《"Crucial to the Survival of Black People": Local People, Black Power, and Community Organizations in Buffalo, New York, 1966-1968》

打印
作者
来源
JOURNAL OF URBAN HISTORY,Vol.43,Issue1,P.140-156
语言
英文
关键字
Black Power; civil rights; African American; black history; Buffalo New York
作者单位
[Alfonso, Rowena Ianthe] Univ Toronto, Dept Hist, Toronto, ON, Canada. Alfonso, RI (reprint author), Univ Toronto, Dept Hist, Toronto, ON, Canada. E-Mail: rowena.alfonso@utoronto.ca
摘要
This is a Black Paper, declared BUILD's statement criticizing the Buffalo Public School system for providing inferior education to black children in Buffalo, New York. Written in 1967 by the community organization, BUILD (which stood for Build Unity, Independence, Liberty, and Dignity), BUILD Black Paper Number One was a call for change. Like other black communities in late 1960s America, black Buffalo was caught up in the fervor of the Civil Rights and Black Power Movements. A Rust Belt city, Buffalo was hit hard by deindustrialization, which, coupled with unemployment, segregated housing and unequal education, adversely affected its black community. In 1967, a riot exploded in Buffalo's predominantly black East Side. This article analyzes statements made by black Buffalonians and argues that Black Power thrived in Buffalo in the late 1960s, through community organizations which attempted to address urban issues that negatively affected African Americans in a postindustrial city.