Local chapter committed to racial justice
Not long after the Urban League of Eastern Massachusetts opened its doors, lynchings were sweeping across the South, race riots were exploding in cities across the land and African American veterans of World War I were finding doors to employment closed in their faces.
The Bay State branch of the national economic and civil rights advocacy group acted to counter the challenges, urging the Massachusetts delegation in Congress to support federal anti-lynching laws while firmly pushing open the door of hiring opportunities for black men and women throughout Greater Boston.
The tone of the post-World War I era was set by President Woodrow Wilson, who said of the returning vets, “Black American soldiers were being treated as equals by the French and it has gone to their heads.”
Compounding the tensions in 1919 were a faltering economy and widening fears of anarchy triggered by bombings targeting public figures, including the Washington home of U.S. Attorney General A. Mitchell Palmer. Enlisting the aid of a young J. Edgar Hoover, Palmer sought to root out the “Red Menace” of communist extremism, which he feared would mobilize African Americans against the white establishment.
The targeting of black communities
as hotbeds of radicalism during the “Red Summer” of 1919 fueled
resentment among working class whites. In the South, “Strange Fruit”
blossomed from hanging trees. And in the North, roving gangs attacked
African American neighborhoods already roiled by police violence.
But
black soldiers who had survived trench warfare in the fields of France
and Flanders would not accept second-class citizenry or unruly white
mobs without a fight. In cities like Washington, D.C., and Chicago,
African Americans stood up to vigilantes emboldened by liquor and hate.
“By
the God of Heaven, we are cowards and jackasses if now that the war is
over, we do not marshal every ounce of our brain and brawn to fight a
sterner, longer and more unbending battle against the forces of hell in
our own land,” wrote W.E.B. DuBois in the NAACP’s “The Crisis” magazine
in 1919.
More than a
century later, the oldest local branch of the Urban League finds itself
still facing the unending battle, with police abuse replacing nooses and
night riders as the most violent threats to people of color. Rising
unemployment and shuttered businesses, caused by the coronavirus
pandemic, complicates the challenge.
Joseph
D. Feaster Jr., chairman of the ULEM board, said the tragic murder of
George Floyd in Minneapolis has spurred his branch to redouble its
efforts to combat social and economic injustice.
“We
have renewed energy to press for social and equal justice, dignity,
respect and freedom from racist attacks for black and brown peoples,”
said Feaster.
At the
same time, “The pandemic has required us to focus even more on workforce
development and helping small businesses. We know Main Streets in black
communities are going to have tumbleweeds rolling down the sidewalks,”
added Feaster, an attorney and former Boston NAACP president, who has
served as ULEM chairman the last five years.
In
its third annual Equal Opportunity and Diversity Awards Breakfast, held
by videoconference just before the Floyd murder, Urban League leaders
and supporters gathered to discuss the group’s ongoing efforts to
broaden its partnerships and increase its reach into communities in need
during the pandemic.
As
early as March, 90% of black-owned businesses surveyed by the Black
Economic Council of Massachusetts were reporting negative impacts of the
coronavirus. Nationally, the number of working African American
business owners dropped by more than 40% due to the virus, according to a
report released in late May.
The
study came as other reports showed the crisis killing non-white
Americans at higher rates and eliminating more of their jobs, according
to the Washington Post.
“It’s the same old story,” said Feaster. “When the broader economy catches a cold, we catch a flu. Except this time, it’s much worse.”
Keith
Motley, former chancellor of the University of Massachusetts Boston and
the acting president of the local Urban League branch, said a revived
and reinvigorated Urban League is essential to addressing the current
crisis.
“We stand on
the shoulders of giants,” he said. “We have a long and proud history and
we’re going to continue the legacy of standing up for our community.”
The
Boston branch, formed seven years after the launch of the national
organization in 1910, currently runs programs in workforce development,
employment assistance and domestic violence prevention on a $1.6 million
annual budget and with a 10-member staff out of its Warren Street
headquarters in Roxbury. The group also operates the ULEM Guild and its
Young People’s Network.
In
recent years, the league has expanded its network of corporate support
to include the Boston Red Sox, TJX, Liberty Mutual Insurance and
Southwest Airlines. Sam Kennedy, president of the Red Sox, received the
Urban League Chairman’s Award during the diversity breakfast.
Honors
also went to state Rep. Chynah Tyler, Boston City Councilor Michael
Flaherty and Carney Hospital President Tom Sands, who received the Mel
King Community Leadership Award; to
Gordon
Thompson, founder of the global medical supplies company Westnet, who
received the George A. Russell Jr. Business Leadership Award; and Boston
City Council President Kim Janey, Boston NAACP Branch President Tanisha
Sullivan and Nia Grace, executive director of the Boston Black
Hospitality Coalition, recipients of the Joan Wallace-Benjamin
Leadership Award.
The
breakfast also provided a platform for fundraising, with close to
$200,000 added to its coffers through Motley’s amiable exhortations.
“Believe me,” said the persuasive former chancellor, “I have no problems asking people for money.”
While
ULEM has rebounded since the departure of Darnell Williams, its last
full-time president, who left in 2018, Feaster said the current crisis
will strain its resources to keep pace with demand for greater advocacy
and programs.
“Just
look at the Paycheck Protection Program,” he said. “We got hundreds of
calls about getting access to federal money to support small businesses
in the wake of the virus crisis. But by the time many applied, the money
was gone, especially in the first wave, which mostly went to
well-connected big corporations.”
The
National Urban League will continue “to use its bully pulpit to push
Congress and the White House to provide the support black businesses and
small businesses everywhere need to survive,” said Feaster. “Locally,
we will do all we can in our programs and advocacy to live up to our
legacy of building economic opportunity as well as racial justice in the
wake of the twin crises of police abuse and the pandemic.”