including civil rights and black
history.
Robeson
was the first major concert star to popularize the performance of
Negro spirituals and
was the first black actor of the 20th century to portray Shakespeare's Othello on Broadway
. As
of 2009 Robeson's run in the 1943–45
Othello production
still holds the record for the longest running Shakespeare play on
Broadway. In line with Robeson's vocal dissatisfaction with movie
stereotypes, his roles in both the
US and
British film industries were
some of the first parts ever created that displayed dignity and
respect for the African American film actor, paving the way for
Sidney Poitier and
Harry Belafonte.
At the height of his fame, Paul Robeson decided to become a
primarily political artist, speaking out against
fascism and
racism in the US
and abroad as the United States government and many Western
European powers failed after
World War
II to end
racial segregation
and guarantee civil rights for
people of
color. Robeson thus became a prime target of the
Red Scare during the late 1940s through to the
late 1950s.
His passport was revoked from 1950 to 1958
under the McCarran Act and he was under
surveillance by the Federal Bureau of Investigation
and Central
Intelligence Agency and by the British MI5
for well
over three decades until his death in 1976. The reasoning behind
his persecution centered not only on his beliefs in socialism and friendship with the Soviet
peoples but also his tireless work towards the
liberation of the colonised peoples of Africa, the Caribbean
, Asia and the Australian aborigines, his support of
the International Brigades,
his efforts to push for anti-lynching
legislation and the racial
integration of major league
baseball among many other causes that challenged white supremacism on six
continents.
Condemnation of Robeson and his beliefs came swiftly from both the
United States Congress and
many mainstream black organizations including the
National
Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP).To
this day, Paul Robeson's FBI file is one of the largest of any
entertainer ever investigated by the
United States Intelligence
Community, requiring its own internal index and unique status
of health file. Despite persecution and limited activity resulting
from ailing health in his later years, Paul Robeson remained,
throughout his life, committed to socialism and
anti-colonialism as a means to
world peace and was unapologetic about his
political views. Present day advocates and historians of Paul
Robeson's legacy have worked successfully to restore his name to
many history books and sports records, while honoring his memory
globally with posthumous awards and recognitions.
Early life and education
Robeson
was born in Princeton,
New Jersey
. His father, William Drew Robeson I, a descendant
of the Igbo people, escaped from a
North
Carolina
plantation where he had been born a slave;
William Drew Robeson I earned a degree from Lincoln
University
and became a church minister. From 1880
until 1901, he was minister of the Witherspoon Street
Presbyterian Church in Princeton. Rev.
Robeson was ousted from the Princeton Pastorate after more than 20
years of service, with no clear explanation given. Rev. Robeson's
own congregation had been a contributing factor to his dismissal at
Witherspoon Church.
Testimony would later reveal that he had aligned himself "on the
wrong side of a church fight," having apparently refused to bow to
pressure from the "white residents of Princeton" that he cease his
tendency to "speak out against social injustice." After his
dismissal, Rev. William Drew Robeson bypassed any need "to
recriminate and rebuke." He said, "As I review the past and think
upon many scenes, my heart is filled with love." In closing his
last address to his Princeton congregation, he implored them, "Do
not be discouraged, do not think your past work is in vain."
Paul Robeson's mother,
Maria Louisa
Bustill, came from an
abolitionist
Quaker family. Nearly blind, she died in a
tragic fire in 1904 when Paul Robeson was six years old.
Paul's
four siblings included: William Drew Robeson II, a physician who
practiced in Washington,
D.C.
; Benjamin Robeson, a minister; Reeve Robeson
(called Reed); and Marian Robeson, who lived in Philadelphia
.William Drew Robeson was a stern
disciplinarian when it came to Paul's studies and citizenship.
In 1910,
when the family relocated to Somerville, New Jersey
, he continued to impress upon Paul that he could
achieve anything that whites could. In 1915, Paul
graduated with honors from Somerville
High School
, where he excelled academically and participated in
singing, acting, and athletics. He went on to win a full
academic scholarship to Rutgers University.
Rutgers University
Paul
Robeson was only the third African-American student accepted at
Rutgers
University
, and he was the only black student during his time
on campus. Robeson was one of three classmates at Rutgers
accepted into
Phi Beta Kappa and one
of four students selected in 1919 to
Cap
and Skull, Rutgers' honor society. He was honored with the Phi
Beta Kappa Key in his third year. The class
valedictorian, he exhorted his classmates to
"catch a new vision", while the "class prophecy" envisioned that he
would become a governor of New Jersey by 1940 and "leader of the
colored race in America."A noted athlete, Robeson earned altogether
15
varsity letters in American
football, baseball, basketball, and track and field. For his
accomplishments as an
end in
football, he was named a first-team
All-American in 1917 and 1918. During scrimmages
while Robeson initially tried out for the football team, he faced
savage physical punishment: for instance, when a senior member of
the team crushed Robeson's hand with a cleated foot, tearing off
fingernails. He bore the abuse to prove his worth, eventually
becoming considered the greatest football player of his era. The
football coach,
Walter Camp, later
described him as "the greatest to ever trot the gridiron." Later in
his life, however, when the United States government stopped him
from traveling outside the country, his name was retroactively
struck from the roster of the 1918 college All-America football
team.
Eventually Robeson's name was fully restored
to the Rutgers University sports records and in 1995, he was also
officially inducted into The College
Football Hall of Fame
. Rutgers-Newark also honored him
posthumously by naming their student-life campus center, and art
gallery after him. The
Rutgers
University New Brunswick Campus named one of their cultural
centers, The Paul Robeson Cultural Center, for him as well. In
addition, the Rutgers-Camden campus named their library, the Paul
Robeson Library, after him.
Columbia Law School, and The School of Oriental and African
Studies, London
After
graduation from Rutgers, Robeson moved to Harlem
and entered
Columbia Law School, Between
1920 and 1923, Robeson helped pay his way through law school by
working as an athlete and a performer. He played
professional football in the
American Professional
Football Association (later called the National Football
League) with the
Akron Pros and
Milwaukee Badgers.
He served as
assistant football coach at Lincoln University in Pennsylvania,
where he was initiated into the Nu Chapter of Alpha Phi Alpha, the oldest intercollegiate
Greek-letter fraternity
for African Americans.32 He also played for the St.
Christopher Club traveling basketball team during their 1918–19
season, alongside future Basketball Hall of Fame
members Clarence "Fats"
Jenkins and James “Pappy” Ricks, and former Hampton
Institute
star center Charles Bradford. In 1922, he
starred in the play
Taboo, written by
Mary Hoyt Wiborg, in New York and in
London. He graduated from Columbia in 1923, in the same law school
class as
William O. Douglas—later a United
States Supreme Court
Justice—and was hired at the law firm of Stotesbury
and Miner in New York City; Robeson quit after a white secretary
refused to take dictation from him because of the color of his
skin.
Robeson
later studied studied phonetics and Swahili at the School of
Oriental and African Studies at the School of
Oriental and African Studies
at the University
of London in 1934.
Personal life
Robeson married
Eslanda Cardozo
Goode in August 1921. She headed the pathology laboratory at
Columbia
Presbyterian Medical Center in New York City and came from a
distinguished family of a
mixed race
background.
Her father Cardozo Goode was related to the
U.S.
Supreme
Court
Justice Benjamin
Cardozo. Essie encouraged Robeson in his career and
became his business manager. Early in their marriage, she
understood that her husband was not dedicated to monogamy and
domesticity. Wanting to remain Mrs. Robeson, she made her peace
with his extramarital affairs. Paul Robeson and Eslanda seriously
considered divorce in the 1930s when Robeson fell deeply in love
with a British woman, Yolanda Jackson. However, the relationship
with Jackson ended abruptly and Eslanda and Robeson stayed
together, agreeing to an
open marriage
until her death on December 23, 1965.
The Robesons had one child,
Paul Robeson
Jr, born November 2, 1927. Paul Robeson Jr., who is
multi-lingual like his father, lives in New York and has spent much
of his life safeguarding his father's memory and restoring his
father's legacy by founding The Robeson Family Archives and The
Paul Robeson Foundation. Paul Robeson had two grandchildren, David
Robeson (1951–1998) and Susan Robeson (born in 1953).
In 1980 Susan Robeson published a pictorial biography of her
grandfather titled
The Whole World in His Hands.
Career in entertainment
In the 1920s, Robeson found fame as an actor and singing star of
both stage and radio with his
bass voice and commanding presence. His
rich vocal instrument descended as low as C below the bass clef. In
addition to his celebrated stage performances, his renditions of
old
spirituals were acclaimed; Robeson
and his accompanist and arranger
Lawrence Brown were the first to
bring them to the concert stage. Paul Robeson also acted in or
narrated over a dozen films, in the United States and overseas. His
growing political and racial consciousness saw him become one of
the first actors of any race to demand (and receive) final cut
approval on a film, making him the first black actor to act in
roles that had both dignity and emphasized pride in African
heritage.
Early stage work and Eugene O'Neill
His first roles were in 1922 playing Simon in
Simon the
Cyrenian at the
Harlem YMCA and Jim
in
Taboo at the Sam Harris Theater in Harlem.
Taboo was later re-named
Vodoo. Robeson was
acclaimed for his 1924 performance in the title role of
Eugene O'Neill's
The Emperor Jones—originally
performed, also with great success, by
Charles Gilpin in 1920. Robeson gained
fame in his early career for his performance in
All God's Chillun Got
Wings in which he portrayed the black husband of an
abusive white woman who, resenting her husband's skin color,
destroys his promising career as a lawyer. He next played Crown in
the stage version of
DuBose Heyward's
novel
Porgy, which provided the basis
for
George and
Ira Gershwin's opera
Porgy and Bess.
Othello and Show Boat
In 1930 Robeson starred in the title role in
William Shakespeare's
Othello in England, when no U.S. company would
employ him for the part.
Peggy
Ashcroft co-starred as
Desdemona. He
would reprise the role in New York in 1943, and tour the U.S. with
it until 1945. His Broadway run of
Othello is still, as of
2009, the longest of any Shakespeare play. He won the
Spingarn Medal in 1945 for his portrayal of
Othello.
For the Broadway
production Uta Hagen
played Desdemona, and José Ferrer
played Iago. Robeson's final portrayal of Othello in 1959
at The Royal Shakespeare
Company in Stratford-upon-Avon
was directed by Tony
Richardson and also proved to be his theatrical swan song.
Robeson also played the role of Joe, which was written for him, in
the 1928 London production of
Show
Boat, and repeated his performance in the 1932 Broadway
revival of the show, the 1936 film version, and a 1940 Los Angeles
stage production. His rendition of "
Ol'
Man River" is widely considered the definitive version of the
song. Robeson sang the song as written whenever he appeared in a
production of
Show Boat, but in later recitals he made
alterations to the lyrics to transform it from a song of black
lament to one of defiance and perseverance.
While
Show Boat was immensely popular with white
audiences, black theater reviewers were less than impressed. J.A
Rodgers of
The Amsterdam
News wrote in 1928 that he had spoken to "fully some
thirty Negros of intelligence and self respect" who urged "their
disapprobation of the play" and he had "heard many harsh things
said against Robeson... if anyone had called him (Robeson) a
'nigger', he'd be the first to get offended and there he is singing
'nigger, nigger' before all these white people."He also played the
role of
Toussaint L'Ouverture
in a 1936 play by
C.L.R. James alongside the actor
Robert Adams.
Spirituals and concert singing
During his days at
Columbia Law
School during the
Harlem
Renaissance Paul Robeson sang professionally but with little
thought of pursuing a career in song. In 1922
Eubie Blake heard Robeson sing casually and
encouraged him to appear in Blake's production of
Shuffle Along. In 1924 when Robeson was
unable to whistle for a performance in
Taboo, he sang a spiritual instead pleasing both
the cast and audiences. After briefly meeting accompanist and
arranger Lawrence Brown in England during 1922, the two reconnected
in 1924 and rapidly established a successful musical partnership.
Robeson would credit Brown guiding him "...to the beauty of my own
folk music and to the music of all other Peoples so like our
own."
Lawrence Brown, who had previously worked with the
gospel singer
Roland
Hayes, had an extensive repertoire of African-American folk
songs. Both he and Robeson helped bring these to much wider
attention both inside the U.S. and abroad. With Robeson's wife
Eslanda arranging concert venues, Paul Robeson became a hugely
popular concert draw in New York City with
Carl Sandburg drawing a distinction between
his interpretations of spirituals and
Roland Hayes' stating that "Hayes imitates
white culture... Robeson is the real thing... ." Robeson also
became interested in the
folk music of
the world; he came to be conversant with 20 languages, fluent or
near fluent in 12. His standard repertoire after the 1920s included
songs in many languages including languages as diverse as Chinese,
Russian, Yiddish and German.)
Through his renowned singing and his work with Lawrence Brown,
Alan Booth and other accompanists,
arrangers and producers, Paul Robeson went on to a lucrative
concert, radio and recording career. But the
Red Scare in 1949 brought his career to a halt. He
was unable to perform in the U.S.; and his passport was revoked
from 1950 to 1958 under the
McCarran
Act, which left him unable to travel overseas to perform.
His 1958
concert at Carnegie
Hall
would prove his comeback. And, despite very
ill heath, he sang the spiritual "
We Are Climbing Jacob's
Ladder" during his last major public appearance, which took
place in April 1965, for a
Freedomways Quarterly birthday
celebration in his honor. From 1961 to 1985, a period of massive
social change for African Americans,
Freedomways Quarterly
published the leaders and artists of the black freedom movement.
Figures of towering historical stature wrote for
Freedomways
Quarterly, and Robeson was among them.
Hollywood and international film career
Between 1925 and 1942 Robeson appeared in eleven films, all but
four of them British productions—after he and his wife moved to
England in the late 1920s.
For a total of nearly eleven years, he lived
in the United
Kingdom
and paid taxes, with long periods away on singing
tours, until the outbreak of World War II.
Robeson's earliest surviving film is 1924's
Body and Soul a silent
American
race film (made for all-black
audiences) directed by
Oscar Micheaux
in which Robeson played a preacher with a split personality.
Robeson's second film was the experimental classic
Borderline.
Shot in Switzerland
in 1930 by a trio of avant garde artists known as
the Pool Group, and co-starring his wife,
Eslanda, the film chronicles race relations in a small European
village.
In 1933, he returned briefly to the U.S. where he reprised his
title role in
Dudley Murphy's film
version of
Eugene O'Neill's
The Emperor Jones. The
American version of
The Emperor Jones was censored to
leave out a dramatic scene featuring Robeson killing a white prison
guard who had ordered his character to beat a fellow prisoner who
had been caught escaping. It was the first time a black man was
shown killing a white man on the big screen—and audiences in the
U.S. were not permitted to see it. The 1936
Universal Pictures film
Show Boat was a box office hit
for Robeson, and the most frequently shown and highly acclaimed of
all his films, and his performance of "
Ol'
Man River" was particularly notable.
At the height of his popularity in the 1930s, Robeson became a
major box office attraction in British films such as
Song of Freedom (1936) and
The Proud Valley (1940).
He was also King Umbopa in the 1937 version of
King Solomon's Mines
(1937). In films such as
Jericho and
Proud
Valley, he portrayed strong black American male leading
roles.
Robeson left Britain during the Second World War. It was later
discovered that his name was in
The Black
Book, a Nazi document listing thousands of people living in
Britain who were to be arrested following the successful completion
of
Operation Sealion.
Ballad for Americans
After a return from Europe in 1939, Robeson quickly became the
voice of the nation when he performed
Ballad for
Americans, an
American patriotic
cantata with lyrics by
John La Touche and music by
Earl Robinson. Originally titled
The Ballad for Uncle Sam, it was
written for a
Works
Progress Administration theatre project called
Sing for Your Supper. Robeson
performed "Ballad" on the
CBS radio network in
1943, accompanied by chorus and orchestra.
Bing Crosby would also record a commercially
successful recording of the piece but the song is almost always
associated with Robeson as it represents the pinnacle of his music
and radio career prior to the
Cold War.
He sang
Ballad for Americans at The Hollywood Bowl
to the largest sold-out crowd in its
history.
International activism
Paul Robeson spent many years abroad during his early career on
stage and in concert. Eager to understand their struggle against
poverty and harsh working conditions, he met with Welsh coal miners
in the late 1920s who were protesting unfair labor practices by
colliery owners. This led him to a greater political awareness
transcending race and showing him that, ultimately, the struggles
of oppressed people are due to inequities in the class structure of
capitalism rather than racial divisions.
In London, he became aware of the large body of knowledge on
African history and culture that was not available in the United
States.
As his political consciousness grew, Robeson
became an unwavering supporter of the International Brigades and their
struggle to liberate Spain
from the
fascist government of General Francisco
Franco. He also supported the cause of
Jewish refugees from
Nazism.
The Welsh coal miners
Robeson's
association with Wales
began in
1928 while he was performing in London in the musical Show
Boat. There, he met a group of unemployed miners
who had taken part in a "hunger march" from South Wales
to protest their situation. During the 1930s,
Robeson made several visits to Welsh coal mining regions to perform
in Cardiff
, Neath
and Aberdare
. In 1934, he performed in Caernarfon
to benefit the victims of a major disaster at
Gresford
Colliery, near Wrexham
, where 264 miners died. In 1940, Robeson
appeared in The Proud
Valley, playing a black laborer who arrives in the
Rhondda
and wins the hearts of the local
people.
Robeson remains a celebrated figure in Wales. The exhibit
Let
Paul Robeson Sing! was unveiled in Cardiff in 2001, then
toured several Welsh towns and cities. A number of Welsh artists
have celebrated Robeson's life: the
Manic Street Preachers' song
"
Let Robeson Sing" appears on the
album
Know Your Enemy. The band also covered "Didn't My
Lord Deliver Daniel?"— the spiritual sung by Robeson as part of his
1957 telephone performance to the Miners' Eisteddfod in Porthcawl
during the eight year period from 1950 through 1958 when the U.S.
government revoked his passport, which stopped him from traveling
or performing overseas. The play
Paul Robeson Knew My
Father by Greg Cullen, set in the Rhondda during the 1950s,
features a character with a childhood obsession for Robeson's music
and films.
Martyn Joseph's song "Proud
Valley Boy" on his 2005 album
Deep Blue is also based on
Robeson's Welsh connections.
The Spanish Civil War
Robeson toured
Republican
Spain during the
Spanish Civil
War and was photographed with members of the
Abraham Lincoln Brigade, including
its black commander
Oliver Law. His
repertoire included "
Peat Bog
Soldiers," which was popular with
International Brigade volunteers and
veterans alike. Robeson was among the first performers to sing in
concert to U.S. troops during World War II.
In 1938, he performed
in front of an audience of 7,000 at the Welsh International
Brigades National Memorial in Mountain
Ash
, to commemorate the 33 men from Wales killed while
fighting on the side of the Republic in the Spanish Civil
War. Paul Robeson's image is featured prominently in the
only national historical monument dedicated to the
Abraham Lincoln Brigade.
The
monument was unveiled on The
Embarcadero in San
Francisco
in
2008.
Anti-colonialist activism
In
London
during the
1930s he met with African students, who urged him to travel to the
Soviet
Union
. Paul and Eslanda Robeson Eslanda were named
honorary members of the West African
Students' Union in London where they became acquainted with African
students Kwame Nkrumah and Jomo Kenyatta, future presidents of Ghana
and
Kenya
, respectively. In 1934 Robeson wrote of his
desire to "be Africa" and continued to draw comparisons between
oppressed peoples exploited in the colonial possessions of Western
Europe and blacks in the United States abused by
segregation and
lynching. He was a prolific writer for
leftist and progressive periodicals such as
Freedomways Quarterly for whom Nkrumah, Kenyatta,
W. E.
B. Du
Bois and
Martin Luther King
Jr. also contributed.
The Council on African Affairs
In 1937, with
Max Yergan, Paul Robeson
founded the Council on African Affairs (CAA), the first major U.S.
organization whose focus was on providing pertinent and up-to-date
information about Africa across the U.S., particularly to African
Americans. During World War II, the Council functioned as a
broad-based coalition that included a variety of activists, some of
whom were associated with the Communist Party. Probably the most
successful campaign of the Council was for South African famine
relief in 1946.
Members of the CAA were hopeful that following World War II, when
Western Powers adopted new resolutions on the issue of colonialism,
there would be a move towards
Third
World independence under the trusteeship of the
United Nations. To the CAA's dismay, the
United States introduced a series of proposals at the April–May
1945 conference that set no clear limits on the length of
colonialist occupation and no motions towards allowing territorial
possessions to move towards self government.
Liberal supporters abandoned the CAA, and the
federal government
cracked down on its operations. In 1953 the CAA was charged with
subversion under the
McCarran Act. Its
principal leaders, including Robeson, Du Bois, and Hunton, were
subjected to harassment, indictments, and in the case of Hunton,
imprisonment. Under the weight of internal disputes, government
repression, and financial hardships, the Council on African Affairs
disbanded in 1955. Ardent involvement in the liberation of
colonialist Africa was considered a threat to the US
government.
NAACP response
The vilification of Robeson's work for African liberation reached
its zenith when
J. Edgar Hoover, with the help of the
NAACP (and
Roy Wilkins,
editor of
The Crisis, the
official magazine of the NAACP), arranged for a ghost-written
leaflet to be printed and distributed in Africa; it was called
Paul Robeson: Lost Shepherd,, and waspenned under the
false name of "Robert Alan", whom the NAACP claimed was a "well
known New York journalist."
Another article by Roy Wilkins, called
"Stalin's Greatest Defeat", denounced Robeson as well as the
Communist Party of the
USA in terms consistent with the FBI
's
information.
At the time of Robeson's widely misquoted declaration at
The Paris Peace Conference in
1949, that African Americans would not support the United States in
a war with the Soviet Union because of their continued lynchings
and
second-class citizen status
under law following World War II, Roy Wilkins stated that
regardless of the number of lynchings that were occurring or would
occur, Black America would always serve in the armed forces.
Response to apartheid in South Africa
In 1952 Robeson wrote of "... the Union of South Africa and the
savage racist oppression."
Referencing the "... eight and a half
million African victims, a million Cape
Coloured, and a third of a million Indians
who have solemnly determined that only by
establishing a common front of united and resolute resistance can
they escape enslavement by the fascist Malan regime."
In July 1953, the Council on African Affairs drew up and forwarded
a memorandum as an appeal to the UN Commission on Racial
Discrimination in South Africa which had been set up in 1952 by the
UN General Assembly. The long
detailed memo attacked a spate of Malan-sponsored
apartheid legislation including The
Prohibition of Mixed
Marriages Act, The
Bantu
Authorities Act which created the legal basis for the
deportation of blacks into designated homeland reserve areas, and
The Asiatic Laws which repealed the already limited ability for
Indians to own franchises, among many other acts that suppressed or
eliminated minority rights. Robeson drew a comparison between
apartheid in South Africa and
Jim Crow
in the southern United States.
Ho Chi Minh and Vietnam
In 1954, Paul Robeson contributed an article about
Ho Chi Minh to the progressive journal
Freedom, a periodical that first appeared in 1950 and
which was promptly labeled a "Communist Front organization" by the
FBI. In the piece entitled "Ho Chi Minh is the
Toussaint Louverture of
Indo-China", Robeson wrote that "Vast quantities
of U.S. bombers, tanks and guns have been sent against
Ho Chi Minh and his freedom-fighters; and now we
are told that soon it will be 'advisable' to send America GI's into
Indo-China in order that the
tin,
rubber and
tungsten of
Southeast Asia be kept by the "free
world"-meaning white
Imperialism."
Robeson also accused the black community's
leaders of staying "too silent", and urged that blacks had a
specific need to understand the crucial parallels between the
previous French colonial
empire domination of Haiti
, and
France's current inability to retain colonial domination over
Vietnam
. One of his last public statements in the
mid-1970s would congratulate the peoples of Vietnam for once again
"turning back an Imperialist aggressor."
Labor movement and trade union activism
From 1927 to 1939, while continuing his professional singing and
acting career, Robeson was active in the
British Labor Movement, and was
involved with the struggles of the workers of England, Scotland,
Ireland and Wales. He performed for them on numerous occasions,
going down into the pits with the miners to see their working
conditions and breaking bread with them and their families.
Returning to England in 1949, he stated that his earlier time there
had a profound influence on his political development:
- "I learned my militancy and my politics, from your Labor
Movement here in Britain.... That was how I realized that the fight
of my Negro people in America and the fight of oppressed workers
everywhere was the same struggle."
In the United States as in England, Robeson would enjoy long
friendship and honorary status with many unions, for his devotion
to their causes and his ability to be on the picket lines showing
support. He was given honorary memberships in United Auto Workers
Local 453, Fur and Leather Workers Union, and the Transport Workers
Union. His belief that the Labor Movement and trade unionism were
crucial to the civil rights of oppressed people everywhere was
challenged by some discouraging realities: many unions at the time
were still characterized by racism. Robeson's close friend, the
union activist
Revels Cayton, would
play a central role in pressing for "black caucuses" within in each
union, with Robeson's encouragement and involvement.
Congressional statement by Jackie Robinson
At an
international student peace conference held in Paris on April 20,
1949, Robeson made widely-referenced and controversial comments to
the effect that American blacks would not support the United States
in a post-World War II Cold
War with the Soviet Union, due to continued second-class
citizen] status under United States law. This subsequent
controversy caused the
House Committee on
Un-American Activities (HUAC) to investigate Robeson and his
alleged Communist sympathies.
HUAC sought
Jackie Robinson's
testimony on the subject. Robinson was reluctant to testify to HUAC
on these matters, in part because of Robeson's prior advocacy on
behalf of integration in professional baseball. Among other things,
at the annual winter meeting of baseball owners in December 1943,
Robeson became the first black man to address baseball owners on
the subject of integration. As such, Robeson had done much to pave
the way for Jackie Robinson's entry into major league baseball just
over four years later.
In July 1949, Robinson eventually agreed to testify before HUAC,
fearing that declining to do so might negatively and permanently
damage his career. His testimony was a major media event, with
Robinson's carefully-worded statement appearing on the front page
of
The New York Times
the following day.
While Robeson considered Robinson's testimony a "disservice" to the
black community, he declined to comment on Robinson personally: "I
am not going to permit the issue to boil down to a personal feud
between me and Jackie. To do that, would be to do exactly what the
other group wants us to do." Jackie Robinson appreciated Robeson's
restraint, and eventually grew in greater admiration for Robeson.
Near the end of his life, Robinson wrote in his autobiography about
the incident:
However, in those days I had much more faith in the
ultimate justice of the American white man than I have
today.
I would reject such an invitation if offered
now....
I have grown wiser and closer to the painful truths
about America’s destructiveness.
And I do have increased respect for Paul Robeson who,
over the span of twenty years, sacrificed himself, his career, and
the wealth and comfort he once enjoyed because, I believe, he was
sincerely trying to help his people.
The Soviet Union and the Communist Party
A large aspect of Robeson's persecution by
J. Edgar
Hoover's FBI and the political right in the U.S. was, in part,
due to his support for the Soviet Union, which was a cause célèbre
among well-known artists and scientists during the 1930s and the
early 1940s. As soon as the war ended, the U.S. and Soviet Union
became fierce competitors and the period of the Cold War between
the two superpowers began. In the 1950s,
McCarthyism and the
Red
Scare dominated the headlines, and any artist, scientist or
academic who failed to denounce communism became suspect.
Following Paul Robeson's first trip to Russia in late 1934, he
became a lover and advocate of not just the Soviet Union's
socialist experiment and its culture and history, but of the
Russian peoples. Robeson became fluent in
Russian, studied Russian history in depth, learned about the many
national minorities (eg:
Yakuts,
Uzbeks and
Tatars) and wrote
numerous essays and articles demonstrating his deeply held beliefs
that the US should seek peace and understanding with Soviet Russia.
He also felt African-Americans showed many similarities to the
Russian peoples.
White supremacist and anti-civil
rights members of the US Government (e.g.,
Martin Dies and
Theodore Bilbo) and anti-Communist members of
the
US intelligence
community, especially
J.
Edgar Hoover, were able to take
Robeson's unwavering devotion to the people of the Soviet Union and
Russian culture and attach it to his other causes. Anti-lynching
legislation and African independence were already being given a
Pinko label. The US government was able to
attach Robeson's socialist views to these civil rights causes,
effectively frightening many of the trade unions and mainstream
African American political community, including the NAACP, away
from him.
Tenney and House Un-American Activities Committees
On October 7, 1946, Robeson testified before the Fact-Finding
Committee on Un-American Activities in California (Tenney
Committee) that he was not a Communist Party member. Contrary to
popular belief, he has never been identified as a card-carrying or
official member of any Communist organization, despite his
unwavering support of socialism, domestically and
internationally.
Ten years later, in 1956, Robeson was called before the
House Un-American
Activities Committee (HUAC) after he refused to sign an
affidavit affirming that he was not a Communist. In response to
questions concerning his alleged Communist Party membership,
Robeson reminded the Committee that the Communist Party was a legal
party and invited its members to join him in the voting booth
before he invoked the
Fifth
Amendment and refused to respond. Robeson lambasted Committee
members on
civil rights issues
concerning African-Americans. When one senator asked him why he
hadn't remained in the Soviet Union, he replied, "Because my father
was a slave, and my people died to build this country, and I am
going to stay here, and have a part of it just like you. And no
Fascist-minded people will drive me from it. Is that clear? I am
for peace with the Soviet Union, and I am for peace with China, and
I am not for peace or friendship with the Fascist Franco, and I am
not for peace with Fascist Nazi Germans. I am for peace with decent
people."
Stalin
Robeson is often criticized for accepting the
Stalin Peace Prize, eulogizing Stalin,
and continuing to support the Soviet Union and not formally
denouncing the regime, despite conflicting accounts that show his
awareness of state-sponsored intimidation and murder. In his
testimony to HUAC, he stated that,
"I have told you, mister, that I would not discuss anything with
the people who have murdered sixty million of my people, and I will
not discuss Stalin with you." And "I will discuss Stalin when I may
be among the Russian people some day, singing for them, I will
discuss it there. It is their problem." Asked if he had praised
Stalin during his previous trip to the Soviet Union, Robeson
replied, "I do not know." When asked outright if he had changed his
mind about Stalin he implored,
"Whatever has happened to Stalin, gentlemen, is a question for the
Soviet Union, and I would not argue with a representative of the
people who, in building America, wasted sixty to a hundred million
lives of my people, black people drawn from Africa on the
plantations. You are responsible, and your forebears, for sixty
million to one hundred million black people dying in the slave
ships and on the plantations, and don’t ask me about anybody,
please."
When Robeson was given the news of Stalin's 1939 non aggression
pact with Hitler, also known as the
Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact, he
saw the agreement as having been forced on Russia by the
unwillingness of the French and British forces "to collaborate with
the Soviet Union in a real policy of collective
security"-personally writing in his journal that an Anglo-Russian
pact "would have stopped Nazi aggression"-thus leaving the USSR
with no alternative choices in shoring up its borders.
Robeson's defense of socialism
Having experienced firsthand during the 1930s a climate in Russia
that he perceived as free from racial prejudice and then to see no
western country or superpower actively attempt any comparable
commitment to the rights of minorities or blacks, Robeson
indefatigably refused any pressure to publicly censure the Soviet
experiment. In his opinion, the existence of the USSR was the
guarantee of political balance in the world. A large number of
Robeson biographers, including Martin Duberman, Philip S Foner,
Marie Seton,
Paul Robeson Jr and
Lloyd Brown also concur with Robeson's
own words, that he felt that criticism of the Soviet Union by
someone of his immense international popularity would only serve to
shore up reactionary elements in the U.S., the same elements that
had lifted his passport, blocked anti-lynching legislation, and
maintained a racial climate in the United States that also allowed
Jim Crow, impoverished living conditions for all races and a
white supremacist domination of
the US government to continue. Robeson is on record many times as
stating that he felt the existence of a major socialist power like
the USSR was a bulwark against Western European capitalist
domination of Africa, Asia and the Caribbean.
At no time during his retirement (or his life) is Paul Robeson on
record of mentioning any unhappiness or regrets about his beliefs
in socialism or his unwavering devotion for the Soviet Union Paul
Robeson's experiences in the USSR continue to cause controversy
among historians and scholars as well as fans and
journalists.
U.S. civil rights stances and reactions
Robeson spoke out against racist conditions experienced by Asian
and Black Americans; he condemned
segregation in both the North and the
South. In particular, Robeson spoke out against
Lynching in the United States
and, in 1946, he founded the
American Crusade Against
Lynching.
"We Charge Genocide"
Robeson worked tirelessly for civil rights within the confines of
the US despite being barred from traveling internationally,
including the bringing to the
United
Nations in 1951 the document "We Charge Genocide". The document
asserted that the U.S. federal government, by its failure to act
against lynching in the United States, was guilty of
genocide under Article II of the
UN Genocide Convention. Hundreds of executions were documented
in the petition in the section Evidence. (Although the petition
states that there were at least 10,000 African Americans who had
been executed, the real number will never be known because these
incidents were never properly documented or recorded.) The petition
also describes conspiracy against African Americans by inhibiting
their ability to vote through poll taxes and literacy tests.
The Progressive Party
In 1948, Robeson was active in the presidential campaign to elect
Progressive
Party candidate
Henry A.
Wallace, who had served as
Secretary of Agriculture, Vice President, and Secretary of Commerce
in the administrations of President
Franklin D. Roosevelt. On the campaign trail in
June of that year, Robeson went to Georgia, where he sang before
"overflow audiences... in Negro churches in Atlanta and
Macon."
Trotskyists
Paul Robeson's staunch support of the Soviet Union also saw him on
at least one occasion speak out harshly against the
civil liberties of international socialists.
At a
Bill of Rights
Conference in New York City in July 1949, a resolution was
introduced calling for the freeing all 19
Trotskyists convicted in 1941 under the
provisions of the
Smith Act, being used at
that time against the leaders of the CPUSA. Robeson gave a speech
denouncing this idea, saying that the imprisoned
Socialist Workers
Party members were “the allies of Fascism who want to destroy
the new democracies of the world. Let’s not get confused, they are
the enemies of the working class. Would you give civil rights to
the
Ku Klux Klan?"
Peekskill Riots
In 1949,
a popular concert by Robeson in Peekskill, New York
, to benefit the Civil Rights Congress resulted in the
Peekskill Riots caused by anti-Communist and anti-civil rights
members of local Veterans of
Foreign Wars and American Legion
chapters and also by local residents. The concert,
organized as a benefit for the Civil Rights Congress, was scheduled
to take place on August 27 in Lakeland Acres, just north of
Peekskill
. Before Robeson arrived, a mob of locals
attacked concert-goers with baseball bats and rocks. Thirteen
people were seriously injured before the police intervened. The
concert was postponed until September 4.
Robeson drove with longtime friend and Peekskill resident, Rosen
and two others to the concert site and saw marauding groups of
protesters, a burning cross on a nearby hill and a jeering crowd
throwing rocks chanting "Dirty Commie" and "Dirty Kikes." Paul
Robeson made more than one attempt to get out of the car and
confront the mob but was restrained by his friends. Following a
very large meeting of local citizens, union members and Robeson
supporters who formed "The
Westchester
Committee for Law and Order", it was unanimously determined that
Robeson should be invited back to perform at Peekskill.
Representatives from various left wing unions-the Fur and leather
workers, the
Longshoremen and
the
United Electrical
Workers – all agreed to converge and serve as a wall of defense
around the concert grounds.
The rescheduled event on September 4, 1949, was attended by 20,000
people and went off without incident but after the concert, a
violent mob (all caught on film by the press) chanting "Go back to
Russia you white Niggers" and "Dirty Kikes", threw rocks through
the windshields of cars and buses, injuring 140 people. Standing
off the angry mob of rioters, some of the concertgoers, and
union members, along with writer
Howard Fast and others assembled a
non-violent line of resistance, locked arms, and sang the song "We
Shall Not Be Moved." Some people were reportedly dragged from their
vehicles and beaten. Over 140 people were injured and numerous
vehicles were severely damaged as police stood by.
Following the riots,
more than 300 Robeson supporters went to Albany
to voice their indignation to Governor Thomas Dewey, who refused to meet with them,
blaming "Communists for provoking the violence."
Twenty-seven plaintiffs filed a civil suit against Westchester
County
and two veterans groups. The charges were
dismissed three years later. Paul Robeson called the actions of the
New York state troopers, who were caught on film beating concert
goers, including
World War I veteran and
first decorated Black aviator,
Eugene
Bullard, as "Fascist stormtroopers who will knock down and club
anyone who disagrees with them" Graphic photos of Eugene Bullard
being beaten by two policeman, a state trooper and concert goer,
were later published in Susan Robeson's pictorial biography of her
grandfather, "The Whole World in His Hands: a Pictorial Biography
of Paul Robeson.
Passport ban and media isolation
In March 1950,
NBC canceled Robeson’s scheduled
appearance on former First Lady
Eleanor Roosevelt’s television program,
Today with Mrs. Roosevelt. A spokesman for NBC declared
that Robeson would "never appear on NBC." Press releases of the
Civil Rights Congress objected that "censorship of Mr. Robeson's
appearance on TV is a crude attempt to silence the outstanding
spokesman for the Negro people in their fight for civil and human
rights" and that our "basic democratic rights are under attack
under the
smoke-screen of
anti-Communism." Protesters picketed NBC
offices and protests arrived from numerous public figures,
organizations and others. In 1976, following Robeson's death, NBC
approched Paul Robeson, Jr. asking permission to create a three
hour documentary on his father, an offer which was swiftly turned
down. Robeson, Jr. felt that it was an offensive request given
their previous treatment of his father during his lifetime.
Because of the controversy surrounding him, Paul Robeson's
recordings and films lost mainstream distribution. During the
height of the Cold War it became increasingly difficult in the
United States to hear Robeson sing on commercial radio, or to see
any of his films, including the acclaimed 1936 version of
Show
Boat.
Passport ban
In 1950
the State Department
denied Robeson a passport and issued a "stop
notice" at all ports, effectively confining him to the United
States. When Robeson and his lawyers met with officials at
the State Department on August 23, 1950 and asked why it was
"detrimental to the interests of the United States Government" for
him to travel abroad, they were told that "his frequent criticism
of the treatment of blacks in the United States should not be aired
in foreign countries"—it was a "family affair." When Robeson
inquired about being re-issued a passport, the State Department
declined, citing Robeson’s refusal to sign a statement guaranteeing
not to give any speeches while outside the U.S. Robeson's passport
revocation was similar to that of other individuals that the State
Department deemed pro-Soviet, including the writers Howard Fast and
Albert E. Kahn,
W.
E. B. Du Bois
and
Richard Morford, who headed the
National Council of America-Soviet Friendship.
In a
symbolic act of defiance against the travel ban, labor unions in
the U.S. and Canada
organized a
concert at the International Peace Arch
on the border between Washington
state and the Canadian province of British
Columbia
on May 18, 1952. Paul Robeson stood on the
back of a flat bed truck on the American side of the U.S.-Canada
border and performed a concert for a crowd on the Canadian side,
variously estimated at between 20,000 and 40,000 people. Robeson
returned to perform a second concert at the Peace Arch in 1953, and
over the next two years two further concerts were scheduled.
(Officially, the travel ban did
not prevent Robeson from
entering Canada, as travel across the Canada-United States border
did not require a passport, but the State Department directly
intervened to block Robeson from traveling to Canada.)
In 1956,
Robeson left the United States for the first time since the travel
ban was imposed, performing concerts in two Canadian cities,
Sudbury
and Toronto
, in March of that year. The travel ban ended
in 1958 when Robeson’s passport was returned to him.
Return to Europe
Robeson's only book,
Here I
Stand, was published by a British publishing company in
1958.
Later, in May 1958, his passport was finally
restored and he was able to travel again, after the U.S.
Supreme
Court
ruled, in Kent vs. Dulles, that the
Secretary of State had no right to deny a passport or require any
citizen to sign an affidavit because of his political
beliefs. Also that year, Robeson's 60th birthday was
celebrated in several US cities and twenty-seven countries across
Europe, Latin America, Asia and Africa, as well as in the Soviet
Union.
In
particular, in the USSR he visited Young Pioneer camp Artek
with his wife Eslanda and performed in concert
there on September 6, 1958. As part of his "comeback", he gave two
sold-out recitals that month in Carnegie Hall
, which were released on LP
and later on CD. They would be his only
stereo recordings.
Final performance of Othello
In the late 1950s, Robeson moved to the United Kingdom and traveled
extensively.
He spent five years touring the world,
playing Othello again in Tony
Richardson's 1959 production at Stratford-upon-Avon
, and singing throughout Europe, Australia, and
New
Zealand
. On his visit to England he befriended actor
Andrew Faulds and inspired him to take
up a career in politics. He had health problems during his travels,
and spent some time in Russian and East German hospitals.
Health breakdown and CIA neutralizing claims
Paul Robeson's severe health problems in later life has been a
subject of much controversy and rumor. In 1955 at the age of
fifty-eight years old, during the height of his troubles with the
passport ban, Robeson was hospitalized for a difficult
prostate operation.Duberman, Martin.
Paul
Robeson, 1989, pg 438–439. Prior to the operation he expressed
to
Paul Robeson Jr fear of what
might "be done" to him by the
US
Government. Robeson's recovery would be a lengthy one and
coupled with other setbacks. Robeson first became manic with
energy, obsessing daily over the
pentatonic scale and the connectedness of
universal
music theory lapsing
eventually into a withdrawn depressive state where he saw virtually
no one. Robeson's doctor felt there were deep psychological issues
brought on by the combined stress of his prostate surgery and
government harassment but also that there may have been the early
onset of
arteriosclerosis, a
disease that would a contributing factor to his retirement in
1963.
In regards to the rumors that the United States Intelligence
Community was a contributing factor to his father's decline in
health, Paul Robeson Jr, has worked vociferously for over four
decades to prove that his father was neutralized by the CIA and MI5
during his last stay in Europe from 1961 to 1963.
Martin Duberman, one of Robeson's premier
biographers, has not wholly discounted his claims but was not as a
biographer, able to obtain enough evidence in his own voluminous
research to either prove or disprove Paul Robeson Jr's theory. And
that the issue must remain unexplained until the release of all
pertinent material. However, this may never be possible as the FBI
lawyers told Martin Duberman's attorney in the 1980s, in an alleged
mocking tone, that "some 56 volumes (out of a probable 103) in the
Robeson file of the New York Field Office had "unaccountably
disappeared."
Moscow hospitalization
In spring of 1961, Robeson attempted suicide in a Moscow hotel room
during an uncharacteristically wild party that was spontaneously
thrown for him by what turned out to be anonymous strangers and
anti-Soviets.
His son claims the suicide attempt was precipitated by a
Central Intelligence Agency
(CIA) agent who placed some synthetic
hallucinogens into his drink under a covert
program called
MK Ultra. Paul Robeson Jr.
visited his father in the Moscow hospital three days after the
suicide attempt. Robeson told his son that he felt extreme paranoia
and thought that the walls of the room were moving. He said he had
locked himself in his bedroom and was overcome by a powerful sense
of emptiness and depression before he tried to take his own life.
Paul Robeson Jr then hounded Soviet Officials to find out who had
been present at the party, how near was Robeson to death and if the
doctors had found any
hallucinogenic drugs in his father's
blood. Most of his questions would never be answered and nearly two
weeks later Paul Robeson Jr found himself also feeling similar
horrific hallucinogenic suicidal symptoms which he says have never
repeated themselves before or since, leading him to believe that he
too was drugged.
Paul Robeson and his son recovered, with
Paul Robeson staying at the Barvikha
Sanatorium for a prolonged period of
rest.
Paul Robeson Jr recalled the incident 38 years later:
My father manifested no depressive symptoms at the
time, and when my mother and I spoke to him in the hospital soon
after his “suicide” attempt, he was lucid and able to recount his
experience clearly.
The party in his suite had been imposed on him under
false pretenses, by people he knew but without the knowledge of his
official hosts.
By the time he realized this, his suite had been
invaded by a variety of anti-Soviet people whose behavior had
become so raucous that he locked himself in his
bedroom.
His description of that setting, I later came to learn,
matched the conditions prescribed by the CIA for drugging an
unsuspecting victim, and the physical psychological symptoms he
experienced matched those of an LSD trip."
Electro-convulsive treatment at The Priory
Robeson recovered and left Moscow for London early September 1961,
where he again became rapidly depressed and suicidal. He was
immediately admitted to
The Priory
Hospital. There he was turned over to psychiatrists who started him
on a course of
electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) 36
hours after his arrival without consulting his previous physicians
in the USSR and without offering any combined psychotherapy or
antidepressant drug therapy. The
electro-shock treatments would eventually reach 54 rounds, a number
his son called "criminal by any standards then or now." Doctors at
the time felt his condition was too acute to risk waiting for
treatment. According to The Priory doctors and close friends, the
ECT treatments that Robeson was given did help in the short term
but yielded no cumulative effects to his mental health.
FBI, MI5 and MI6 surveillance in Britain
Both the United States Intelligence Community and
British Intelligence were well aware of
Robeson's suicidal state of mind. In an FBI memo dated "April 7th,
1961", agents described Robeson's debilitated condition, remarking
that his "death would be much publicized" and that his name would
be "useful in propagandizing the on behalf of the Intentional
Communist community." They agreed to
continue to their ceaseless surveillance. They also stated in
numerous memos that Robeson should be denied a passport renewal
which would ostensibly jeopardize his fragile health and the
recovery process he was engaged in overseas. Duberman writes, "No
evidence has come to light suggesting that the agencies of the US
government were complicitous—as his son (Paul Robeson Jr) has long
maintained was probable—in the breakdown of Robeson's health but
once it did deteriorate, they proved perfectly willing to assist in
its further decline."
Following
World War II, MI5 set up a
special department to "study negro political movements" in the
British Empire near the end of the
war, according to Colonial Office files released on March 6, 2003.
The file shows that the security services were alarmed by growing
links between the then embryonic American civil rights movement and
black
anti-colonial politicians in the
British Caribbean and West Africa.
The files in 2003 and additional material released in March 2, 2005
revealed MI6 tracked Robeson, as a key figure in the movement
especially in May 1945 he appealed for $40,000 as chairman of the
American
Council on African
Affairs.
Colonel Valentine Vivian, the head of MI6
,
complained that the Council on African Affairs had Communist links
and was constantly making ill-informed complaints about British
administration. The additional files also stated that
Robeson was being monitored during his years in London including
during his treatment at The Priory.
FBI status of health files and CIA theory
Robeson's frequent trips to the Soviet Union led to his being
investigated by the FBI under J. Edgar Hoover. Robeson was under
surveillance by the FBI from 1941 to 1974, when the Bureau decided
that "no further investigation [of Robeson] was warranted."
At the time of his hospitalization in 1961, electro-shock, in
combination with psycho-active drugs, was a favored technique of
CIA
behavior modification. It
eventually became public record that the doctors treating Robeson
in London and, later, in New York were CIA contractors.
Furthermore,
Freedom of
Information documents show that the FBI and the CIA knew of his
planned visits to China, India and Cuba.
His embrace of
Fidel Castro in Havana
would have
seriously undermined U.S. efforts to overthrow the new Cuban
government.
Another pressing concern for the U.S. government at the time was
Robeson's announced intentions to return to the United States and
assume a leading role in the emerging
civil rights movement. Like the family
of
Martin Luther King, Robeson
had been under official surveillance for decades. As early as 1935,
British intelligence had been looking at Robeson's activities. In
1943, the
Office of
Strategic Services, the World War II predecessor to the CIA,
opened a file on him.
Robeson, Jr. has been attempting for over 30 years to have the
U.S., Russia and United Kingdom release classified documents
regarding his father. He feels his most illuminating discovery is
an FBI "status of health" report on Robeson created in April 1961.
"The fact that such a file was opened at all is sinister in
itself," Robeson told the
London
Sunday Times in 1998. "It indicates a degree of prior
knowledge that something was about to happen to him."
Martin Duberman's theory
Robeson biographer
Martin Duberman
posits that given the most available evidence, Paul Robeson's
health breakdown was brought on most likely by a combination of
factors including but not limited to: extreme emotional and
physical stress from being under intense surveillance for over
twenty years.
Bipolar depression
from being blacklisted and isolated from his friends and
livelihood. Extreme exhaustion and the beginning of circulatory and
heart problems. Duberman writes: "...even without an organic
predisposition and accumulated pressures of government harassment
he might have been susceptible to a breakdown..." But also that,
after initiating a lawsuit against the FBI for further information
on Robeson's physical and emotional collapse and receiving little
more than "inked out reports" and a unique and still unexplained,
according to his attorney Ed Greer, FBI "Status of Health" file on
Robeson, "the issue must be considered unresolved."
Recovery in East Germany
Disturbed over his treatment at
The
Priory friends of Robeson had him transferred to The Buch
Clinic in
East Berlin. The physicians
found him "completely without initiative" and they expressed "doubt
and anger" about the "high level of
barbiturates and ECT that had been administered
during his stay at The Priory. They also discovered that he had
heart and liver problems consistent with his age and stopped the
heavy doses of the sedatives prescribed at The Priory.
Robeson rapidly improved and was given intensive
psychotherapy,though his doctor stressed that "what little is left
of Paul's health must be quietly conserved." With the blessing of
his doctors Paul Robeson eventually returned to the United States
in 1963 to retire, but for the remainder of his life he would be
plagued by ill health nearly dying from double pneumonia and a
kidney blockage in 1965.
Final years
After a
few scattered public appearances, including a brief tour that saw
him fall seriously ill from exhaustion he went to live briefly at
his home on Jumel Terrace in Harlem, and then in a large Upper West
Side apartment with his son and daughter in-law (and their
children) in New York
City
from 1966 to 1968 Eventually Robeson settled at his
sister Marian Robeson's home in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
. He saw few visitors aside from very close
friends and gave few statements apart from very short messages to
support current civil rights and international movements, feeling
that his record "spoke for itself." Contrary to many mainstream
media rumors, numerous friends and biographers have reported that
Robeson was not a "bitter recluse", he had simply decided to lead a
very quiet life due to ailing health.
Despite Robeson's retirement from public life there were many
accolades and celebrations for Robeson both in the U.S. and
internationally.
Many of awards and honors transpired in
public arenas that had previously shunned him during the Cold War
including Rutgers
University
which held a symposium on his life in 1975 and the
Black Sports Hall of Fame cited him for his athletic record.
Paul Robeson also finally received praise from the next generation
of civil rights activists via a dinner in his honor given by
Freedomways, a progressive journal, in April 1965. It
would be his last major public appearance. In 1974 Robeson was the
first recipient of the
Paul Robeson
Award established by the
Actors' Equity Association.
Robeson was unable to attend and his message accepting the award
was his final public statement.
70th birthday celebration
Elaborate events were held all over the world in honor of Paul
Robeson's 70th birthday including a three day celebration in East
Germany.
There was also an evening of music and
poetry in London at the Royal Festival Hall
featuring Mary Ure,
Peggy Ashcroft, Peter O'Toole and Michael Redgrave. In Moscow
, speakers
included the writer Boris
Nikolaevich Polevoy and the poet Mikhail Kotov. The black commission of
CPUSA celebration remarked that "The white power structure has
generated a conspiracy of silence around Paul Robeson. It wants to
blot out all knowledge of this pioneering Black American
warrior...'
75th birthday celebration
More than
3,000 people gathered in Carnegie Hall
to salute Robeson's 75th birthday in 1973,
including Attorney General Ramsey
Clark, Pete Seeger, Angela Davis, Dolores
Huerta, Dizzy Gillespie,
Odetta, Leon Bibb,
Sidney Poitier, Harry Belafonte (who also produced the
show), James Earl Jones, Zero Mostel, Roscoe
Lee Browne, Ossie Davis, Ruby Dee, and Coretta
Scott King; birthday greetings arrived from President Julius K. Nyerere of Tanzania, Prime Minister
Michael Manley of Jamaica, President
Cheddi Jagan of Guyana, President
Kenneth Kaunda of Zambia,
Indira Gandhi,
Arthur
Ashe,
Linus Pauling, Judge
George W. Crockett,
Leonard Bernstein and the
African National Congress. Robeson
was unable to attend because of illness, but a taped message from
him was played which said in part, "Though I have not been able to
be active for several years, I want you to know that I am the same
Paul, dedicated as ever to the worldwide cause of humanity for
freedom, peace and brotherhood."
Death and funeral service
On
January 23, 1976, in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
, at the age of 77, Paul Robeson died of a stroke
following "complications from a "severe cerebral vascular
disorder." He lay in state for a viewing at Benta's
Funeral Home in Harlem
for two
days. His granddaughter, Susan Robeson, recalled
"...watching this parade of humanity who came to pay their
respects...from the numbers runner on the corner to
Gustaf VI Adolf King of
Sweden."
Condolences came from around the world including
Coretta Scott King who deplored
"America's inexcusable treatment" of a man who had had "the courage
to point out her injustices." According to Robeson biographer,
Martin Duberman:
"The white press, after decades of harassing Robeson,
now tipped it's hat to a 'great American,' paid its gingerly
respect in editorials that ascribed the vituperation leveled at
Robeson in his lifetime to the Bad old Days of the Cold War,
implied those days were forever gone, downplayed the racist
component central to his persecution, ignored the continuing
inability of white America to tolerate a black maverick who refused
to bend.
The black press made no such mistakes.
It had never, overall, been as hostile to Robeson as
the white press, (though at some points in his career, nearly
so)"
The black press universally celebrated Robeson with
The
Amsterdam News eulogizing him as
"Gulliver among the Lilliputians," his life that would "always be a
challenge and a reproach to white and Black America."
On January 27, 1976, two thousand five hundred people attended Paul
Robeson's funeral at Mother AME Zion Church in Harlem where
Robeson's brother Ben had been pastor for 27 years. Thousands more,
mostly African Americans, stood outside, in freezing rain,
throughout the service, listening on the public address system, as
speaker after speaker including
Harry
Belafonte paid tribute to Robeson for his integrity and
tremendous courage in the face of extreme adversity. Also in
attendance were
Uta Hagen,
Betty Shabazz,
Henry
Winston of the CPUSA,
Eubie Blake
and
Paul Robeson Jr who described
his father as "great and gentle warrior."
Robeson
was cremated and his ashes were interred in the Ferncliff
Cemetery
in Hartsdale, New York
with a grave marker that states "The Artist Must
Fight For Freedom Or Slavery. I Made My Choice. I Had No
Alternative".
Legacy and selected posthumous honors
After his death, Paul Robeson has continued to be revered and
celebrated throughout the world especially during his centennial
year of 1998. Listings of Robeson posthumous recognitions and
events from 1976 until the present day number in the thousands.
The most
recent major event was the January 2009, "50th Anniversary of
Othello" at The Royal
Shakespeare Company in Stratford-upon-Avon
which featured a revival of Othello set in
the 1950s, "A Slave's Son at Stratford", an exhibit on Robeson's
work at RSC and "I have done the state some service: Othello,
Robeson and the FBI", a panel discussion.
The first memorial following Robeson's 1976 funeral was a tribute
held in US House of Representatives January 28, 1976.
Throughout 1976
memorials were held at Rutgers; The World Peace Council in Athens
, Greece;
Columbia University, New York
City; Toronto
; Shiloh Baptist
Church in Washington, D.C.
; and by Actor's
Equity in Los Angeles. On October 8, 1976, Artist's
Tribute to the Life of Paul Robeson, was held at Carnegie Hall, as
a benefit for the
Paul Robeson
Archive.
Sidney Poitier
proclaimed, "When Paul Robeson died, it marked the passing of a
magnificent giant whose presence among us conferred nobility upon
us all..."
Beginning in 1978, Paul Robeson's films were finally shown again on
American television, with
Show Boat making its cable
television debut in 1983. In recent years, all of Robeson's films
have appeared on
Turner Classic
Movies. In the 1970s and 1980s three buildings on the Rutgers
University campus were named in his honor, including the library at
Rutgers Camden Campus and the
West
Philadelphia house that he resided in for the last ten years of
his life is now a museum and historical monument.
On
January 18, 1995 after five decades of exclusion for political
reasons, Paul Robeson was finally inducted into the College
Football Hall of Fame
, in a step taken by the National Football Foundation
which many called "long-overdue".
During
the centenary of Paul Robeson's birth in 1998, around the world,
over four hundred celebrations took place with over twenty Robeson
centennial events held in the Bay Area
alone. In the
mass
media there was broad recognition of Paul Robeson, through
numerous film showings, musical and educational programs, art
exhibitions, a two-hour PBS documentary, as well as the
presentation of the Lifetime Achievement
Grammy Award.
In 2002, scholar
Molefi Kete
Asante listed Paul Robeson on his list of
100 Greatest African
Americans. And in 2004, after nearly a decade of intense
lobbying and petitioning of the
United States Postal Services'
citizens stamp advisory board, Paul Robeson was finally featured on
a US postage stamp.The Paul Robeson Commemorative Postage Stamp is
the 27th stamp in the Black Heritage Series.The national Stamp
Unveiling Ceremony was held on January 20, 2004 at Princeton
University, Princeton, NJ, Robeson’s birthplace, with Paul Robeson,
Jr. participating.
On
September 26, 2009, Edgecombe Avenue and 160th Street in Washington
Heights, Manhattan
, were renamed as Paul Robeson Boulevard and Count
Basie Place. The corner is the location of 555 Edgecombe
Avenue, also known as the Paul Robeson Home
, a National Historic Landmarked building where Paul
Robeson and Count Basie
lived.
Filmography
Writings by Paul Robeson
- Robeson, Paul. Here I
Stand. Beacon Press (1958), (1971 edition with Preface by
Lloyd L. Brown), (January 1, 1998). 160 pages. ISBN 0-8070-6445-9.
There is also Paul
Robeson: Here I Stand a 1999 documentary by director
St. Clair Bourne. Winstar Home
Entertainment. DVD. (August 24, 1999). Run Time: 117 minutes.
- (Contributor) Paul Robeson: "The Great Forerunner",
Freedomways, 1971, new edition, Dodd, 1978, enlarged,
1985.
- Paul Robeson: Tributes, Selected Writings, compiled
and edited by Roberta Yancy Dent with the assistance of Marilyn
Robeson and Paul Robeson, Jr., The Archives, 1976.
- Paul Robeson Speaks: Writings, Speeches, Interviews,
1918–1974, edited with an introduction by Philip S. Foner,
Brunner, 1978.
See also
References
- Robeson, Susan. Paul Robeson: The Whole World in His Hands,
a Pictorial Biography, 1980, pg 13, prologue
- Boyle, Shelia Tully. Paul Robeson: The Years of Promise and
Achievement, 2001, pg 11 notes on sources
- Duberman, Martin. Paul Robeson, 1989, preface
- Seton, Marie. Paul Robeson, 1958, pg 57.
- Duberman, Martin. Paul Robeson, 1989, preface
- Duberman, Martin. Paul Robeson, 1989, pg 90.
- Duberman, Martin. Paul Robeson, 1989, preface
- Duberman, Martin. Paul Robeson, 1989, pg 400.
- Duberman, Martin. Paul Robeson, 1989, pg 563, notes on
sources
- Brown, Lloyd. The Young Paul Robeson 1997.pg 161
- Turner, Charlotte. Paul Robeson's Last Days in
Philadelphia, 1986, pg 150.
- Duberman, Martin. Paul Robeson, 1989, pg 543.
- Paul Robeson Centennial Celebration, A Brief Biography
- Duberman, Martin. Paul Robeson, 1989, pgs 6–7
Boyhood
- Brown, Lloyd. The Young Paul Robeson, 1997.
- Brown, Lloyd. The Young Paul Robeson 1997, pg 37.
- Brown, Lloyd. The Young Paul Robeson, 1997, pg
57.
- "Robeson in Depth", Amanda Casabianca, Bay Area Paul
Robeson Centennial Committee
- Who Belongs To Phi Beta Kappa, Phi Beta Kappa
website, accessed Oct 4, 2009
- Paul Robeson Campus Center
- Corliss, Richard. "Ol' Man Charisma: PAUL ROBESON: 1898–1976",
Time, 20 April 1998.
- College Football News, Top 100 Players.
- Brown, Lloyd. The Young Paul Robeson, 1997, pg 162
AppendixB last interview
- Rutgers-Newark: The State University of New
Jersey
- Paul Robeson Campus Center
- Paul Robeson Galleries
- [1]
- [2]
- The St. Christopher Club (also knonw as the Red and Black
Machine, the St. C's) Harlem, New York City
- Paul Robeson Honored On New Black Heritage Series
Commemorative Postage Stamp
- Duberman, Martin. Paul Robeson, 1989, pgs 162–163 The
Discovery of Africa
- Robeson, Susan. A Pictorial Biography of Paul Robeson: The
Whole World in His Hands, 1981, pg 37
- Duberman, Martin. Paul Robeson, 1989, pg 114.
- Robeson, Susan,The Whole World in His Hands: Paul Robeson a
Pictorial Biography, 1981, pg 35.
- Duberman, Martin. Paul Robeson, 1989, pgs 78–79 The
Harlem Renaissance and the Spirituals
- Duberman, Martin. Paul Robeson, 1989, pgs 80–81.
- Online notes from 2005 Paul Robeson Conference at Lafayette College. Accessed
31 January 2006.
- Duberman, Martin. Paul Robeson, 1989, pg 241.
- "Paul Robeson, actor, singer, and political
activist." April 15, 2009. Podcast. "Oxford Biographies."
Oxford Dictionary of
National Biography. 6 July 2009.
- Paul Robeson
-
http://www.caernarfononline.co.uk/wyddech_chi/pavilion2eng/index.htm
- Llyfrgell Genedlaethol Cymru—National Library of
Wales : Error
- Greg Cullen Web site
- [3]
- Foner, Phillip. Paul Robeson Speaks, 1978, pg 88.
- Duberman, Martin. Paul Robeson, 1989, pg 296–297.
- Duberman, Martin. Paul Robeson, 1989, pg 395.
- Duberman, Martin. Paul Robeson, 1989, pg 396.
- Duberman, Martin. Paul Robeson, 1989, pg 358.
- Foner, Phillip. Paul Robeson Speaks, 1978, pg
197.
- Wilkins, Roy. Standing Fast: The Autobiography of Roy
Wilkins, pg 200–205.
- Foner, Phillip. Paul Robeson Speaks, 1978, pg
307.
- Foner, Phillip. Paul Robeson Speaks, 1978, pg
353.
- Duberman, Martin. Paul Robeson, 1989, pg 392.
- Foner, Phillip. Paul Robeson Speaks, 1978, pg
378.
- Wright, Charles. Paul Robeson: Labors' Forgotten
Champion, 1984, pgs 50–51.
- Duberman, Martin. Paul Robeson, 1989, pg 249–250.
- page 197, "Address to The Paris Peace Conference"
- page 358, "The Paris Speech and After."
- Robinson.
"Breaking The Color Barrier." I Never Had It Made. p.
53.
- pages 361–62, "The Right to Travel."
- page 219, "Let's Not Be Divided"
- Robinson
- Duberman, Martin. Paul Robeson, 1989, pg 190.
- Duberman, Martin. Paul Robeson, 1989, pg 307.
- Duberman, Martin. Paul Robeson, 1989, pgs 354
- http://historymatters.gmu.edu/d/6440/"You Are the
Un-Americans, and You Ought to be Ashamed of Yourselves": Paul
Robeson Appears Before HUACretrieved March 2nd 2009"
- Duberman, Martin. Paul Robeson, 1989, pg 232.
- Foner,Phillip.Paul Robeson Speaks:The Negro and The Soviet
Union, 1978,pgs 237
- Duberman, Martin. Paul Robeson, 1989, chapters "Broken
Health" and "Attempted Renewal".
- The Atlanta Journal 6/21/48
- Duberman, Martin. Paul Robeson, 1989, "The Paris
Speech and After"
- Robeson, Susan. Paul Robeson:The whole World in His
HandsChapter 5,The Politics of Persecution,pg. 181
- Ford, Carin T. Paul Robeson:I Want to Make Freedom
Ring, pp. 97–98 Chapter 9, 2008.
- Duberman, Martin. Paul RobesonPeekskill,pg.365
- Ford, Carin T. Paul Robeson:I Want to Make Freedom
Ring,pp. 97–98 Chapter9 2008.
- Duberman, Martin. Paul Robeson, Peekskill, pg.
366
- Seeger, Pete. in Brave Nation video " Police inaction, at 10:00 minutes in."
- Duberman, Martin. Paul Robeson, Peekskill, pp.
371–372
- Duberman, Martin. Paul Robeson, Notes on Sources p.
695
- Robeson, Susan. Paul Robeson:The whole World in His
Hands, Chapter 5, The Politics of Persecution, pg.
182–183
- /Chronology_6.htm#March,%201950 Paul Robeson
Chronology
- Editors of Freedomways. Paul Robeson:The Great
Forerunner, Bibliography, Magazine and newspaper articles,
pg.377, pg. 182–183
- Duberman, p. 389
- Duberman, p. 400
- Duberman p. 411
- Duberman, p. 463
- Paul Robeson Chronology.
- The
International Children Center Artek Timeline – the 1950s
- Duberman, Martin. Paul Robeson, 1989, pp 500–501
Broken Health.
- Duberman, Martin. Paul Robeson, 1989, pg 498–499.
- Duberman, Martin. Paul Robeson, 1989, pg 564.
- Rhodes, Tom. "US Poisoned Paul Robeson with Mind-Bending Drug",
The Times of London, 1998.
- Robeson, Paul Jr. The Paul Robeson Files, The
Nation, 1999.
- Duberman, Martin. Paul Robeson, 1989, pg 509.
- Travis, Alan. "Paul Robeson Was Tracked by MI5", The
Guardian, 7 March 2003.
- Devine, David. "MI5 tracked Robeson amid communist fears",
Wales Online, 7 March, 2003.
- FBI File on Paul Robeson
- "Did the U.S. Government Drug Paul Robeson?"
Democracy Now, July 6, 1999
- FBI New York "100-25857-4531" Paul Robeson FBI Files,
April 3, 1961
- Duberman, Martin. Paul Robeson, 1989, pg 516.
- Duberman, Martin. Paul Robeson, 1989, pg 517.
- Duberman, Martin. Paul Robeson, 1989, pg 518.
- Duberman, Martin. Paul Robeson, 1989, pg 537.
- p.235, 'The Whole World In His Hands', Susan Robeson, Citadel
Press, 1981.
- Turner, Charlotte. Paul Robeson: His Last Days in
Philadelphia, 1986.
- Turner, Charlotte. Paul Robeson: His Last Days in
Philadelphia, 1986, pg 100.
- Foner, Phillip S. Paul Robeson Speaks 1978, pg
246
- Foner, Phillip S. Paul Robeson Speaks 1978, pg 46
- Duberman, Martin. Paul Robeson, 1989, pg 542.
- Duberman, Martin. Paul Robeson, 1989, pg 548.
- Robeson, Susan. A Pictorial Biography of Paul Robeson: The
Whole World in His Hands, 1981, pg 236–237.
- Duberman, Martin. Paul Robeson, 1989, pg 549.
- Paul Robeson Chronology
- Paul Robeson Library at the Camden Campus of
Rutgers University.
- Paul Robeson House :: gophila.com – The Official
Visitor Site for Greater Philadelphia
- Asante, Molefi Kete (2002). 100 Greatest African Americans: A
Biographical Encyclopedia. Amherst, New York. Prometheus Books.
ISBN 1-57392-963-8.
- Paul Robeson Postage Stamp ::retrieved February 19
2009
Further reading
- Balaji, Murali. The Professor and the Pupil: The Politics
and Friendship of W. E. B. Du Bois and
Paul Robeson (Nation Books, 2007) ISBN 1568583559
- Boyle, Sheila Tully, and Andrew Bunie. Paul Robeson: The
Years of Promise and Achievement ISBN 1-55849-149-X
- Du Bois, Shirley Graham. Paul Robeson, Citizen of the
World. (Julian Messner, June 1, 1971) ISBN 0-671-32464-0;
(Greenwood Pub Group, January 1, 1972) ISBN 0-86543-468-9; (Africa
World Pr, January 1, 1998), ISBN 0-86543-469-7; (Africa World Pr,
April 1, 1998), ISBN 0-8371-6055-3
- Duberman, Martin Bauml. Paul Robeson (Alfred A. Knopf,
1988). 804 pages. New Press; Reissue edition (May 1, 1995). ISBN
1-56584-288-X.
- Dorinson, Joseph and William Pencak with foreword by Henry
Foner. Paul Robeson: Essays on His Life and Legacy (Oct
15, 2004) ISBN 0-7864-1153-8;
- Foner, Philip S. Paul Robeson
Speaks: Writings, Speeches, and Interviews, a Centennial
Celebration. Citadel Press; Reprint edition (September 1,
1982). 644 pages. ISBN 0-8065-0815-9.
- Holmes, Burnham. Paul Robeson: A Voice of Struggle
(Heinemann Library, September 1, 1994) ISBN 0-8114-2381-6
- Larsen, Rebecca. Paul Robeson: Hero Before His Time
(Franklin Watts, September 1, 1989), ISBN 0-531-10779-5
- McKissack, Pat, Fredrick McKissack and Michael David Biegel
(illustrator). Paul Robeson: A Voice to Remember. Library
(Enslow Pub Inc, May 1, 2001), ISBN 0-89490-310-1
- Nash, Elizabeth. "Autobiographical Reminiscences of
African-American Classical Singers, 1853-Present".(Edwin Mellen
Press, 2007). ISBN: 0-7734-5250-8.(192-194, 438-445)
- Nazel, Joseph. Paul Robeson: Biography of a Proud Man.
(Holloway House Pub Co, August 1, 1980), ISBN 0-87067-652-0
- Robeson Jr., Paul. The Undiscovered Paul Robeson , An Artist's
Journey, 1898-1939.
- Reiner, Carl. How Paul Robeson
Saved My Life and Other Mostly Happy Stories (Cliff Street
Books, October 1, 1999), Cassette/Spoken Word (Dove Entertainment
Inc, October 1, 1999). ISBN 0-06-019451-0
- Stewart, Jeffrey C. (editor); Paul Robeson Cultural Center;
Jane Voorhees Zimmerli Art Museum (corporate author). Paul
Robeson: Artist and Citizen. Hardcover (Rutgers Univ Pr, April
1, 1998) ISBN 0-8135-2510-1, Paperback (Rutgers Univ Pr, April 1,
1998) ISBN 0-8135-2511-X
- Stuckey, Sterling. I Want to Be African: Paul Robeson and
the Ends of Nationalist Theory and Practice, 1919–1945 (Univ
of California Center for Afro, June 1, 1976) ISBN
0-934934-15-0
- Wright, David K. Paul Robeson: Actor, Singer, Political
Activist (Enslow Pub Inc, September 1, 1998) ISBN
0-89490-944-4
- Robeson Jr., Paul. "How My Father Last Met Itzik Feffer."
Jewish Currents, November 1981.
- Rappaport, Louis. Stalin's War Against the Jews: The
Doctors Plot & The Soviet Solution, Free Press (October 1,
1990) ISBN 0-02-925821-9
External links
- The Paul Robeson Foundation, Inc.
- Paul Robeson digital archive at Rutgers
University
- Rutgers Celebrates the Paul Robeson Stamp
- The
Bay Area Paul Robeson Centennial Committee
- The
Robeson Centennial Celebration
- "I Am at Home", at a Reception in the Soviet
Union
- Paul Robeson Awards
- The Paul Robeson Collection
- Testimony of Paul Robeson before the House Committee on
Un-American Activities, June 12, 1956
- The Freedom Archives
- American Masters: Paul Robeson
- "Did the CIA Drug Paul Robeson? – a Look at the Secret Program Mk Ultra" Part
1. 23:16 minutes. Amy Goodman interviews Paul Robeson, Jr., Dr.
Eric Olson, Martin Lee. Democracy
Now!. Thursday, July 1, 1999. Retrieved May 12, 2005.
- "Robeson/Hollywood Star", NBC Evening News, 9
April 1979, David Brinkley reporting (2 min segment)] (from the
Vanderbilt Television News Archives)
- Paul Robeson
Cultural Center at Rutgers University
- Paul
Robeson Cultural Center
- The FBI Files of Paul Robeson
- Discography
- Paul Robeson singing the English version of the
U.S.S.R. anthem
- BBC site celebrating Robeson with contributions
by Tony Benn
- Paul Robeson sings "Just a-Wearyin' for You" by
Carrie Jacobs-Bond
- Paul Robeson sings "A Perfect Day" by Carrie Jacobs-Bond
- Several
digitally restored Paul Robeson recordings
- Paul Robeson in Berlin with Aubrey Pankey Photographed
in 1960