Santa Fe New Mexican

Film probes radical black-Latino-poor white 1960s alliance

- By Russell Contreras

ALBUQUERQU­E — Civil rights activists were still mourning the 1968 assassinat­ions of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. and Robert Kennedy. Richard Nixon was president, the Vietnam War hadn’t ended and urban racial tensions remained.

In that climate, a 24-year-old Black Panther Party member from Houston named Bobby Lee went into a Chicago neighborho­od of poor Southern white migrants with a stunning and straightfo­rward plea: Join us.

A new PBS documentar­y is exploring a little-known movement that brought together blacks, Latinos and poor whites from Appalachia that later resulted in the upending of politics in the American Midwest.

The First Rainbow Coalition, scheduled to begin airing Monday as part of the Independen­t Lens series, shows how members of the Black Panther Party organized Puerto Rican radicals and Confederat­e flag-waving white Southerner­s to help tackle poverty and discrimina­tion. The union shocked some allies and scared police and the FBI, who feared the coalition would upend the social order.

It would eventually change Chicago.

Filmmaker Ray Santisteba­n said it took him 14 years to complete the project. The effort only took off after he convinced Lee, the ailing organizer behind the multi-ethnic effort, to speak publicly for the first time.

The subject of race also has come under scrutiny under President Donald Trump, who has been accused of making racist statements. “Funders would tell me, ‘this was an interestin­g film but what does this have to do with today?’ ” Santisteba­n said. “Then, the country changed. I started getting calls about four years ago about it.”

In 1969, Lee reached out to Southern white migrants in a northern Chicago neighborho­od called “Hillbilly Harlem” to join him in fighting poverty and police misconduct. “They were poor. It was a slum. You could smell it,” Lee told Santisteba­n. “And you could smell a slum.”

Wearing a beret, his hands behind this back, Lee stood in front of a room of whites. To ease the crowd’s anxieties, Lee told the crowd, “my name is Bobby Lee. But my real name is Robert E. Lee.” It was an ironic reference to the former Confederat­e general who now shared the name with a black revolution­ary.

“We laughed,” remembered Hy Thurman, a white man from Tennessee and a member of a group called the Young Patriots.

The police mistreated them like the police mistreated blacks, Lee told the crowd. Landlords also refused to change living conditions in their homes like the homes of black residents, he said.

“What do you want in your community? What do you want here?” he asked.

Lee also enlisted the Puerto Rican group, the Young Lords, to join the new multiethni­c struggle.

The coalition began pressuring landlords about conditions and challenged police on their tactics. When eight police officers from the Cook County State’s Attorney’s Office raided an apartment and killed Illinois Black Panther leader Fred Hampton, the coalition helped Republican Bernard Carey defeat Democratic Cook County State’s Attorney Edward V. Hanrahan.

It wasn’t the first time there was an attempt to forge a multicultu­ral alliance. New Mexico-born education pioneer George I. Sanchez and NAACP lawyer Thurgood Marshall correspond­ed in the late 1940s on ways to fight segregatio­n. Japanese Americans would join Latinos in California to push for desegregat­ion.

During the civil rights movement, Mexican American and African American advocates tried to create a coalition in Houston. The Houston group fought even over whether they should be called the Black/Brown or Brown/Black Coalition until future Congresswo­man Barbara Jordan told participan­ts to call themselves the B and B Coalition.

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