Home » Paul Robeson (Part I)–a mind can be an impossible thing to change

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Paul Robeson (Part I)–a mind can be an impossible thing to change — 11 Comments

  1. All I ask is that Paul Robeson be judged by all of his deeds.

    As commendable as speaking out against lynching and segregation is, to imply that these actions somehow absolve ignoring and abetting the premeditated murder of thousands by their own government is an exercise in moral equivalence I’ve rarely seen equalled. And as for the legendary McCarthy years, while Joe was largely a grandstander milking it for his personal political gain, KGB documents released after the collapse of the USSR showed he had most of his facts right.

  2. Ooops, my question should say did Robeson continue his stance against fascism during the time of the Hitler-Stalin pact?

  3. Robeson’s “weakness” for Soviet Russia may have been the “tragedy” of his life, but I’ll go out on a limb and say the even greater tragedy was suffered by the millions of actual victims of Soviet Russia. In my opinion, Robeson’s failure to speak for them, who were slaughtered in the name of the most illiberal ideology and form of government on earth, cannot be counterbalanced by his willingness to champion liberal causes in America. And I’m sure it offered little comfort to the murdered and the terrorized that while Robeson apologized for Stalin, at least he had the courage to speak out against Truman.

    I have a side question about Robeson, though, and I really don’t know the answer to this one. Did Robeson stance against fascism continue during the duration of the Hitler-Stalin pact? Most party members and fellow travelers became “pacifists” during those years; did Robeson buck the trend?

  4. Robeson’s weakness for Stalinist Russia was the great tragedy of his life. But let me ask you; if Robeson was the great dupe, the poster child of leftist authoritarianism, why was it that it was only people like Robeson who were standing up for democracy in America for so many years? It was Robeson who fought against fascism in Europe when the business community and and the American and British upper classes were hailing it as a godsend; Robeson who defended freedom of conscience in America during the Mcarthy years; when President Truman was too weak to demand anti-lynching and anti-segregation laws, it was Robeson who demanded them and wouldn’t settle for anything less. The examples are countless.

    Any person who binds themselves to an ideology is bound to commit crimes against truth and reason. All I ask is that Paul Robeson be judged by all of his deeds.

  5. Have you read “Commies” by Ronald Radosh? That book is an eye opener even for a former member of the New Left (me) .

  6. Stalin planned to extradite the jews from Moscow, and perhaps from the European part of the Soviet union, to the far east. You should read “Stalin’s last crime” by Jonathan Brent and Vladimir Naumov.
    Did Robeson know about it? He should have if he was indeed “a great mind”. He was a great artist but I suspect he was deeply insecure and a coward.

  7. Welcome to the real world. I am not even slightly surprised that true believing utopian ideologues are indifferent toward human suffering. This is really ho-hum for the course. They fervently believe that a few eggs must be broken to make an omelet. It matters little that a few innocent individuals are sacrificed for the greater good.

  8. There are two basic possibilities:

    1. Robeson trusted Stalin and decided that Feffer had somehow betrayed the communist cause.

    2. Robeson realized Feffer was telling the truth but decided that the cause of international communism was too important to be held back by the mere “truth”.

  9. Paul Robeson was a brilliant mind. I have always felt his life was the best example of how the ideology of the Left can drag even a brilliant mind into the depths you describe.

    BTW Hope you’re having a great vacation!

  10. One of the biggest roadblocks to gaining knowledge about our society is the tendency of those currently writing history to add political spin for their own purposes. I read the PBS version of Robeson’s life you linked. Young people reading this today and then reading your alternate view are justified when they conclude that, like the MSM, liberal historians lie. My point is that intelligent young people realize that, in our modern world, respect for the truth has given way to acceptance of political spin everywhere (both from the left and from the right). The dross of this spin weighs down the truth and makes it impossible for the unsophisticated to discern. Their only option is cynicism. Liberals not only tolerate this spin, they demand it.

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