W.E.B. Du Bois: The zest for life by Herbert Aptheker One could discuss DuBois' careers: as a teacher and editor, organizer, po­ et, novelist, essayist, historian, sociologist and anthropologist. One could discuss DuBois* monumental confrontations: with Booker T. Washington, with Marcus Garvey, with Walter White twice, with the board of trustees of Atlanta University, with the so-called Department o f Justice of the U.S. Government. One could discuss DuBois and his decisive influence on mo­ mentous developments: the Pan-African Movement and the movement for the liberation of Africa, of which he is the father; the Niagra Movement, the N A A C P and the development of the modern Afro-American liberation movement, of which he is the father; the W orld Peace Council and the Peace Information Center, which he headed; and the movement to prevent a third world war, in which he played a central role; the development of a scientific study o f the history o f Africa and African-derived peoples, in which he was the pioneer; the awakening of the world to the importance and beauty of the art and music, the poetry and drama that welled up from the souls of Black Folk. But I will do none of these .. rather. I want to talk of Dubois' idea of life, of how he was able to make of his life an epic poem, of what he himself once called in a commencement speach for black children in jim-crow Washington in 1904. “ The Zest for L ife." That he retained this zest, this eagerness, through 9$ years of turmoil, would be remarkable in itself. But that this black man, this poetic black man, retained this balanced Joyfulness while living and battling in the United States from the 1880s until the 1960s is perhaps the single most in­ credible reality in the accomplishments of this almost incred’ble person. Some wit, I think it was Oscar Wilde, once remarked that in life one faced two perils: failure and success. One would think this offered a rather hope­ less alternative. DuBois* portion of cruelty was not less than Wilde's or any­ one else's but he chose a third path. He so conducted his life that failure or success was not possible for each connotes completion which means satia­ tion. But suppose one so lived that the point is the struggle? Suppose one so lived that he seeks to push back the past, to urge forward the present, to help shape an ever moving future? Suppose one so lived as to be part of the process, looking toward enhancement of the human condition? Then, any possibility of final achievement is part of the joy of livin g .. .o f one's zest. Then one sees himself, or herself, as one of a continuum and consciously draws on those who proceeded him and consciously plans to be­ queath not only some accomplishment to those who follow but also some work for them to do in the endless flow of human endeavor. DuBois believed in work. DuBois lived as though he had made his credo Jefferson's advice to his daughter: “ Be doing. You will be surprised at how much can be done if you’re always doing." DuBois believed in work, but not work for its own sake, for mere business and certainly not work merely for sustenance. No, work that one loved, that one could not resist doing. The difference between hell and heaven, he once said, was the difference be­ tween doing what one disliked and what one loved. But again, not work for self-gratification but work for service. This was the point of his 1890 com­ mencement address at Harvard and it was the point of his life until death came in 1963. Service to what? Service to the enhancement of human well­ being was beginning where you were and among the people who bore you, sustained you, whom you loved. Back in 1898, speaking on Careers Open to College Bred Negroes, Du­ Bois said, “ We serve first for the sake of serving, to develop our own pow­ ers, gain the mastery o f this human machine, and come to the broadest, deepest self-realization. And then we serve for the real end of service, life, no narrlow selfish thing, but to let it sweep the morning broad and full and free for all men and women and all time, that you and I may earn a living and earn too much more than that, a life worth living.” He urged here in 1898 divine discontent with the imperfect and told his young audience, at the age of about thirty, " . . .to do your duty because the world thirsts for your service; to perform clean, honest, thorough work not for cheap ap­ plause but because the work needs to be done.” O f course it was one thing to make speeches to college audiences, or any other audience, and it is another thing to live by the suggestions made in such speeches. DuBois did both. The first thing in terms of making a life was work— work that one cher­ ished. And second was service, which meant a cause. And what cause was that? He explained to the children of Washington back in 1904 and only the numbers he then used need changing "Look! Yonder lie 10 million human be:ngs writhing in sorrow and disappointment, bending beneath insult and hatred, choked with the blood and the dust of battle___ For them must you work, in their service must your work be put, and such work and such ser­ vice will be the ultimate secret of a worthwhile life and that is sacrifice. Be prepared for personal sacrifice, the sacrifice of position, of income, of so­ cial prestige, even of life itself for the sake of a mighty people." Even then he made clear that he meant far more than the 10 millions of his own folk for he added, "The majority of mankind are colored The farthest portions of the earth are under their feet, and the marvelous spectacle before the world today is the fear of the darker races Not fear of their retrogression, but fear of their advance." It is in conjunction with this sense of service and of sacrifice that one is to understand DuBois* famous essay on the talented tenth, first published in 1903. There still adheres to that something of the attitude of a settlement worker. It was under the auspices o f a settlement house as well as the University o f Pennsylvania that DuBois had produced in 1899 his great book, The Philadelphia Negro. That is, there adheres to this great 1903 essay. The Talented Tenth, the idea of lifting up the mass. But whatever the limitations of this essay, which may be discerned now with the hind sight of three-quarters of a century, it was not elitest in the sense of remoteness from the masses, the withdrawing from them On the contrary, his whole purpose was that of service to them, albeit still from outside. By 1907 DuBois encompassed in his view of work, service and sacrifice not only his own people, and not only the colored people, but also all working people For he then writes, "The cause of labor is the cause of the colored masses, and the cause of those masses is the cause of labor.” By 1911 he joined the Socialist Party. True, he remained a member only one year, but this was at least as much the doing of the party as of DuBois. In any case, Dr. DuBois considered himself a socialist from about 1907 until his death. His definition of socialism changed through the years but his basic commitment to the emancipation of working people and his sense of the irrationality of capitalism and the bestiality of imperialism not only never left him but grew as the decades passed and as both the irrationality and the bestiality intensified. The culmination came with his joining the Communist Party of the United States in 1961. In his essay written in Rayford Logan's splendid book. What the Negro Wants, 1944, DuBois concluded this way: "The hope of civilization lies not in exclusion, but of inclusion of all human elements. We find the richness of humanity not in the social register but in the city directory, not in great aristocracy's chosen people in superior races but in throngs of disinherited and underfed people; not the lifting of the lowly but the unchaining of the unawakened mighty will reveal the possibilities of genius, gift and miracle in mountainous treasure trove which hitherto civilization has scarcely touched and yet boasted blatentlv and even glorified in its poverty. . . In worldwide equality of human development is the answer to every meticulous taste and each rare personality." DuBois* work and service and sacrifice was moved by a love for his people and a passionate hatred of their oppressors. This passion in DuBois is the secret of his vast accomplishments and of his life. Many missed this passion, but missing this means misunderstanding. One might well miss it. DuBois’ manner was more courtly than warm; DuBois was not the kind of person who slapped others on the back and certainly not the kind of person one slapped on the back himself. So far as I know, in his adult years only his wife of 50 years and Mary Church Teller, who was his senior, ever called him Will. The exterior of formality was part of DuBois' armor, just as his sartorial care, his precise grooming, his promptness, and the manifest dislike he had for wasting time. He lived under fire for decades. This did not destroy him but tempered him. And part of this tempering was a very conscious and necessary kind o f restraint. He relaxed o f course; there was no more delightful companion than DuBois if the company were small and congen­ ial. He carefully watched his own health. He never failed to take at least a two-week vacation he spent walking, fishing and hoping not to catch any fish, and reading detective stories. He ate quite slowly and wisely, slept eight hours a day, smoked (Benson and Hedges Gold-Tipped) only three cigarettes a day, one after each meal and then quite deliberately as part of the enjoyment of the meal. Ever since his mother had warned him to stay out of saloons DuBois avoided hard liquour, but he dearly loved good wine and his student days in Germany gave him a taste for fine beer. Certain things he relished. Among them were music, poetry, the circus. At a seventi- eth birthday celebration DuBois said of himself, “ I am especially glad of the divine gift of laughter. It has made the world human and loving despite all its pain and wrong. I am glad that the partial Puritanism of my upbring­ ing (he means New Fngland| has never made me afraid of life. Now I have lived completely, testing every normal appetite. Feasting on sunset, sea, and hill, I have seen the face of beauty, from the Grand Canyon to Capri to Lake Baikal, from the African Bush to Venus de M ilo. I am proud of a straightforward clearness of reason. 1 suppose a gift of the gods but also to no little degree due to scientific training and discipline. By means of this I have met life face to face. I have loved a good fight and above all I have done the work which I wanted to do and not merely that which somebody paid me to do." As to DuBois’ passion, witness the tenderness of his love for Josie in his immortal Souls o f Black Polk; the depths of his anguish at the passing of their firstborn, o f their son; the intensity of his hatred for those who at­ tempted what he called "the damnation of women.” No one has ever ex­ pressed with greater force hatred of the oppressor, not even M r. Eldridge Cleaver before he became a born-again Christian. Shall w^ sample a little of this part of DuBois? “ Does not this justice of hell stink in your nostrils, oh God? How long shall the mounting flood of innocent blood roar in Thine ears and pound in our hearts for vengeance? Pile the pale frenzy of blood-crazed brutes who do such deeds high on Thine Altar and burn it in Hell forever and forever." As for his great essay, The Burden o f Black Women, DuBois writes of, “ The white world's vermin and filth, all the dirt of London, all the scum of New York, valiant spoilers of women, conquerors of unarmed men, shame­ less breeders of bastards drunk with the greed of gold. . . " Cannot you PACIFIC NORTHWEST BELL SALUTES TWO BLACK INVENTORS GRANVILLE T WOODS 1856 1910 INVENTOR Alexander Graham B ril and Thomas Edison dominated the age of electricity in the late 1800's, but others played important roles. Ia-wis Howard Latimer and Gran ville T. Woods, who produced key inventions, had two things in common. They both contributed to telephone and electricity and they were Black L A T IM E R was born in 1848 He left home at sixteen to join the Navy and after serving in the Civil War. returned to Boaton to become a draftsman Alexander Graham Bell hired lai timer in 1876 to make the patent drawings for the first telephone LEWIS HOW ARD LATIMER 1X48 1928 DRAFTSMAN. ENGINEER A fter joining the United States Electric Lighting Company in 1880, la tim e r invented a carbon filament for an incandescrnt lamp As a member of Edison's engineering staff he supervis ed the installation of the electric light in New York. Philadelphia, Montreal and London (alter in life laitim er produced one of his first b<»ks. explaining the principle of the electric light and published a volume of his poetry when he retired He died at the age of righty. WOODS who was born in Columbus. Ohio in 1856. was a prolific inventor He learned through practical exper icnce rather than from books He quit mechanical skills by working in a machine shop and on a railroad He was 28 when he patented his first invention: a furnance and a boiler to produce steam heat In the same year he invented a telephone transmitter which he sold to Bell. inciuuro an inrunator, an electrt relay switch, a regulator for elecl motors, and a safety rut out switch avoid overloading electrical cirruiti One of his last inventions was telegraph system for use betwi moving trains Pacific Northwest Bell < 1982 Pat if n Northwest Bell An Equal Opportunity Employer Portland Observer, February 23, 1983 Section II Page 3