We have covered Spain’s genocide of the native
inhabitants in the Caribbean and the Americas, the war for independence
in the United States and the disgraceful slaughter of Native Americans.
We have examined slavery, the Mexican-American War, the Civil War, the
occupations of Cuba and the Philippines, the New Deal, two world wars
and the legacy of racism, capitalist exploitation and imperialism that
continue to infect American society.
We have looked at
these issues, as Zinn did, through the eyes of Native Americans,
immigrants, slaves, women, union leaders, persecuted socialists,
anarchists and communists, abolitionists, anti-war activists, civil
rights leaders and the poor.
As I was reading out loud a passage by
Sojourner Truth, Chief Joseph, Henry David Thoreau, Frederick Douglass,
W.E.B Du Bois,
Randolph Bourne, Malcolm X or Martin Luther King, I have heard students mutter “Damn” or “We been lied to.”
The power of
Zinn’s scholarship—which I have watched over the past few weeks open the
eyes of young, mostly African-Americans to their own history and the
structures that perpetuate misery for the poor and gluttony and
privilege for the elite—explains why the FBI, which released its
423-page file on Zinn on July 30, saw him as a threat.
Zinn, who died in
January at the age of 87, did not advocate violence or support the
overthrow of the government, something he told FBI interrogators on
several occasions. He was rather an example of how genuine intellectual
thought is always subversive. It always challenges prevailing
assumptions as well as political and economic structures. It is based on
a fierce moral autonomy and personal courage and it is uniformly
branded by the power elite as “political.” Zinn was a threat not because
he was a violent revolutionary or a communist but because he was
fearless and told the truth.
The cold, dead pages of the FBI file
stretch from 1948 to 1974. At one point five agents are assigned to
follow Zinn. Agents make repeated phone calls to employers, colleagues
and landlords seeking information. The FBI, although Zinn is never
suspected of carrying out a crime, eventually labels Zinn a high
security risk. J. Edgar Hoover, who took a personal interest in Zinn’s
activities, on Jan. 10, 1964, drew up a memo to include Zinn “in Reserve
Index, Section A,” a classification that permitted agents to
immediately arrest and detain Zinn if there was a national emergency.
Muslim activists, from Dr. Sami Al-Arian to Fahad Hashmi, can tell you that nothing has changed.
The file exposes
the absurdity, waste and pettiness of our national security state. And
it seems to indicate that our security agencies prefer to hire those
with mediocre or stunted intelligence, dubious morality and little
common sense. Take for example this gem of a letter, complete with
misspellings, mailed by an informant to then FBI Director Hoover about
something Zinn wrote.
“While I was
visiting my dentist in Michigan City, Indiana,” the informant wrote.
“This pamphlet was left in my car, and I am mailing it to you, I know is
a DOVE call, and not a HOCK call. We have had a number of ethnic groups
move into our area in the last few years. We are in a war! And it
doesn’t look like this pamphlet will help our Government objectives.”
Or how about the
meeting between an agent and someone identified as Doris Zinn. Doris
Zinn, who the agent says is Zinn’s sister, is interviewed “under a
suitable pretext.” She admits that her brother is “employed at the
American Labor Party Headquarters in Brooklyn.” That is all the useful
information that is reported. The fact that Zinn did not have a sister
gives a window into the quality of the investigations and the caliber of
the agents who carried them out.
FBI agents in
November 1953 wrote up an account of a clumsy attempt to recruit Zinn as
an informant, an attempt in which they admitted that Zinn “would not
volunteer information” and that “additional interviews with ZINN would
not turn him from his current attitude.” A year later, after another
interrogation, an agent wrote that Zinn “concluded the interview by
stating he would not under any circumstances testify or furnish
information concerning the political opinions of others.”
While Zinn
steadfastly refused to cooperate in the anti-communist witch hunts in
the 1950s, principals and college administrators were busy purging
classrooms of those who, like Zinn, exhibited intellectual and moral
independence. The widespread dismissals of professors, elementary and
high school teachers and public employees—especially social workers
whose unions had advocated on behalf of their clients—were carried out
quietly. The names of suspected “Reds” were handed to administrators and
school officials under the FBI’s “Responsibilities Program.” It was up
to the institutions, nearly all of which complied, to see that those
singled out lost their jobs. There rarely were hearings. The victims
did not see any purported evidence. They were usually abruptly
terminated. Those on the blacklist were effectively locked out of their
professions. The historian Ellen Schrecker estimates that between 10,000
and 12,000 people were blackballed through this process.
The
FBI spent years following Zinn, and carefully cutting out newspaper
articles about their suspect, to amass the inane and the banal. One of
Zinn’s neighbors, Mrs. Matthew Grell, on Feb. 22, 1952, told agents that
she considered Zinn and another neighbor, Mrs. Julius Scheiman, “to be
either communists or communist sympathizers” because, the agents wrote,
Grell “had observed copies of the Daily Workers in Mrs. Scheiman’s
apartment and noted that Mrs. Scheiman was a good friend of Howard
Zinn.”
The FBI, which
describes Zinn as a former member of the Communist Party, something Zinn
repeatedly denied, appears to have picked up its surveillance when
Zinn, who was teaching at Spelman, a historically black women’s college,
became involved in the civil rights movement. Zinn served on the
Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee. He took his students out of
the classroom to march for civil rights. Spelman’s president was not
pleased.
“I was fired for insubordination,” Zinn recalled. “Which happened to be true.”
Zinn in 1962
decried “the clear violations by local police of Constitutional rights”
of blacks and noted that “the FBI has not made a single arrest on behalf
of Negro citizens.” The agent who reported Zinn’s words added that
Zinn’s position was “slanted and biased.” Zinn in 1970 was a featured
speaker at a rally for the release of the Black Panther leader Bobby
Seal held in front of the Boston police headquarters. “It is about time
we had a demonstration at the police station,” Zinn is reported as
telling the crowd by an informant who apparently worked with him at
Boston University. “Police in every nation are a blight and the United
States is no exception.”
“America has been
a police state for a long time,” Zinn went on. “I believe that
policemen should not have guns. I believe they should be disarmed.
Policemen with guns are a danger to the community and themselves.”
Agents muse in
the file about how to help their unnamed university source mount a
campaign to have Zinn fired from his job as a professor of history at
Boston University.
“[Redacted] indicated [Redacted]
intends to call a meeting of the BU Board of Directors in an effort to
have ZINN removed from BU. Boston proposes under captioned program with
Bureau permission to furnish [Redacted] with public source data
regarding ZINN’s numerous anti-war activities, including his trip to
Hanoi, 1/31/68, in an effort to back [Redacted’s] efforts for his removal.”
Zinn and the
radical Catholic priest Daniel Berrigan had traveled together to North
Vietnam in January 1968 to bring home three prisoners of war. The trip
was closely monitored by the FBI. Hoover sent a coded teletype to the
president, the secretary of state, the director of the CIA, the director
of the Defense Intelligence Agency, the Department of the Army, the
Department of the Air Force and the White House situation room about the
trip. And later, after Berrigan was imprisoned for destroying draft
records, Zinn repeatedly championed the priest’s defense in public
rallies, some of which the FBI noted were sparsely attended. The FBI
monitored Zinn as he traveled to the Danbury Federal Prison in
Connecticut to visit Berrigan and his brother Philip.
“Mass murders
occur, which is what war is,” Zinn, who was a bombardier in World War
II, said in 1972, according to the file, “because people are split and
don’t think … when the government does not serve the people, then it
doesn’t deserve to be obeyed. … To be patriotic, you may have to be
against your government.”
Zinn testified at
the trial of Daniel Ellsberg, who gave a copy of the Pentagon Papers to
Zinn and Noam Chomsky. The two academics edited the secret documents on
the Vietnam War, sections of which had appeared in The New York Times,
into the four volumes that were published in 1971.
“During the
Pentagon Papers jury trial, Zinn stated that the ‘war in Vietnam was a
war which involved special interests, and not the defense of the United
States,’ ” his FBI file reads.
By the end of the
file one walks away with a profound respect for Zinn and a deep
distaste for the buffoonish goons in the FBI who followed and monitored
him. There is no reason, with the massive expansion of our internal
security apparatus, to think that things have improved. There are today
1,271 government organizations and 1,931 private companies working on
programs related to counterterrorism, homeland security and intelligence
in about 10,000 locations across the United States, The Washington Post
reported in an investigation by Dana Priest and William M. Arkin. These
agencies employ an estimated 854,000 people, all of whom hold
top-secret security clearances, the Post found. And in Washington, D.C.,
and the surrounding area, 33 building complexes for top-secret
intelligence work are under construction or have been built since
September 2001. Together, the paper reported, they occupy the equivalent
of almost three Pentagons or 22 U.S. Capitol buildings—about 17 million
square feet.
We
are amassing unprecedented volumes of secret files, and carrying out
extensive surveillance and harassment, as stupid and useless as those
that were directed against Zinn. And a few decades from now maybe we
will be able to examine the work of the latest generation of dimwitted
investigators who have been unleashed upon us in secret by the tens of
thousands. Did any of the agents who followed Zinn ever realize how they
wasted their time? Do those following us around comprehend how
manipulated they are? Do they understand that their primary purpose, as
it was with Zinn, is not to prevent terrorism but discredit and destroy
social movements as well as protect the elite from those who would
expose them?
Zinn’s book is
revered in my cramped classroom. It is revered because these men
intimately know racism, manipulation, poverty, abuse and the lies
peddled by the powerful. Zinn recorded their voices and the voices of
their ancestors. They respect him for this. Zinn knew that if we do not
listen to the stories of those without power, those who suffer
discrimination and abuse, those who struggle for justice, we are left
parroting the manufactured myths that serve the interests of the
privileged. Zinn set out to write history, not myth. And he knew that
when these myths implode it is the beginning of hope.
“If you were a
Native American,” one of my students asked recently, “what would have
been the difference between Columbus and Hitler?”