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Abe
Osheroff is a heroic figure, but he isn’t my hero. Osheroff is far too
engaging, and engaged, to consign to such a fate.
Heroes tend to live under
glass, removed from intimacy with the people and world around them; Osheroff
remains in close contact with his world.
Another problem with heroes: It can be hard to argue with them, and I can’t
imagine giving up the pleasure of arguing with Osheroff.
Osheroff certainly could play the hero if he liked. At age 90, he’s
participated in some of the most important political moments and movements
of the 20th century -- from fighting with the International
Brigades in the Spanish Civil War in the 1930s, to the U.S. civil rights
struggles in the segregated South in the 1960s, to the contemporary antiwar
movement. And he’s right out of central casting for the role of the
aging-radical-who-never-gives-up: The white-haired rascal who moves
seamlessly between passionate political analysis and anecdotes of past
struggles, all in his gravely Brooklyn-accented speech peppered with enough
profanity to set off a fire alarm.
But instead of a hero, in Osheroff I found something far more valuable: an
ally and a friend. I found someone who was interested in being honest and
self-critical, both about his life and the political movements to which he
has belonged. Osheroff has little time for the politeness that constrains so
much internal political discussion on the liberal/left. He sees one of his
contributions to left/radical politics today to be mentoring younger
activists, and in that endeavor his preferred tool is an intellectual
hammer. He pounds away at political points with the same force that he drove
nails as a working carpenter.
Osheroff loves to tell stories about the past, and it doesn’t take much to
start them rolling. But he’s not mired in the past; conversations loop back
to his personal history not to revel in the glory days, but to extract from
those experiences lessons for the struggles ahead.
That past includes a long stint in the Communist Party, during which time he
organized tenants, the unemployed, and workers. In 1937 he joined the
Abraham Lincoln Brigade, the U.S. wing of the internationals fighting in
Spain. After Pearl Harbor, he re-entered the fight against fascism with the
U.S. Army in Europe. He spent part of the 1950s moving around the country
semi-underground, avoiding the FBI’s campaign to jail Communist Party
members. After leaving the party in 1956 in the wake of revelations about
the horrors of Stalinism and the Soviet crackdown in Hungary, Osheroff moved
to California and got involved in community organizing against real estate
developers on the Venice canals. In 1964 he went to Mississippi to help
build a community center. He worked behind the scenes in the Vietnam antiwar
movement in California. In 1985 he went to Nicaragua with the Lincoln
Construction Brigade, which he organized to build housing with a campesino
collective. Along the way he made two award-winning documentary films about
Spain and the legacy of the civil war, “Dreams and Nightmares” in 1974 and
“Art in the Struggle for Freedom” in 2000. He also has taught history
classes on the subject at UCLA and the University of Washington.
Living in Seattle since 1989, he and his wife, Gunnel Clark, are both active
in that city’s antiwar movement. Osheroff continued to give talks at
universities and high schools until several spinal surgeries made it
increasingly difficult for him to travel. That physical limitation led to
his most recent project, the Peace Mobile. He raised the money to equip a
van with a sound system and weather-proof posters to create a traveling
outreach center. He hopes eventually to add projection equipment to show
films anywhere, as well as computers and copiers to produce fliers on site
at events. But a big part of the draw of the project is that he will be able
-- sitting in the passenger seat with microphone in hand -- to keep talking
to people about justice and peace.
Osheroff intends to keep at it as long as his body holds out.
“My ship is slowly sinking, but the cannons keep firing,” Osheroff says.
“Or, here’s another way to say it: I have one foot in the grave but the
other keeps dancing.”
I met Osheroff in 2000 when he
came to the University of Texas at Austin to lecture. A second visit to
Austin in 2001 led to correspondence and a trip to Seattle in the summer of
2005 to record some of Osheroff’s insights. Our conversation roamed over a
wide range of subjects political and philosophical, from the planetary to
the personal, and I left with a deeper appreciation for Osheroff’s analysis
and honesty. In a world driven by fear, Osheroff is one of those rare people
who is willing to tell you to your face what he thinks of you, and then can
turn that scrutiny on himself. In the conversation that follows, Osheroff
demonstrates what it means to love the world deeply enough to be willing to
tell the truth.
Read the
full text of this must-read interview at:
http://thirdcoastactivist.org/osheroff.html
Robert Jensen is a journalism professor at the University of
Texas at Austin and a member of the board of the Third Coast Activist
Resource Center,
http://thirdcoastactivist.org/.
He is the author of
The Heart of Whiteness: Race, Racism, and White Privilege and
Citizens of the Empire: The Struggle to Claim Our Humanity (both
from City Lights Books). He can be reached at:
rjensen@uts.cc.utexas.edu.
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