Tuesday, November 08, 2005

what's my name, fool?

To be honest, I don't often watch sports and I tend to think of them as pretty inconsequential. The topic reminds me of the Boondocks strip where Huey is sitting in front of the television and the announcer's voice (filtered through Huey's mind) says: "And today in sports, a black man somewhere ran with a ball and jumped with a ball and threw a ball and people got really excited as if they hadn't seen it a million times before". But in fact, there are certainly times when athletic competitions can have deep political/cultural implications.

This is an excerpt from Dave Zirin's new book, What's My Name, Fool?: Sports and Resistance in the United States (Haymarket Books, 2005).

No sport has chewed athletes up and spit them out -- especially black athletes -- quite like boxing. For the very few who "make it," it is never the sport of choice. Boxing has always been for the poor, for people born at the absolute margins of society. The first boxers in the United States were slaves. Southern plantation owners amused themselves by putting together the strongest slaves and having them fight it out while wearing iron collars.

After the abolition of slavery, boxing was unique among sports because it was desegregated as early as the turn of the last century. This was not because the people who ran boxing were in any way progressive. They make the people who run boxing today resemble gentlemen of great character. Those early promoters simply wanted to make a buck off the rampant racism in American society by pitting black vs. white for public spectacle. Unwittingly, these early fight financiers opened up a space in which the white supremacist ideas of the day could be challenged. This was the era of deeply racist pseudo-science. The attitude of the social Darwinist quacks was that blacks were not only mentally inferior but also physically inferior to whites. Blacks were cast as too lazy and too undisciplined to ever be taken seriously as athletes.

When Jack Johnson became the first black heavyweight-boxing champion in 1908, his victory created a serious crisis for these ideas. The media whipped up in a frenzy about the need for a "Great White Hope" to restore order to the world. Former champion Jim Jeffries came out of retirement to restore that order, saying, "I am going into this fight for the sole purpose of proving that a white man is better than a Negro."

At the fight, which took place in 1910, the ringside band played, "All Coons Look Alike to Me," and promoters led the nearly all-white crowd in the chant "Kill the nigger." But Johnson was faster, stronger, and smarter than Jeffries, knocking him out with ease. After Johnson's victory, there were race riots around the country -- in Illinois, Missouri, New York, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Colorado, Texas, and Washington, D.C. Most of the riots consisted of white lynch mobs attempting to enter black neighborhoods and blacks fighting back.

This reaction to a boxing match was the most widespread simultaneous racial uprising in the U.S. until the riots that followed the 1968 assassination of civil rights leader Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Right-wing religious groups immediately organized a movement to ban boxing, and Congress actually passed a law that prohibited the showing of boxing films.
(click here for the full page on AlterNet)

3 comments:

Sharks said...

when Muhammad Ali went to Mecca i was a little kid(9-10 Y) i don't remember if it was Hajj or Omara!...i was there back then i still have this memory clear in mind of him supplicating with the Imam he was crying n' his hands shaking...i was peaking from behind the columns of Haram like 3 meters away from him...i just couldn't take my eyes of him...n' kept asking my mom about him all the way back...poor mom :)...it has nothing to do with the post i know...sorry!...

Abdul-Halim V. said...

reformist muslim: yes, me too..

sharks: that was a really nice story. And it actually has alot to do with the title of the post. Muhammad Ali used to be called Cassius Clay, but then when he became Muslim he changed his name. But to taunt him in the boxing ring, his opponents (in particular Sonny Liston) would sometimes still call him by his old name. And when he eventually beat Sonny Liston, Ali kept saying "what's my name?" as he punched him.

Anonymous said...

Salaam 'Alaikum

PBS recently aired (well, like in Jan. or Feb or March, that is) a documentary based on a new book about Johnson. The title of which I can't remember right now, but I reviewed the doc on my blog... really interesting story. -- UZ