Thursday, August 10, 2000 |  Print this story


NAACP Official Resigns Over Remark on Jews


By MELISSA HEALY, JEFF LEEDS, Times Staff Writers





     WASHINGTON--One of the nation's most politically charged rifts surfaced
Wednesday as African American leaders scrambled to distance themselves from
anti-Semitic comments made earlier this week by a leading black figure in
Dallas.
     Commenting on Vice President Al Gore's choice of Sen. Joseph I.
Lieberman as a running mate, Lee Alcorn told a Dallas radio station Monday:
"We need to be very suspicious of any kind of partnership between the Jews at
that kind of level, because we know that their interest primarily has to do
with, you know, with money and these kinds of things."
     Alcorn, president of the Dallas chapter of the National Assn. for the
Advancement of Colored People, added he was "sick of the Democratic Party
taking the African American vote for granted." He resigned his job as chapter
president Wednesday.
     Alcorn's comments were quickly repudiated by African American leaders,
including NAACP President Kweisi Mfume, who called the Texan's remarks
"repulsive, anti-Semitic, anti-NAACP and anti-American."
     Alcorn's remarks come at a time of relative harmony between Jews and
blacks even as hate groups have continued their drumbeat of anti-semitism.
     Reflecting that harmony, NAACP Board Chairman Julian Bond on Wednesday
hailed Lieberman as a champion of civil rights, adding that Alcorn's
"hateful, repulsive and ignorant" remarks "have no place in American
political life and no place in the NAACP."
     Visiting the White House on Wednesday, the Rev. Jesse Jackson warned
against being misled by a "misguided statement," telling reporters that
Alcorn's views are "not a trend."
     "Vice President Gore made the right decision. It was a decision with
some political risk but a moral certainty to put Lieberman on the ticket,"
Jackson said.
     And the Republican Party, which is actively courting black voters, also
weighed in with denunciations of Alcorn.
     "When it comes to fighting anti-Semitism, Gov. [George W.] Bush and
Secretary [Dick] Cheney stand shoulder to shoulder with all Americans in
condemning such foolish utterances," said campaign spokesman Ari Fleischer.

     'Frustration With Politics' Cited
     Apologizing Wednesday if he had offended "members of the Jewish faith or
others," Alcorn, in resigning, said that his remarks had been "fueled by
frustration with politics" as it relates to blacks.
     Those who track the relations of American Jews and blacks said Wednesday
that a strain of anti-Semitism remains alive among some African American
nationalists and intellectuals who view Israel as an outpost of U.S.
imperialism and American Jews as its agents.
     "This is probably the one place in American life where anti-Semitism is
still alive to a somewhat significant extent," said Murray Friedman, director
of Temple University's Center for American Jewish History and a scholar of
relations between American blacks and Jews.
     Blacks have a long-standing partnership with American Jews. Jewish
leaders helped to found the NAACP in 1909, and they played key roles in the
civil rights movement.
     As Bond observed Wednesday, Lieberman was among the foot soldiers of the
civil rights movement in the 1960s. As a student at Yale University in the
early 1960s, Lieberman joined the Yale chapter of the NAACP. In the summer of
1964, the future Connecticut senator joined a small army of young whites who
descended on Mississippi to fight racial segregation there during the period
known as "Freedom Summer."
     But since the late 1960s, some black intellectuals and activists have
sought to nudge mainstream African American groups away from that alliance.
And tensions have periodically flared.
     In 1984, Jackson was forced to apologize for calling New York
"Hymie-town." In 1991, a group of blacks in Crown Heights, N.Y., rampaged
against the Hasidic Jewish community there after a traffic accident claimed
the life of a local black child.
     And in 1994, Nation of Islam leader Louis Farrakhan called Jews "the
most organized, rich and powerful people . . . in the world" and accused them
of "plotting against us even as we speak."
     Even before Alcorn's remarks, watchdog groups were monitoring the
airwaves and Internet for signs that Lieberman's selection would unleash a
wave of anti-Semitism. By Wednesday, many of those monitors reported that
hate speech has been present, but sporadic.
     Since Monday morning, when America Online established a board so
subscribers could discuss the Lieberman choice, 28,000 messages have been
posted, and the "vast minority" were anti-Semitic, said spokesman Nicholas
Graham. Monitors at the Internet service provider have removed hateful
postings from the board.

     Big Issue on Some Radio Shows
     Talk radio also felt the wave. In Los Angeles, "phones are ringing off
the hook," said Bernard Pendergrass, producer of a talk show on KABC.
"Obviously, it's a first that people feel passionately about." He estimated
40% of the show's callers believed "it's not time yet" for a Jewish vice
president, and some raised the question of whether Lieberman could serve
effectively because he observes the Sabbath and does not work on Saturdays.
     Radio programmers elsewhere experienced similar reactions.
     "Absolutely, we've had a couple of guys who put on their white sheets
and burned a cross in the front yard before they called in," said Ken
Charles, program director at Atlanta talk station WGST. "But there hasn't
been a huge groundswell of bigots on parade."
     University of Massachusetts scholar John Bracey said Wednesday that
Gore's choice of Lieberman would likely have a significant impact on black
voters.
     Rather than turn out at polls to support the Democratic ticket, many
will stay home, said Bracey, co-author of "Strangers and Neighbors," a book
about Jewish-black relations in America.
     But their abstention will stem not from Alcorn's apparent brand of
anti-Semitism, Bracey contended. It will be a rejection of Lieberman's--and
Gore's--social conservatism, and a reaction against Lieberman's high-profile
denunciation of Bill Clinton's sexual transgressions in the Oval office, he
said.
     "This is going to deaden the African American vote. The black vote is
just going to sit down," said Bracey. "This ticket is just not going to
energize them. They'll just say, the hell with it, I'll just go fishin.' "
     Among those who in recent days have posted comments on the Web site
blackvoices.com, concerns about voter apathy and anti-Semitism mixed
uneasily.
     "The WASPS who really run this country will not vote for a Jew," said
one posting. "We shall see come this November. Gore should have picked
anybody other than Lieberman."
     Added another: "I think he will get more white votes than he will black
votes. As a matter of fact, I believe that this election will probably have
the lowest black turnout in history. There are a lot of people who believe
Jews are largely responsible for their lot in life and I believe this
election will reflect those views," said another bulletin board participant.
     "In addition to the prejudices about Jews and money, there will also be
the question of the impact in our relations with the Middle East. And that's
very real. Unless Lieberman can publicly convince people that he can be
reasonably neutral on Middle East issues, he will scare all of us who care
about gas prices," said another posting.

 Search the archives of the Los Angeles Times for similar stories about:
Joseph I Lieberman, National Association For The Advancement Of Colored
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