(NAME-MCE) FW: [E of S] 40 Years Ago Today
Carrie Stewart
cls2001 at swbell.net
Fri Oct 17 12:11:57 EDT 2008
40 Years Ago Today: Why the Smith and Carlos Legacy Lingers
By Dave Zirin
It lasted for only as long as it took to play the National Anthem, and yet
it's lasted for four decades. The image of Tommie Smith and John Carlos,
their black-gloved fists raised to the heavens on October 16th, 1968 at the
Mexico City Olympics, has somehow grown in power over the last 40 years.
Unlike other iconography from the 1960s - Woodstock, Abbie Hoffman, Dick
Nixon - the moment isn't musty. It has retains its ability to pack a punch.
Go up to Harlem and street merchants still sell t-shirts of the medal stand
moment on the corner stands. Turn on HBO this month and see the continual
running of the 2004 documentary about the movement behind the moment, Fists
of Freedom. Watch ESPN and they pose the question whether any athletes at
the upcoming 2008 games in Beijing will be raising criticisms of the Chinese
government by "pulling a Smith or Carlos." (This last question, which I have
been asked repeatedly, has always struck me as odd. Smith and Carlos didn't
go to Mexico City after all to criticize Mexico.)
A question worth asking is why: Why has a moment that emblemizes a very
specific moment in time - the fires of 1968 - found a place in contemporary
consciousness? Why has it retained its cultural capital? I spoke recently on
a panel with John Carlos and afterward there was a line that stretched long
and deep of young people born years (even decades) after 1968, asking Carlos
to sign posters, T-shirts, even pins all emblazoned with that moment. You
don't see a similar reaction sparked by Jefferson Airplane.
There are several reasons I believe this moment has retained its power. The
most obvious is that people love a good redemption song. Smith and Carlos
were standing up against racism in both sport and society. They wanted South
Africa and Rhodesia banned from the games for their apartheid politics. They
wanted more black coaches. They wanted International Olympic Committee
President Avery Brundage held accountable for his open and virulent racism.
They wanted Muhammad Ali - "the warrior saint of the black athlete's revolt"
- to have his title restored. And they were reviled for taking their stand
and using the Olympic podium to do it. But these "radical" demands have
since been proven prescient and Smith and Carlos have made the journey over
four decades from receiving countless death threats and being athletic
pariahs to having statues unveiled in their honor. Quite an adventure: one
that says more about our collective journey than theirs.
But there are other less backward-looking reason the black gloves have
retained their power: Smith and Carlos sacrificed privilege and glory for a
larger purpose. They left fame and money on the table because of a higher
calling. As John Carlos said to me, "A lot of the athletes thought that
winning medals would supercede or protect them from racism. But even if you
won the medal it aint going to save your momma. It aint going to save your
sister or children. It might give you 15 minutes of fame, but what about the
rest of your life?"
This resonates because we still live in a world where racism is still very
real. If hurricane Katrina taught us nothing else, it's that for every
Barack Obama and Condi Rice, there remain countless communities where
poverty and institutional racism create graveyards of agony.
It also resonates because Smith and Carlos used that ubiquitous platform of
sports to make their stand. Today sports is a global, trillion dollar
business which thanks to cable television, the internet, and corporate
sponsorship, is vastly greater than four decades ago. The idea of athletes
using their hyper-exalted-brought-to-you-by-Nike platform to speak out about
injustice is almost unthinkable. Almost. We have seen athletes like the
NBA's Etan Thomas and the NFL's Scott Fujita speak out on war, poverty, and
racism in the United States. We have seen platinum plated stars on the US
Olympic basketball team like Kobe Bryant and Lebron James raise concerns
about China's connection to the genocide in Darfur. None of this comes close
to matching the moment of Smith and Carlos. But it holds the dangerous,
tantalizing, whiff of a time when even the world of sports wasn't immune to
the politics of protest. For some, it's a noxious scent, for others a sweet
perfume but it sure lingers in the air.
[Dave Zirin is the author of a People's History of Sports in the United
States (The New Press) and is the sports correspondent for the Nation
Magazine.]
_____
Edge of Sports |
<https://www.listbox.com/member/?member_id=11071593&id_secret=117170540-916f
6d> Modify Your Subscription |
<https://www.listbox.com/unsubscribe/?member_id=11071593&id_secret=117170539
-b5d9a8> Unsubscribe Now
<http://postlink.www.listbox.com/221017/ceaef0abaafb826b7a7a90ddf36178e1/110
71593/633ee6c3?uri=aHR0cDovL3d3dy5saXN0Ym94LmNvbQ>
Carrie L. Stewart, M.C.I.S.
Owner/Principal
One World Consulting
OneWorld at swbell.net
512-350-9030 (O/M)
Gathering People ~ Finding Common Ground
-------------- next part --------------
A non-text attachment was scrubbed...
Name: winmail.dat
Type: application/ms-tnef
Size: 13246 bytes
Desc: not available
URL: <http://mail.nameorg.org/pipermail/name-mce_nameorg.org/attachments/20081017/e3205d85/attachment-0001.bin>
More information about the Name-mce
mailing list