Bayard Rustin: Troubles I've Seen: A Biography
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Publisher: HarperCollins Publishers, Incorporated
Format: Hardcover
Publication Date: January 1997
Pub. Price: $28.00 AALBC Price: $19.60 -- You Save $8.40 (30%) As organizer of the 1963 March on Washington,
the Montgomery bus boycott, and architect of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference,
Rustin's influence on American culture has been immeasurable. Written with complete access
to Rustin's personal papers, this biography delves into the character of this influential
man. Photos.
Review from Kirkus :
A vividly rendered life of a critical figure in the African- American struggle for civil
rights. Bayard Rustin, writes New Yorker staff writer Anderson (This Was Harlem, 1982),
was a man of sometimes contradictory parts--so much so that at his funeral service a
friend described Rustin (19121987) as ``a Quaker without an ounce of goodyness; an
ex-communist without a trace of vindictiveness; a Gandhian without one trace of holiness;
an ex-con without one trace of self-pity or self-dramatization; a passionate advocate of
civil rights who wasted little time brooding about racism.'' He was also an intellectual
of complex, learned tastes, a collector of art and textiles, a skilled interpreter of Bach
and Donizetti, a champion of Alvin Ailey's dance company, and a fine athlete.
Drawing on interviews with dozens of Rustin's acquaintances and colleagues, Anderson
recounts the activist's contributions to African-American culture and to the work of
organizations like the Southern Christian Leadership Conference and the Congress for
Racial Equality. Jailed for 28 months for refusing conscription during WW II, Rustin was
also an early disciple of Gandhi, and it was he who made the Indian pacifist's ideas an
important part of Dr. Martin Luther King's program. Those ideas were lost in the militancy
of the late 1960s and early '70s, Anderson writes, and Rustin's role in the movement was
diminished. Anderson carefully examines Rustin's many contributions to the civil-rights
movement, noting that ``no important black figure of his generation responded to as many
causes in which the values of democracy and fair play were at stake.'' Although he never
achieved prominence as a leader in these causes, and indeed was marginalized in many of
them, Rustin was, Anderson maintains, of inestimable importance in making them known. This
well-written biography is a fitting tribute to a great civil libertarian.
From the Publisher:
Bayard Rustin's influence on American culture is perhaps immeasurable. He played a key
role in infusing the Civil Rights movement with the principles of nonviolence; one of the
movement's ablest strategists, he was responsible for organizing two of its most momentous
events.
In this biography, Jervis Anderson, who once worked with Rustin, describes the life of
this leading Black intellectual from his imprisonment as a conscientious observer during
WWII to his relationships with Dr. King, A. Philip Randolph, Roy Wilkins and Dorothy
Height and the controversy he caused in his later years when he took issue with certain
aspects of the Black Power movement. Written with the cooperation of Rustin's friends and
colleagues, and with complete access to his personal papers, this is the definitive
biography of one of the most important heroes of the Civil Rights movement.