Paul Robeson: The fight for freedom The persecution o j P aul Robeson by the government and people o f the Untied States during the last nine years has been one o f the most contempti ble happenings in m odern h is to ry ___ To struggle up as a black boy in America; to meet jeers and blows; to meet insult with silence and discrimin­ ation with a smile; to sit with fello w students who hated you and work and play f o r the honor o f a college that disowned you—a ll this was America f o r Paul Robeson. Yet he fo u g h t the good fig h t; he was despised and rejected o f men; a man o f sorrows and acquainted with g rie f and we hid as it were our faces fro m him; he was despised and we esteemed him n o t ... In A m er­ ica he was a "nigger''; in Britain he was tolerated, in Prance he was cheered; in the Soviet Union he was loved f o r the great artist that he is. H e loved the Soviet Union in turn. H e believed that every black man with blood in his veins would with him love the nation which first outlawed the color line " I saw him when he voiced this. I l was in Paris in 1949 a t the greatest rally f o r world peace the world ever witnessed. Thousand o f persons fro m a ll the world fille d the Salle Pleyie fro m flo o r to rafters. Robeson hurried in, m agnificent in height and breadth, weary fr o m circling Europe with song. The audience rose to a man and the walls thundered. Robeson said that his people wanted peace and "w ou ld never fig h t the Soviet Union ” I joined with the thousands in wild acclaim "T h is , f o r A m erica was his crim e . . Yet has P au l Robeson kept his soul and stood his ground. Still he loves and honors the Soviet Union. Still he has hope f o r America. Still he asserts hu fa ith in G od Hut * * — what can we say o r do; nothing but hang our heads in endless shame. “ — W EB DuBois. 1958 Paul Leroy Robeson was born in Princeton, New Jersey, on A pril 9. 1898, the son of an escaped slave. His was a poor family— his father a min­ ister. his mother dying when he was six years old. At 16 he graduated from high school with honors and won a scholarship to Rutgers University through an oratory contest. He was the third black to attend Rutgers. The only black on campus the four years he was there, he was constantly confronted with racism and hostility. He graduated in 1919, valedictorian of his class, earned a Phi Beta Kappa key in his junior year; won the major oratorical contest four years in a row; was twice named to the All-America football team; played on the baseball and basketball teams; sang in the Glee Club. He moved to Harlem and attended Columbia Law School, working on weekends as a professional football player. In 1921 he married Eslanda Goode, a chemist. While in law school Robeson played in two theater productions— "Simon the C y re n ia n ," and " V o o d o o .” He completed law school in 1923 and joined a prestigious law firm. Realizing that his career in law was limited and racial insults would continue, he left law and made a career in the thea­ ter. Robeson starred in Eugene O ’ Neill's new play, " A ll God's Chillun Got Wings . " The fact that Robeson’s hand was kissed by a white woman brought hysteria and death threats by the Kian. With controversy raging. O 'N eill selected Robeson for the starring role in "Emperor Jones." Robe son received great acclaim and positive reviews for his role in "Em peror Jones,” and when " A ll God’s Chillun" opened the reviews were mixed Af- ter closing in New York "F.mperor Jones" opened in London, still featur­ ing Robeson. Robeson's singing career began by accident. He ran into Laurence Brown, accompanist for Roland Hayes, one day in Harlem They went to dinner and afterward Paul sang a few songs for those present Among the guests was the director o f a theater in the village who arranged a recital. A prominent music critic wrote: "P a u l Robeson's voice is difficult to de­ scribe. It is a voice in which deep bells ring." l or the next four years Robeson and Brown toured the nation. Robeson look the opportunity to explain the spirituals he sang— they "portray the hopes of our people who faced the hardships of slavery They sang to forget the chains and misery. The sorrow will some day turn to joy. All that breaks the heart and oppresses the soul will one day give place to peace and understanding, and every man will be free. That is the interpretation of the true Negro spiritual.” In 1928 Robeson joined the cast of Kern and Hammerstein's "Show Boat" in London, singing the song that was written for him— " O ld Man River." He was an overnight hit with the English public and he decided to remain in London, where he would have more opportunity for artistic de­ velopment. Two years later he starred in Shakespeare's “ Othello"— the first black to appear in the role of Othello since the 1860s. PA U L R O B ESO N Life in England had a profound effect on Robeson. Accepted in the company of the nation's greatest artists and philosophers, he associated with people like George Bernard Shaw, H .G . Wells, Ramsay MacDonald, Gertrude Stein and was exposed to socialism. One day he noticed a British aristocrat’s behavior toward his chauffeur. " I said to myself, 'Paul, that is how (he southerner in the United States would speak to you, that is how ! realized that the fight of my Negro people in America and the fight of the oppressed workers everywhere was the same struggle. That incident made me sad for a year. I sat home and read and wondered If anything finally made class difference clear to me against the English background it was the general attitude toward servants and also the servants’ acceptance of their status." Preparing for his role as O thello , Robeson studied the works of Shakespeare and the English language. " I have read virtually everything of Shakespeare's," he said. “ Now that I know the English people and really un­ derstand what their country means to them, now that I am in touch with the English spirit, I feel I can play Othello." Robeson's interpretation of Othello was revolutionary— he considered Othello to be a proud and noble black man alone in a white world. "Othello in the Venice of that time was in practically the same position as a coloured in America today,” he told a British reporter. I am i he Black chi Id. A ll lhe world awaits my coining. A ll the* earth watches, with interest, to sec what I shall become. ( ivilization hangs in the balance, lb r what I am, 1 he world ol tomorrow w ill be. I am the Black c h ild . Yon have brought me into this world, about which I know nothing. Yon hold in your hand my destiny. \on determine whether I succeed or fa il. Give me, I beg yon,a world where I can w alk ta ll and proud, d rain me, as is your duty unto me, do love myself, my people, and to bu ild out Black nation. Page 6 Section II Portland Observer, February 23, 1963 Oregon Education Association