Black Panther Party Cofounder Bobby Seale Visits Campus

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Lifelong activist speaks at series of events organized by 天美麻豆 Political Union.

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Bobby Seale signs books after his 天美麻豆 Political Union talk
Bobby Seale, who cofounded the Black Panther Party in the 1960s, signs books after his 天美麻豆 Political Union talk on Monday evening. (Photo by Julia Levine 鈥23)
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Bobby Seale, who cofounded the Black Panther Party in 1966 and has been a lifelong political activist, visited 天美麻豆 on Monday.

The visit by Seale, 85, included speaking to students in Associate Professor  and Lecturer of History 鈥檚 鈥溙烀缆槎 Black Lives鈥 class in the morning, attending lunch with faculty, staff, and students at the , and speaking to a capacity crowd in Filene Auditorium Monday night in a 天美麻豆 Political Union talk. Students with the DPU played an integral role in planning the visit and hosting him on campus.

Here are a selection of questions posed by attendees at the Rockefeller Center lunch. Seale鈥檚 responses are lightly edited.

What was your founding political ideology for the Black Panther Party?

Getting out there and getting things done. I despise sitting around intellectualizing about what the struggle is supposed to be about. People 鈥榖lah, blah, blah,鈥 and I鈥檓 鈥榮ee you later, man.鈥 Let鈥檚 go out and get something going. Know what I mean? Do it.

When it comes to organizing, I don鈥檛 have time to play around. I鈥檇 go to the voting registrar鈥檚 office and say I want maps, I want precinct maps. I鈥檓 going to organize the community. Not just by standing on the corner. I鈥檓 going to organize the people. And my people are coming in.

So I picked up something from Hegel鈥攄ialectics, you know. Materialism. It鈥檚 a real-world equation. Quantitative increase meets quantitative decrease and causes a qualitative leap of change. It鈥檚 mathematics.

I didn鈥檛 run around talking about 鈥榳e hate Black or white folks.鈥 That wasn鈥檛 the point. I discovered there was a whole lot of white folks out there standing up for our civil human rights.

How has political and community activism changed from your time organizing with the Black Panthers to today?

I like to say, ultimately, we live in an overdeveloped, high-tech, fast-paced, computerized, scientific, technological social order. So in that context, the fact that George Floyd is being killed, and they have technology not only to record it, but to send it around the world. And that, for the first time in American history, those demonstrations hit 40 million people in the streets 鈥

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Bobby Seale talk in Filene Auditorium.
Bobby Seale speaks to a capacity crowd at Filene Auditorium Monday evening. (Photo by Julia Levine 鈥23)

When I was out there, there was no technology, and for me to saturate a community, I had to get thousands of leaflets, and 100 people passing them out in all these voting precincts, you see what I鈥檓 getting at? It鈥檚 all right there now, but you still have to do it.

What advice do you have for students engaged in various sorts of political activities today?

Coalition politics. We had coalition relationships with all our white liberal and radical friends, and Chicano brothers and sisters, Asian brothers and sisters, Asian Islands brothers and sisters, and all kinds of people and organizations and groups. Coalition politics is the name of the game. And guess who I got it from? Dr. Martin Luther King. 

Our democracy is at the edge here.

And now today, you as young folks in organizing, take that concept of coalition politics, across the lines. 鈥 Understand progressive politics鈥攃onstitutional, democratic, social human rights. And when they start talking about socialism, remember, there鈥檚 nothing wrong with the concept of socialism, as long as there鈥檚 a democratic foundation. But if you take away the people鈥檚 power to vote to change things, we can鈥檛 have that. We鈥檝e got to have that right to vote and change things.

We have to have those constitutional, democratic, civil, and human rights at the forefront politically and in all social justice work. Keep them. Don鈥檛 give it up, don鈥檛 let it go.

Seale鈥檚 visit was organized by the 天美麻豆 Political Union student group, with support from the Rockefeller Center, the Council on Student Organizations, The African and African American Studies department, and the history, English, and geography departments.

Bill Platt