Posts

The 1919 Red Summer: White Mobs, Black Resistance

Image
In the scorching months between April and October of 1919, the United States experienced an unprecedented wave of racial violence. From Longview, Texas, to Chicago, Illinois; from Washington, D.C., to Elaine, Arkansas, white mobs attacked Black communities with impunity, burning homes, lynching veterans, and destroying entire districts. The African American journalist and activist James Weldon Johnson christened this period the “Red Summer,” a chilling double-entendre referring both to the bloodshed and to the anti-communist “Red Scare” gripping the nation. Yet the standard narrative of helpless Black victimization obscures a crucial dimension of the Red Summer: organized, armed Black resistance. Across the country, African Americans—many of them recent veterans of the Great War—defended their homes, families, and neighborhoods with military precision and moral fury. As historian David F. Krugler argues, “The Red Summer was not merely a series of one-sided pogroms but a confrontation b...

White Terror: How the Ku Klux Klan Targeted Black Communities during Reconstruction

Image
Reconstruction and the Birth of Organized White Terror The period of Reconstruction (1865–1877) following the American Civil War marked a transformative yet violently contested era in United States history. Formerly enslaved African Americans gained legal freedom, citizenship rights, and, crucially, political participation through constitutional amendments and federal policies. However, these gains were met with fierce resistance from segments of the white Southern population. At the center of this backlash stood the Ku Klux Klan (KKK), a clandestine organization that became synonymous with racial terror. Historians increasingly reject earlier interpretations that portrayed the Klan as a reactionary social club. Instead, modern scholarship frames it as a coordinated terrorist movement. As one study notes, the Klan was “a terrorist organization used…to restore ‘home rule’ in the South,” relying on violence to suppress Black political participation and Republican influence. This es...

Were the Numidians Black? Reassessing Identity, Evidence, and Afrocentric Interpretations

Image
  The question of whether the ancient Numidians were “Black” is not simply about skin color—it is a historiographical and conceptual problem shaped by modern racial categories, colonial-era scholarship, and contemporary ideological debates. The Numidians, who inhabited parts of present-day Algeria and Tunisia between roughly the 3rd and 1st centuries BCE, are typically identified by historians as part of the broader Amazigh (Berber) populations of North Africa. Yet, in recent decades, this identification has been challenged or reinterpreted within Afrocentric frameworks that seek to reposition North Africa firmly within a “Black African” historical continuum. This essay critically evaluates the available evidence—classical texts, archaeology, linguistics, and genetics—while interrogating the conceptual limitations of projecting modern racial categories such as “Black” onto ancient populations. It argues that the Numidians cannot be accurately reduced to a binary classification su...