American Revolutionary
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What does it mean to be an AMERICAN REVOLUTIONARY today? Grace Lee Boggs, a Chinese American woman in Detroit, who died in October 2015 at 100 years old, has a surprising vision of revolution. A writer, activist, and philosopher rooted for more than 70 years in the African American movement, she devoted her life to an evolving revolution that encompassed the contradictions of America’s past and its potentially radical future. This Peabody Award-winning documentary plunges us into Boggs’ lifelong practice of igniting community dialogue and action, work that traverses the major U.S. social movements of the last century: from labor to civil rights, to Black Power, feminism, the Asian American and environmental justice movements and beyond.
 
 Angela Davis, Bill Moyers, Bill Ayers, Ruby Dee and Ossie Davis, Danny Glover, Boggs’s husband James Boggs, and a host of Detroit comrades across three generations help shape this uniquely American story. As she wrestles with a Detroit in ongoing transition, contradictions of violence and non-violence, Malcolm X and Martin Luther King Jr., the 1967 rebellions, and non-linear notions of time and history, Boggs emerges with an approach that is radical in its simplicity and clarity: revolution is not an act of aggression or merely a protest. Revolution, Boggs says, is about something deeper within the human experience — the ability to transform oneself in order to transform the world. More than ten years in the making, this interdisciplinary film has broad educational appeal.
Citation
Main credits
								Boggs, Grace Lee (on-screen participant)
Lee, Grace (film producer)
Lee, Grace (film director)
Libresco, Caroline (film producer)
Wilkin, Austin (film producer)
Maddala, Vivek (composer)
							
Other credits
Editor, Kim Roberts; cinematography, Jerry A. Henry, Quyen Tran; music by Vivek Maddala.
Distributor subjects
Politics; Philosophy; Civil Rights; Asian American; Race and Ethnicity; African American; Women's Studies; Politics and Political Science; Philosophy; Civil Rights; Asian-American Studies; Race and Racism; Cultural and Ethnic Studies; African-American Studies; Gender Issues and Studies; Documentary FilmsKeywords
WEBVTT
 
 00:00:13.681 --> 00:00:17.643
 I feel for so sorry for people
 who are not living in Detroit.
 
 00:00:21.940 --> 00:00:26.903
 Detroit gives a sense of
 epochs of civilization
 
 00:00:27.028 --> 00:00:30.615
 in a way that you don’t
 get in a city like New York.
 
 00:00:32.908 --> 00:00:38.205
 I mean, it’s obvious by looking
 at that what was doesn’t work.
 
 00:00:39.873 --> 00:00:44.378
 People are always
 striving for size.
 
 00:00:44.503 --> 00:00:45.921
 Be a giant.
 
 00:00:48.381 --> 00:00:52.386
 And this is a symbol
 of how giants fall.
 
 00:01:05.233 --> 00:01:09.111
 Evolution is not linear.
 Times interact.
 
 00:01:25.420 --> 00:01:29.673
 History, that’s a story not only
 of the past but of the future.
 
 00:01:40.016 --> 00:01:41.978
 It’s hard when you’re young
 
 00:01:42.103 --> 00:01:45.481
 to understand how reality
 is constantly changing
 
 00:01:45.648 --> 00:01:48.485
 because it hasn’t changed that
 much during your lifetime.
 
 00:01:57.743 --> 00:01:58.995
 For over a decade,
 
 00:01:59.120 --> 00:02:01.413
 I’ve been coming to Detroit,
 to this house,
 
 00:02:01.580 --> 00:02:03.415
 for an unfinished conversation.
 
 00:02:08.588 --> 00:02:10.881
 Don’t you want to film me
 opening the door?
 
 00:02:11.215 --> 00:02:14.468
 Hello, Quyen, how are you?
 Come on in.
 
 00:02:15.428 --> 00:02:18.723
 She’s not my grandmother.
 We’re not even related.
 
 00:02:19.306 --> 00:02:20.933
 Do you drink beer?
 
 00:02:21.558 --> 00:02:22.935
 No, but you should have some.
 
 00:02:23.060 --> 00:02:24.940
 I’ll have a beer with you
 if you want to have...
 
 00:02:25.188 --> 00:02:28.023
 You don’t have to. But...
 but do you drink wine?
 
 00:02:28.148 --> 00:02:29.775
 You drink beer and wine?
 
 00:02:29.941 --> 00:02:30.943
 I drink everything.
 
 00:02:30.985 --> 00:02:34.446
 You drink everything.
 Okay... uh, vodka?
 
 00:02:35.281 --> 00:02:37.950
 So what do you want me to do?
 Just like cut, trim the...
 
 00:02:38.075 --> 00:02:39.951
 Just... I mean, just take
 off some of this
 
 00:02:40.076 --> 00:02:41.955
 so it doesn’t look so bad.
 
 00:02:42.080 --> 00:02:43.288
 Okay.
 
 00:02:43.455 --> 00:02:45.458
 You know it’s very funny
 what happens
 
 00:02:45.625 --> 00:02:47.460
 to the hair of old people.
 
 00:02:47.710 --> 00:02:51.005
 You begin getting hair
 in your nostrils.
 
 00:02:51.338 --> 00:02:54.216
 Oh yeah?
 Did you know that?
 
 00:02:56.010 --> 00:02:57.690
 I’m just copying what
 they do in the salon.
 
 00:02:57.803 --> 00:02:59.346
 You know how it\'s amazing
 to me when I think
 
 00:02:59.471 --> 00:03:01.348
 of how, as you grow older,
 
 00:03:01.640 --> 00:03:05.060
 at least for me, just exactly
 what I look like
 
 00:03:05.185 --> 00:03:07.980
 doesn’t matter that
 much to me anymore.
 
 00:03:08.480 --> 00:03:11.901
 I’ve been in these
 same clothes for months.
 
 00:03:12.068 --> 00:03:16.238
 It’s just too much
 trouble to change them.
 
 00:03:18.156 --> 00:03:21.118
 My conversations with Grace
 began over a decade ago
 
 00:03:21.160 --> 00:03:24.038
 when I began filming her
 for another documentary.
 
 00:03:26.040 --> 00:03:29.918
 - Zola! Is Bernadette up there?
 - I’m home!
 
 00:03:30.043 --> 00:03:30.461
 Hi!
 
 00:03:30.586 --> 00:03:32.171
 Hi! I thought that was your car.
 
 00:03:32.338 --> 00:03:33.715
 - Yes it is.
 - How are you?
 
 00:03:33.965 --> 00:03:36.216
 I’d heard about this
 elderly Chinese woman
 
 00:03:36.341 --> 00:03:38.218
 who’d been a part of
 Detroit’s African American
 
 00:03:38.343 --> 00:03:40.220
 community for 50 years.
 
 00:03:42.306 --> 00:03:44.100
 She seemed perfect
 for my earlier film,
 
 00:03:44.225 --> 00:03:45.810
 - the “Grace Lee Project,”...
 - Watch your step.
 
 00:03:45.935 --> 00:03:48.145
 Which was about the many
 Asian American women
 
 00:03:48.311 --> 00:03:49.938
 who share our common name.
 
 00:03:50.063 --> 00:03:52.525
 I’m a terrible housekeeper.
 Let me tell you that in advance.
 
 00:03:52.691 --> 00:03:55.068
 When you said one of the
 reasons for your
 
 00:03:55.235 --> 00:03:58.030
 making this
 Grace Lee documentary,
 
 00:03:58.823 --> 00:04:03.535
 I’m paraphrasing, was that
 you wanted to refute the, um,
 
 00:04:03.703 --> 00:04:07.581
 stereotype of Asian American
 women as passive.
 
 00:04:07.748 --> 00:04:10.918
 The whole thing assumed a,
 a different meaning for me.
 
 00:04:11.043 --> 00:04:14.213
 I, I, I, I didn’t see myself
 so much as Chinese,
 
 00:04:14.338 --> 00:04:15.465
 and you keep asking me this
 
 00:04:15.631 --> 00:04:18.091
 I didn’t think myself
 so much as Chinese American,
 
 00:04:18.216 --> 00:04:20.093
 I didn’t think myself
 so much as a woman
 
 00:04:20.470 --> 00:04:24.306
 because the Chinese American
 movement hadn’t emerged,
 
 00:04:24.348 --> 00:04:26.683
 and the women’s movement
 hadn’t emerged.
 
 00:04:28.393 --> 00:04:31.438
 Over the years, my conversations
 with Grace have evolved.
 
 00:04:32.773 --> 00:04:35.485
 - Ah! So exciting! Guess what?
 - What?
 
 00:04:35.901 --> 00:04:39.113
 When Grace was 85, we
 could barely keep up with her.
 
 00:04:39.363 --> 00:04:42.491
 This is where they set up
 tables to collect the petitions.
 
 00:04:43.158 --> 00:04:45.035
 She attended several
 meetings a day,
 
 00:04:45.160 --> 00:04:47.455
 taught a class,
 collected petitions,
 
 00:04:47.621 --> 00:04:50.500
 and constantly challenged
 everyone in her path.
 
 00:04:50.708 --> 00:04:54.336
 I’m sorry. I think that if we
 stick to those categories
 
 00:04:54.503 --> 00:04:56.921
 of race and class and gender,
 
 00:04:57.090 --> 00:04:59.133
 we are stuck.
 
 00:05:00.760 --> 00:05:02.136
 As we grew closer,
 
 00:05:02.303 --> 00:05:05.013
 I began to learn more
 about Grace’s radical past.
 
 00:05:05.515 --> 00:05:07.558
 She’s been a
 Marxist theoretician,
 
 00:05:07.683 --> 00:05:09.185
 a black power activist,
 
 00:05:09.351 --> 00:05:11.728
 and has a thick FBI file.
 
 00:05:12.230 --> 00:05:15.941
 Grace has made
 more contributions
 
 00:05:16.108 --> 00:05:18.903
 to the black struggle than
 most black people have.
 
 00:05:19.320 --> 00:05:20.696
 Thank you so much.
 
 00:05:20.863 --> 00:05:22.990
 I was underground for
 almost 12 years,
 
 00:05:23.115 --> 00:05:24.408
 uh, in the United States,
 
 00:05:24.575 --> 00:05:27.286
 and Grace Lee Boggs’ books
 were hugely influential.
 
 00:05:27.703 --> 00:05:30.706
 It turns out that Grace has been
 trying to wage a revolution
 
 00:05:30.748 --> 00:05:33.333
 in the United States
 for the past 70 years.
 
 00:05:34.751 --> 00:05:36.920
 But just in the time
 that I’ve known her,
 
 00:05:36.921 --> 00:05:39.965
 her ideas about revolution
 have started to catch fire.
 
 00:05:40.383 --> 00:05:42.385
 What do you think of being
 on a t-shirt, Grace?
 
 00:05:42.426 --> 00:05:45.178
 I never thought of myself
 as a t-shirt character.
 
 00:05:46.221 --> 00:05:49.558
 Grace Lee Boggs, how would you
 
 00:05:49.683 --> 00:05:52.936
 describe where we stand now
 and how we’ve gotten here?
 
 00:05:53.478 --> 00:05:57.650
 Well, I think we are in a time
 of great hope and great danger.
 
 00:05:58.400 --> 00:06:00.653
 I didn’t know I was searching
 for someone like Grace
 
 00:06:00.778 --> 00:06:02.196
 until I met her.
 
 00:06:02.363 --> 00:06:05.908
 I don’t know why people are
 so interested now.
 
 00:06:06.075 --> 00:06:10.370
 I’m not sure why I am who I am.
 
 00:06:10.705 --> 00:06:13.123
 I think it does have something
 to do with the fact
 
 00:06:13.290 --> 00:06:17.043
 that I was born
 female and born Chinese.
 
 00:06:18.545 --> 00:06:21.298
 I’m not sure what that is, but
 I have to think that through.
 
 00:06:22.006 --> 00:06:24.051
 And I thought that maybe
 in our discussions
 
 00:06:24.218 --> 00:06:25.886
 we would be able
 to explore that.
 
 00:06:26.011 --> 00:06:27.221
 Yeah.
 
 00:06:29.056 --> 00:06:30.265
 Can we go back a little bit?
 
 00:06:30.390 --> 00:06:32.268
 And how did you
 become a philosopher?
 
 00:06:34.478 --> 00:06:38.816
 I’ll just go back, um, 70 years.
 
 00:06:55.916 --> 00:06:59.711
 I went to college at
 Barnard at the age of 16.
 
 00:07:01.588 --> 00:07:03.673
 College in those days was still
 
 00:07:03.841 --> 00:07:06.635
 very much
 an upper-class culture.
 
 00:07:10.556 --> 00:07:13.225
 I didn’t want to be different,
 
 00:07:17.103 --> 00:07:19.565
 so I ran for office,
 
 00:07:19.606 --> 00:07:23.735
 I was vice president of the
 Women’s Athletic Association.
 
 00:07:24.445 --> 00:07:28.490
 And suddenly it all
 seemed barren to me.
 
 00:07:28.615 --> 00:07:30.158
 Something seemed wrong.
 
 00:07:30.325 --> 00:07:33.328
 Fellow workers, we want
 peace and prosperity
 
 00:07:33.453 --> 00:07:36.456
 in this country here,
 that’s what we’re fighting for.
 
 00:07:37.166 --> 00:07:41.628
 Union Square was full of people
 because of the Depression.
 
 00:07:52.096 --> 00:07:55.225
 And even though I was not
 an activist growing up at all,
 
 00:07:55.350 --> 00:08:00.815
 I think the seeds were laid,
 you know, in... in my family.
 
 00:08:03.901 --> 00:08:07.863
 Last night I received an
 email from my great niece.
 
 00:08:08.488 --> 00:08:11.908
 And she sent me a picture that
 she found on the floor of
 
 00:08:12.033 --> 00:08:16.538
 her basement of my father’s
 restaurant on Broadway.
 
 00:08:23.880 --> 00:08:26.798
 Chin Lee’s Restaurant
 opened in 1924.
 
 00:08:31.303 --> 00:08:33.805
 My parents came
 here as immigrants.
 
 00:08:35.181 --> 00:08:38.560
 My mother never went to
 school, couldn’t read or write.
 
 00:08:41.355 --> 00:08:45.191
 We lived a very
 comfortable existence.
 
 00:08:46.985 --> 00:08:49.946
 And at the same time,
 I felt from the very beginning
 
 00:08:49.948 --> 00:08:52.575
 that there were changes
 that needed to take place.
 
 00:08:56.828 --> 00:09:01.333
 So I dropped all my classes and
 decided to take philosophy.
 
 00:09:02.335 --> 00:09:04.086
 There was a class on Hegel,
 
 00:09:04.253 --> 00:09:07.506
 and that really changed
 my whole way of thinking.
 
 00:09:10.258 --> 00:09:12.093
 Hegel was a German philosopher
 
 00:09:12.261 --> 00:09:14.055
 who came of age
 during the French Revolution
 
 00:09:14.221 --> 00:09:15.848
 and saw its violent aftermath.
 
 00:09:17.475 --> 00:09:20.351
 Hegel said that every idea
 contains its opposite
 
 00:09:21.145 --> 00:09:23.563
 and only by struggling
 through those contradictions
 
 00:09:23.688 --> 00:09:25.565
 can you get closer to the truth.
 
 00:09:26.441 --> 00:09:27.860
 That’s dialectical thinking.
 
 00:09:28.485 --> 00:09:32.615
 It means don’t get
 stuck in old ideas.
 
 00:09:33.406 --> 00:09:36.951
 Keep, keep recognizing
 that reality is changing
 
 00:09:37.076 --> 00:09:39.413
 and that your ideas
 have to change.
 
 00:09:42.833 --> 00:09:47.128
 I read Hegel’s writings as if
 I were listening to music.
 
 00:09:48.255 --> 00:09:50.381
 And I didn’t understand
 it at the time,
 
 00:09:50.675 --> 00:09:52.676
 but it had stayed with me,
 
 00:09:53.093 --> 00:10:00.726
 and I have a proper respect for
 what reflection really entails.
 
 00:10:08.233 --> 00:10:10.695
 You said that revolution is
 a transformation of ourselves,
 
 00:10:10.861 --> 00:10:12.613
 and I really, really agree
 with that, and I wonder,
 
 00:10:12.738 --> 00:10:14.448
 in your life, how did you
 go through that
 
 00:10:14.615 --> 00:10:16.535
 in order to become the person
 that you are today?
 
 00:10:16.658 --> 00:10:19.286
 Let me tell you how
 I became an activist.
 
 00:10:21.288 --> 00:10:27.753
 Uh, I was a, uh, I got my Ph.D.
 in 1940. Just imagine that.
 
 00:10:33.550 --> 00:10:35.928
 And then I went
 out into the world,
 
 00:10:36.053 --> 00:10:38.721
 and I found that even
 department stores would say,
 
 00:10:38.846 --> 00:10:40.725
 “We don’t hire Orientals.”
 
 00:10:42.351 --> 00:10:45.145
 So I got on a train
 and went to Chicago.
 
 00:10:47.856 --> 00:10:50.066
 Found a job there in the
 philosophy library
 
 00:10:50.191 --> 00:10:51.443
 for $10 a week.
 
 00:10:52.193 --> 00:10:54.196
 It wasn’t very much to live on,
 
 00:10:54.363 --> 00:10:56.531
 so I found a woman who said
 
 00:10:56.656 --> 00:10:59.451
 I could stay in her
 basement rent-free.
 
 00:11:00.035 --> 00:11:02.663
 The only trouble was that
 I had to face a barricade
 
 00:11:02.788 --> 00:11:05.206
 of rats in order to get
 into the basement.
 
 00:11:08.293 --> 00:11:11.421
 So one day I came across
 a meeting of people
 
 00:11:11.546 --> 00:11:14.091
 protesting rat-infested housing.
 
 00:11:17.176 --> 00:11:19.430
 That brought me in contact
 with the black community
 
 00:11:19.555 --> 00:11:21.431
 for the first time.
 
 00:11:22.265 --> 00:11:24.143
 And I want you to
 think about this now.
 
 00:11:24.185 --> 00:11:27.855
 I had never been in contact
 with black people before.
 
 00:11:29.856 --> 00:11:34.236
 In 1941, the Depression had
 ended for white workers
 
 00:11:34.361 --> 00:11:36.238
 but not for black workers.
 
 00:11:38.198 --> 00:11:41.910
 I was aware that
 people were suffering,
 
 00:11:42.076 --> 00:11:45.455
 but it was more
 a statistical thing.
 
 00:11:46.206 --> 00:11:48.791
 And here in Chicago
 I was coming into contact
 
 00:11:48.916 --> 00:11:50.795
 with it as a human thing.
 
 00:11:52.755 --> 00:11:54.715
 Being in contact with
 the black community
 
 00:11:54.840 --> 00:11:56.466
 brought me in contact with
 
 00:11:56.633 --> 00:11:59.511
 the 1941 March on
 Washington movement
 
 00:11:59.636 --> 00:12:03.515
 to demand jobs for
 blacks in defense plants.
 
 00:12:04.558 --> 00:12:08.311
 Tens of thousands of blacks were
 ready to march on Washington.
 
 00:12:08.770 --> 00:12:11.981
 And Roosevelt couldn’t
 afford that to happen,
 
 00:12:12.106 --> 00:12:15.401
 so he issued
 Executive Order 8802,
 
 00:12:15.693 --> 00:12:19.071
 banning discrimination
 in defense plants.
 
 00:12:20.448 --> 00:12:24.370
 I found out that if you
 mobilize a mass action,
 
 00:12:24.536 --> 00:12:26.371
 you can change the world.
 
 00:12:28.373 --> 00:12:31.668
 And I thought to myself, boy,
 if a movement can achieve that,
 
 00:12:31.835 --> 00:12:33.670
 that’s what I want
 to do with my life.
 
 00:12:37.173 --> 00:12:40.551
 In Chicago I realized that I’d
 have to do more thinking.
 
 00:12:41.720 --> 00:12:44.181
 I went down one day to meet this
 
 00:12:44.306 --> 00:12:47.058
 West Indian Marxist,
 C.L.R. James.
 
 00:12:48.018 --> 00:12:52.396
 An extraordinarily
 handsome black man.
 
 00:12:52.523 --> 00:12:54.441
 And he’s carrying two books:
 
 00:12:54.608 --> 00:12:59.696
 Marx’s “Capital” and
 Hegel’s “Science of Logic.”
 
 00:13:01.740 --> 00:13:05.451
 For the next decade Grace worked
 closely with C.L.R. James,
 
 00:13:05.618 --> 00:13:08.496
 translating and embracing
 Marx’s ideas.
 
 00:13:12.083 --> 00:13:16.838
 This room was formerly
 the master bedroom.
 
 00:13:17.673 --> 00:13:25.221
 I was a very faithful student of
 Marx and Engels in the 1940s.
 
 00:13:25.346 --> 00:13:30.435
 I read very carefully almost
 everything that Marx wrote,
 
 00:13:30.560 --> 00:13:32.813
 and studied it,
 and believed in it.
 
 00:13:32.938 --> 00:13:33.938
 The top shelf...
 
 00:13:34.105 --> 00:13:36.775
 This is the period of Grace’s
 life that’s the hardest for
 
 00:13:36.900 --> 00:13:39.445
 someone in my generation
 to understand.
 
 00:13:40.028 --> 00:13:42.030
 There you go.
 
 00:13:42.113 --> 00:13:43.531
 Oh, there you are. Hi!
 
 00:13:43.656 --> 00:13:45.783
 I go back and forth
 with her on Skype,
 
 00:13:45.910 --> 00:13:48.078
 trying to understand
 what she’s talking about.
 
 00:13:48.286 --> 00:13:52.750
 The whole question of
 what is dialectical humanism
 
 00:13:52.875 --> 00:13:55.418
 as contrasted with
 dialectal materialism,
 
 00:13:55.543 --> 00:13:57.420
 which is more in terms of...
 
 00:14:01.341 --> 00:14:03.051
 Marx was a Hegelian
 
 00:14:03.218 --> 00:14:08.431
 who projected socialism
 as workers’ power
 
 00:14:08.598 --> 00:14:10.893
 whereby the workers
 would take over the state.
 
 00:14:12.435 --> 00:14:15.646
 Part of Marx’s theory was that
 
 00:14:15.813 --> 00:14:18.483
 if you could just get the
 masses angry enough,
 
 00:14:18.650 --> 00:14:21.986
 they would sweep
 away the existing society
 
 00:14:22.111 --> 00:14:24.740
 and emerge as a new society.
 
 00:14:26.658 --> 00:14:28.743
 Grace joined C.L.R. James
 in an offshoot
 
 00:14:28.868 --> 00:14:30.745
 of the Socialist Workers Party.
 
 00:14:31.371 --> 00:14:33.248
 They took on the
 party leadership,
 
 00:14:33.290 --> 00:14:36.335
 saying they had ignored
 racism and the potential for
 
 00:14:36.336 --> 00:14:38.295
 black workers to
 ignite a revolution.
 
 00:14:39.755 --> 00:14:44.216
 Most people know me
 first through this pamphlet.
 
 00:14:44.218 --> 00:14:49.306
 And my name... I, I had a...
 a party name, Ria Stone.
 
 00:14:49.598 --> 00:14:51.975
 What do you mean
 by a party name?
 
 00:14:52.016 --> 00:14:55.311
 Oh, in those days, if you were
 in a left-wing organization,
 
 00:14:55.313 --> 00:15:00.316
 you gave yourself a...
 A party name. An
 underground name.
 
 00:15:08.033 --> 00:15:10.326
 Seventeen U.S. Communist
 leaders are arrested.
 
 00:15:10.328 --> 00:15:13.080
 Four more red leaders
 are still being sought.
 
 00:15:13.121 --> 00:15:16.458
 The group is charged with
 criminal conspiracy to
 teach and advocate
 
 00:15:16.625 --> 00:15:18.251
 the overthrow of
 U.S. Government.
 
 00:15:21.421 --> 00:15:25.341
 The generation of radicals
 who were left-wingers
 
 00:15:25.343 --> 00:15:29.261
 had been silenced
 by McCarthyism.
 
 00:15:31.015 --> 00:15:34.310
 There was always
 an atmosphere of fear.
 
 00:15:34.351 --> 00:15:42.351
 And we didn’t begin to free
 ourselves from that underground
 mentality until the mid-‘50s
 
 00:15:42.860 --> 00:15:47.196
 and when we decided that
 we were makers of the
 American Revolution,
 
 00:15:47.198 --> 00:15:50.200
 and that we were Americans.
 
 00:15:53.536 --> 00:15:57.123
 In America, millions of
 people drive automobiles.
 
 00:15:57.125 --> 00:16:00.960
 Most of the cars are
 built right here in Detroit.
 
 00:16:01.295 --> 00:16:05.090
 The auto industry
 built Detroit, made
 it what it is today.
 
 00:16:06.591 --> 00:16:11.430
 Politics of the time
 said Detroit is where
 the workers are,
 
 00:16:11.471 --> 00:16:13.515
 and that’s where you need to be.
 
 00:16:19.311 --> 00:16:23.233
 There were two million people
 in the city around that time.
 
 00:16:23.235 --> 00:16:26.945
 There was such a
 sense of vitality about it.
 
 00:16:29.948 --> 00:16:35.328
 I came to Detroit to help edit
 the newsletter we were putting
 out, “Correspondence,”
 
 00:16:35.330 --> 00:16:43.330
 which would be edited not
 only by workers but by women,
 by young people, and by blacks.
 
 00:16:45.088 --> 00:16:49.968
 Born in Alabama /
 Bred in Illinois
 
 00:16:49.970 --> 00:16:54.390
 He was nothing /
 but a plain black boy
 
 00:16:54.431 --> 00:16:55.556
 Do you remember that?
 
 00:16:56.433 --> 00:16:58.143
 And that’s when I met Jimmy.
 
 00:17:00.186 --> 00:17:04.315
 Jimmy Boggs volunteered
 to be the reporter.
 
 00:17:04.316 --> 00:17:06.943
 And Jimmy was
 obviously very different.
 
 00:17:07.903 --> 00:17:10.571
 And I had never met
 anybody like him before.
 
 00:17:11.906 --> 00:17:14.910
 He was militant.
 He was articulate,
 
 00:17:14.911 --> 00:17:17.578
 so one night I
 invited him to dinner.
 
 00:17:18.996 --> 00:17:23.043
 He reluctantly
 agreed and came late.
 
 00:17:23.085 --> 00:17:27.213
 And I played an album,
 a Louis Armstrong
 album that I had.
 
 00:17:27.215 --> 00:17:31.050
 The stars are bright...
 
 00:17:31.093 --> 00:17:34.596
 He said he had no
 use for Louis Armstrong,
 
 00:17:34.638 --> 00:17:36.306
 and that Louis Armstrong was
 what they called an Uncle Tom
 
 00:17:36.348 --> 00:17:39.058
 because he was
 always, “Yowza Yowza.”
 
 00:17:39.060 --> 00:17:43.021
 And so he was, you know, he
 was very unpleasant actually.
 
 00:17:44.063 --> 00:17:47.776
 But in the course of the
 evening, he asked
 me to marry him.
 
 00:17:48.776 --> 00:17:49.861
 I said yes.
 
 00:17:52.990 --> 00:17:58.120
 Friends of his said I had no
 idea what it was like to be
 married to a black man.
 
 00:17:58.953 --> 00:18:00.330
 And I didn’t.
 
 00:18:01.290 --> 00:18:04.416
 When Jimmy and I
 went on our honeymoon,
 
 00:18:04.418 --> 00:18:07.003
 we had to sleep in
 the car coming back
 
 00:18:07.005 --> 00:18:08.921
 because we couldn’t
 go into a motel.
 
 00:18:10.506 --> 00:18:13.093
 Did you ever want
 to have children?
 
 00:18:13.135 --> 00:18:14.511
 No, I never did.
 
 00:18:15.886 --> 00:18:19.558
 I have a very wonderful,
 philosophic view of children.
 
 00:18:19.725 --> 00:18:22.476
 I don’t know how I
 would do practically.
 
 00:18:23.270 --> 00:18:25.521
 Why do you think he
 asked you to marry him?
 
 00:18:25.523 --> 00:18:27.773
 You must have asked him later.
 
 00:18:28.150 --> 00:18:30.443
 No, we never discussed it.
 
 00:18:31.820 --> 00:18:35.781
 I, I know that sounds
 funny, but we never did.
 
 00:18:36.991 --> 00:18:41.788
 Jimmy and I really
 never discussed personal
 things too much.
 
 00:18:45.500 --> 00:18:48.336
 With Ossie and Ruby.
 
 00:18:48.338 --> 00:18:52.215
 Starring Ruby Dee
 and Ossie Davis.
 
 00:18:53.008 --> 00:18:56.761
 With their very special guests,
 Grace and James Boggs.
 
 00:18:57.595 --> 00:19:02.308
 If you’re lucky, Ossie, you
 know, you meet somebody
 every now and then
 
 00:19:02.310 --> 00:19:04.853
 that you wish everybody
 in the world could know.
 You know?
 
 00:19:05.020 --> 00:19:07.981
 Yeah.
 Like Grace and James Boggs.
 Oh, how true.
 
 00:19:08.065 --> 00:19:11.901
 Nobody in the whole wide
 world has... is more dedicated
 
 00:19:11.903 --> 00:19:14.320
 to the promise and
 the challenge of America.
 
 00:19:14.780 --> 00:19:20.076
 If you want to talk
 about diversity... Jimmy
 was born in the country.
 
 00:19:20.078 --> 00:19:22.786
 You know, you’ll never
 get the country out of him.
 
 00:19:23.455 --> 00:19:26.458
 And there was something
 in me was just a rebel now.
 
 00:19:27.125 --> 00:19:32.380
 Jimmy never lost
 his Alabama accent.
 His accent was so thick
 
 00:19:32.381 --> 00:19:35.716
 it was a little difficult
 to capture what he said.
 
 00:19:46.770 --> 00:19:50.315
 They would whoop your
 butt from here to here.
 
 00:20:06.080 --> 00:20:14.080
 He was born in Alabama /
 He was bred in Illinois /
 
 00:20:15.175 --> 00:20:17.675
 He was nothing but
 a plain black boy...
 
 00:20:18.093 --> 00:20:21.971
 Plain black boy.
 
 00:20:22.805 --> 00:20:25.766
 Swing low... swing low...
 
 00:20:26.058 --> 00:20:29.520
 This was one of the
 really great migrations
 of this country...
 
 00:20:29.561 --> 00:20:35.943
 of black people coming up
 from Mississippi and Alabama
 to Chicago and Detroit.
 
 00:20:39.615 --> 00:20:46.161
 Drive him past the pool hall /
 Drive him past the show...
 
 00:20:46.163 --> 00:20:50.000
 Whole communities
 in the south came north,
 
 00:20:50.001 --> 00:20:54.963
 so that many of Jimmy’s friends
 were his childhood friends.
 
 00:20:55.713 --> 00:20:59.300
 They treated me like
 a member of the family.
 
 00:21:00.468 --> 00:21:02.053
 But what did your family think?
 
 00:21:03.721 --> 00:21:07.976
 My brothers lived here.
 They had a lot of black friends.
 
 00:21:08.018 --> 00:21:11.103
 It was not such a strange thing.
 
 00:21:11.438 --> 00:21:13.481
 Swing low...
 swing low...
 
 00:21:14.650 --> 00:21:19.070
 Jimmy came to Detroit to
 work on the line at Chrysler.
 
 00:21:20.030 --> 00:21:25.618
 Nothing but a plain black boy...
 
 00:21:27.870 --> 00:21:33.335
 He came home from work,
 laid down on the floor with
 a yellow pad and wrote.
 
 00:21:34.460 --> 00:21:38.381
 Jimmy was a much
 faster writer than I.
 
 00:21:38.383 --> 00:21:43.136
 It was just amazing the
 way that his, his pen
 would sort of fly from the
 
 00:21:43.303 --> 00:21:45.680
 left-hand side to
 the right-hand side.
 
 00:21:50.268 --> 00:21:54.021
 In 1963 James Boggs wrote
 “The American Revolution,”
 
 00:21:54.023 --> 00:21:58.443
 where he foreshadowed the
 changes that would undermine
 the American working class.
 
 00:22:01.236 --> 00:22:06.910
 He watched the working
 class expand like crazy
 during World War II
 
 00:22:06.911 --> 00:22:13.291
 and then steadily shrink with
 the introduction of what
 they called automation.
 
 00:22:15.543 --> 00:22:19.338
 And he watched human beings
 disappearing from the line
 
 00:22:19.340 --> 00:22:22.425
 and being replaced by robots.
 
 00:22:41.026 --> 00:22:48.160
 What would human beings do
 when they were not needed for
 work and for labor to produce?
 
 00:22:49.535 --> 00:22:52.746
 And that’s a hell of a question
 to, to put on... you know,
 
 00:22:52.913 --> 00:22:55.583
 on the shoulders of
 young people like yourself.
 
 00:22:55.585 --> 00:23:02.256
 But you know, you don’t
 choose the times you live
 in. But you do choose
 
 00:23:02.258 --> 00:23:06.051
 who you want to be, and you
 do choose how you want to think.
 
 00:23:19.023 --> 00:23:23.195
 This is where we put out
 our newsletter “Correspondence.”
 
 00:23:26.196 --> 00:23:31.745
 The devastation is so
 fabulous, so incredible.
 
 00:23:33.455 --> 00:23:37.291
 People gone...
 neighborhood gone.
 
 00:23:48.761 --> 00:23:52.181
 Jimmy would write
 most of the leaflets,
 
 00:23:52.183 --> 00:23:54.141
 and I would just sit and listen.
 
 00:23:54.893 --> 00:23:59.188
 I was a Chinese American
 living in an African
 American community
 
 00:23:59.190 --> 00:24:05.528
 and saw myself as a part of
 and apart from the community.
 
 00:24:12.035 --> 00:24:15.496
 This was the period that
 the black movement
 was just beginning.
 
 00:24:15.498 --> 00:24:18.916
 1955 was the Montgomery
 bus boycott.
 
 00:24:19.250 --> 00:24:23.213
 We, the Negro citizens
 of Montgomery, Alabama,
 
 00:24:23.215 --> 00:24:26.508
 will continue to carry
 on our mass protest.
 
 00:24:28.926 --> 00:24:33.723
 The Montgomery bus
 boycott was about not only
 transforming the system
 
 00:24:33.725 --> 00:24:36.433
 but an example of how
 
 00:24:36.475 --> 00:24:40.521
 we ourselves change in the
 process of changing the system.
 
 00:24:43.275 --> 00:24:44.985
 In the early 1960s,
 
 00:24:44.986 --> 00:24:47.445
 Grace split with the
 Marxist establishment
 
 00:24:47.446 --> 00:24:50.698
 to focus on a distinctly
 American revolution she saw
 
 00:24:50.865 --> 00:24:52.825
 emerging from
 the black community.
 
 00:24:53.868 --> 00:24:56.830
 She began speaking publicly
 about the black revolution.
 
 00:24:57.871 --> 00:25:00.666
 The Negro revolt is here.
 
 00:25:00.668 --> 00:25:03.878
 I believe that the Negro revolt
 represents the beginning
 
 00:25:03.880 --> 00:25:06.046
 of a new revolutionary epoch.
 
 00:25:07.631 --> 00:25:13.136
 I made a speech at the Center
 for the Study of Democratic
 Institutions in Santa Barbara.
 
 00:25:14.096 --> 00:25:18.768
 I tried to help these
 male intellectuals, these
 liberal intellectuals
 
 00:25:18.770 --> 00:25:23.063
 understand that the black
 movement was about
 something deeper than rights.
 
 00:25:23.815 --> 00:25:26.400
 One could say for
 the American Negro
 
 00:25:26.401 --> 00:25:30.821
 to achieve the middle-class
 white American standards
 
 00:25:30.823 --> 00:25:32.156
 is a revolution.
 
 00:25:33.115 --> 00:25:41.115
 I don’t think whites understand
 the degree to which Negroes
 do not want their whiteness.
 
 00:25:43.376 --> 00:25:47.921
 I am trying to suggest
 that the Negro is striving
 to become equal
 
 00:25:47.923 --> 00:25:52.968
 to a particular image of
 himself that he has achieved.
 
 00:25:52.970 --> 00:25:56.765
 That he is not trying to
 become equal to whites.
 
 00:25:58.056 --> 00:26:02.061
 It was a great philosophic
 transition for me,
 
 00:26:02.228 --> 00:26:06.065
 which I had begun when
 I began examining
 
 00:26:06.231 --> 00:26:10.070
 the difference between Martin
 Luther King and Malcolm.
 
 00:26:13.531 --> 00:26:15.283
 The goal of Dr.
 Martin Luther King
 
 00:26:15.285 --> 00:26:20.455
 is to get Negroes to forgive
 the people who have brutalized
 them for, uh, for 400 years by,
 
 00:26:20.456 --> 00:26:24.166
 by lulling them to sleep and
 making them forgetting what
 those whites have done to them.
 
 00:26:24.708 --> 00:26:27.295
 There’s a great deal of
 difference between
 
 00:26:27.461 --> 00:26:30.465
 non-resistance to evil
 and non-violent resistance.
 
 00:26:32.466 --> 00:26:35.803
 My relationship to King
 has changed over the years.
 
 00:26:35.805 --> 00:26:43.436
 I was one of the organizers
 of the 1963 march down
 Woodward Avenue in Detroit.
 
 00:26:45.730 --> 00:26:48.525
 I have a dream this afternoon
 
 00:26:49.150 --> 00:26:51.193
 that one day right
 here in Detroit,
 
 00:26:51.903 --> 00:26:58.910
 Negroes will be able to
 buy a house anywhere that
 their money will carry them.
 
 00:27:00.411 --> 00:27:02.371
 But I didn’t think much of him.
 
 00:27:02.373 --> 00:27:06.625
 I really thought he was naive.
 I really did because I,
 I was a Malcolm person.
 
 00:27:08.961 --> 00:27:10.963
 I would go and
 hear Malcolm speak.
 
 00:27:11.673 --> 00:27:13.841
 Why, you are the one
 that made it hard for yourself!
 
 00:27:13.843 --> 00:27:17.345
 The white man believes
 you when you go to
 him with that old sweet talk
 
 00:27:17.636 --> 00:27:20.598
 ‘cause you’ve been
 sweet talkin’ him ever
 since he brought you here.
 
 00:27:22.516 --> 00:27:28.063
 And audiences would squirm
 as he would challenge them
 to think differently,
 
 00:27:28.230 --> 00:27:29.898
 to transform themselves.
 
 00:27:34.028 --> 00:27:37.990
 When we think of the civil
 rights era, we think
 of the famous people.
 
 00:27:37.991 --> 00:27:41.535
 But, as Grace says, not all
 ideas come from the top down.
 
 00:27:43.455 --> 00:27:47.333
 They can also percolate up
 from the bottom, from
 conversations in people’s
 
 00:27:47.541 --> 00:27:49.793
 living rooms and around
 their kitchen tables.
 
 00:27:51.670 --> 00:27:56.216
 As I comb through old
 footage, the only evidence
 I found of Grace was this:
 
 00:27:56.218 --> 00:27:59.720
 at the march she helped
 organize for Martin Luther King.
 
 00:28:00.680 --> 00:28:02.431
 And there’s no footage
 of Jimmy at all.
 
 00:28:03.641 --> 00:28:09.688
 He felt that, uh, it was
 much more important
 to keep a low profile.
 
 00:28:09.690 --> 00:28:14.401
 And to be doing the kind of
 thinking and organizing
 that was necessary.
 
 00:28:14.860 --> 00:28:21.450
 This room is essentially the
 same way that it’s been ever
 since we’ve moved here
 
 00:28:21.616 --> 00:28:23.201
 for nearly 40 years.
 
 00:28:24.161 --> 00:28:28.373
 Practically everybody
 who’s been active in
 the city at one time
 
 00:28:28.541 --> 00:28:31.585
 or other says that they’ve
 been in this house
 discussing strategy.
 
 00:28:38.008 --> 00:28:40.678
 We see the events
 of 1963 through
 
 00:28:40.845 --> 00:28:43.055
 the eyes of the mass media.
 
 00:28:43.515 --> 00:28:46.350
 Thank God almighty
 we are free at last!
 
 00:28:46.683 --> 00:28:51.646
 We see events like that and are
 not aware of the struggles that
 were taking place and
 
 00:28:51.815 --> 00:28:53.190
 forcing new developments.
 
 00:28:54.566 --> 00:29:00.071
 Martin Luther King was being
 persecuted by the FBI
 during that period
 
 00:29:00.240 --> 00:29:01.866
 as being pro-Communist.
 
 00:29:02.950 --> 00:29:08.956
 Many people in the black
 movement were afraid that
 if they didn’t purge themselves
 
 00:29:09.123 --> 00:29:13.376
 of left-wing elements, that the
 movement would be destroyed.
 
 00:29:15.338 --> 00:29:18.131
 A few months after the
 march she had helped organize,
 
 00:29:18.133 --> 00:29:22.636
 Grace and others were excluded
 from a civil rights conference
 to be held in Detroit.
 
 00:29:23.428 --> 00:29:25.890
 So we organized our own
 conference and called it the
 
 00:29:26.056 --> 00:29:27.558
 Grassroots Leadership
 Conference.
 
 00:29:28.935 --> 00:29:32.438
 Jimmy was chair of the
 conference. I was the secretary.
 
 00:29:33.271 --> 00:29:37.443
 This is a picture of Jimmy
 talking to one of the workshops
 at the conference.
 
 00:29:37.693 --> 00:29:40.738
 This is me.
 
 00:29:42.781 --> 00:29:44.533
 Brother Jim Boggs
 now has the floor.
 
 00:29:57.088 --> 00:30:02.218
 This is part of James Boggs’
 FBI file. It was very
 exciting to get the file
 
 00:30:02.220 --> 00:30:06.430
 as a historian and as a
 political person who’s
 interested in their work.
 
 00:30:06.431 --> 00:30:10.351
 I, I knew that... I hoped that
 this would have some new
 information which it did.
 
 00:30:11.351 --> 00:30:12.561
 Is this all of it?
 
 00:30:12.563 --> 00:30:13.605
 This is about a third of it.
 
 00:30:13.606 --> 00:30:14.938
 A third? Okay.
 
 00:30:24.698 --> 00:30:28.870
 So in the Grassroots Leadership
 speech, it sounds like
 James is calling for violence.
 
 00:30:28.871 --> 00:30:32.165
 You know, when I ask Grace
 about it, she never gives
 me a straight answer,
 
 00:30:32.331 --> 00:30:33.331
 and I don’t know why.
 
 00:30:33.415 --> 00:30:35.793
 A straight answer about
 how she felt about it?
 Yeah.
 
 00:30:39.671 --> 00:30:47.671
 I think they felt that violence
 was already happening and
 that violence was inevitable.
 
 00:30:59.150 --> 00:31:02.195
 In fact, it was at the
 Grassroots Leadership
 Conference where Malcolm X
 
 00:31:02.361 --> 00:31:05.365
 delivered one of his
 most famous speeches:
 Message to the Grassroots.
 
 00:31:06.740 --> 00:31:08.033
 Can we play the record?
 
 00:31:08.035 --> 00:31:10.953
 Would you like to play it?
 Yes.
 
 00:31:14.831 --> 00:31:20.671
 We want to have just
 an off-the-cuff chat
 between you and me.
 
 00:31:20.673 --> 00:31:22.965
 Us.
 
 00:31:22.966 --> 00:31:28.680
 Concerning the difference
 between the black revolution
 
 00:31:28.681 --> 00:31:32.183
 and the Negro revolution.
 
 00:31:34.101 --> 00:31:38.146
 Revolution is in Africa!
 Revolution is in Asia!
 
 00:31:38.148 --> 00:31:40.900
 Rearing its head
 in Latin America.
 
 00:31:41.566 --> 00:31:46.655
 The only kind of revolution
 that’s non-violent is
 the Negro revolution.
 
 00:31:47.281 --> 00:31:50.601
 For Jimmy and Grace, they had
 been thinking about revolution
 for a decade and a half,
 
 00:31:50.701 --> 00:31:56.456
 so now they’re seeing in this
 particular radical and militant
 stream of black protest
 
 00:31:56.458 --> 00:32:01.670
 a new way to think about
 and envision and enact
 an American revolution.
 
 00:32:02.921 --> 00:32:06.800
 Inspired by the Grassroots
 Leadership conference, Grace
 helped launch a new,
 
 00:32:06.968 --> 00:32:08.218
 all-black political party.
 
 00:32:09.303 --> 00:32:13.056
 So when Grace helps to build the
 Freedom Now party, she’s the
 only non-black person in this
 
 00:32:13.223 --> 00:32:15.183
 self-consciously all-black
 political organization,
 
 00:32:15.768 --> 00:32:17.936
 whose goal is not
 to achieve integration
 
 00:32:18.103 --> 00:32:21.983
 but to try to realize some
 power, political power,
 for African Americans.
 
 00:32:24.401 --> 00:32:27.905
 Years before it became
 a movement, Jimmy
 began writing about the
 
 00:32:28.071 --> 00:32:29.406
 importance of Black Power.
 
 00:32:31.366 --> 00:32:37.498
 The word “power” strikes
 white people as something
 dangerous, threatening.
 
 00:32:38.833 --> 00:32:44.046
 And we were only talking
 about blacks being in office.
 
 00:32:45.005 --> 00:32:48.508
 Back in 1963, Grace was
 still speaking as an outsider.
 
 00:32:48.885 --> 00:32:52.221
 I want to make very clear that
 I, I do not claim in any sense
 of the word to be a Negro.
 
 00:32:52.223 --> 00:32:55.641
 I have not lived all my
 life as a Negro, and I don’t
 think anyone who hasn’t
 
 00:32:55.808 --> 00:32:57.101
 really can speak for the Negro.
 
 00:32:58.060 --> 00:33:01.813
 But once she becomes a
 Black Power activist, she
 starts using the word “we.”
 
 00:33:02.648 --> 00:33:07.278
 In the black movement, when
 we were demanding first-class
 citizenship, we were saying
 
 00:33:07.445 --> 00:33:09.155
 we were being,
 being denied that.
 
 00:33:09.821 --> 00:33:12.991
 We were very ethical but
 we wanted more than that.
 
 00:33:12.993 --> 00:33:17.871
 We wanted to become part
 of the people who took
 responsibility for the country.
 
 00:33:18.915 --> 00:33:22.835
 So by 1966, ‘67, she’s
 well known particularly
 in Detroit circles
 
 00:33:22.836 --> 00:33:26.213
 but also nationally as
 a Black Power figure.
 
 00:33:26.671 --> 00:33:29.341
 And I became so active
 in the Black Power movement
 
 00:33:29.343 --> 00:33:33.930
 that FBI records of that
 time say that I was
 probably Afro-Chinese.
 
 00:33:37.433 --> 00:33:40.686
 Nobody ever really
 thought... I don\'t know
 how to say this, but
 
 00:33:40.688 --> 00:33:47.276
 folks didn’t really think about
 Grace as a Chinese American.
 She was Grace, you know.
 
 00:33:47.443 --> 00:33:49.111
 She was just one of us.
 
 00:33:49.113 --> 00:33:52.865
 As young revolutionaries
 would talk about certain
 things and... we might
 
 00:33:52.866 --> 00:33:56.743
 say, “Okay... well, you know,
 let’s go see what, uh, Jimmy
 and Grace have to
 
 00:33:56.910 --> 00:33:57.910
 say about that.”
 
 00:33:59.080 --> 00:34:03.250
 Their jointly-authored essay,
 “The City Is the Black Man’s
 Land,” written in 1965,
 
 00:34:03.251 --> 00:34:07.421
 calls for black people to
 recognize the demographic
 changes taking place in
 
 00:34:07.588 --> 00:34:08.588
 American cities.
 
 00:34:15.930 --> 00:34:23.930
 The freeways had been
 built in 1953, so by 1967
 a lot of people had left.
 
 00:34:32.863 --> 00:34:39.286
 We were a predominantly
 black city, which was not
 run by black people.
 
 00:34:40.455 --> 00:34:46.626
 And great numbers of people
 who were being harassed by
 the police began to look
 
 00:34:46.793 --> 00:34:50.046
 upon the police as a
 white occupation army.
 
 00:34:53.758 --> 00:34:58.221
 At 13, I had been stopped by
 the Detroit police along with my
 
 00:34:58.388 --> 00:35:01.100
 uncle just for walking
 down the street.
 
 00:35:02.560 --> 00:35:04.436
 With the emergence
 of Black Power,
 
 00:35:04.438 --> 00:35:11.901
 they became more aggressive
 and that aggressiveness was
 what led us to 1967.
 
 00:35:15.865 --> 00:35:20.578
 In July of 1967, Detroit
 police raided a black nightclub
 
 00:35:20.580 --> 00:35:24.540
 and sparked one of the
 most violent urban
 uprisings in American history.
 
 00:35:34.300 --> 00:35:36.510
 Go back to your homes to
 protect your own property.
 
 00:35:36.676 --> 00:35:39.346
 It’s the best thing
 that you can do.
 Protect your own property.
 
 00:35:41.390 --> 00:35:44.018
 After five days, 43
 people were dead.
 
 00:35:47.521 --> 00:35:50.941
 It was a turning point
 for Detroit, and Grace
 has struggled to
 
 00:35:51.108 --> 00:35:53.193
 understand its
 significance ever since.
 
 00:35:54.528 --> 00:36:02.286
 Well, let me take you back to
 that terrible summer of 1967
 when Detroit erupted into,
 
 00:36:02.453 --> 00:36:05.163
 into that awful riot out there.
 
 00:36:05.165 --> 00:36:09.668
 I ask you to think about
 your calling it a riot.
 
 00:36:09.670 --> 00:36:10.670
 What would you call it?
 
 00:36:10.671 --> 00:36:13.671
 Ah... we in Detroit
 called it the rebellion.
 
 00:36:13.838 --> 00:36:14.506
 The rebellion.
 
 00:36:14.673 --> 00:36:17.718
 It was a rising up,
 it was a standing up.
 
 00:36:17.885 --> 00:36:21.388
 It was the protest by a
 people against injustice.
 
 00:36:22.013 --> 00:36:24.266
 So now we taking
 no more from nobody.
 
 00:36:24.268 --> 00:36:26.388
 We been... they been taking
 everything we have and now
 
 00:36:26.435 --> 00:36:28.315
 we showing them we ain’t
 afraid of them no more.
 
 00:36:31.565 --> 00:36:36.445
 This represents a
 racial rebellion that
 goes from coast to coast.
 
 00:36:36.446 --> 00:36:39.656
 In the city Detroit, it
 represents one simple thing:
 
 00:36:39.823 --> 00:36:42.618
 Black people want control
 of black communities.
 
 00:36:42.993 --> 00:36:46.496
 You open it!
 
 00:37:07.351 --> 00:37:12.856
 I’ve just gone through civil
 guerrilla warfare in Detroit.
 
 00:37:13.440 --> 00:37:20.781
 Certainly one of the influences
 was those Americans who are
 preaching revolution in America,
 
 00:37:20.783 --> 00:37:24.618
 and I say we ought to deal
 with such people on the
 basis of laws of treason.
 
 00:37:31.875 --> 00:37:35.755
 It was a turning point
 in my life and it forced
 us to begin thinking,
 
 00:37:35.921 --> 00:37:37.548
 “What does a revolution mean?”
 
 00:37:40.635 --> 00:37:44.555
 Grace watched how the
 violence of the rebellions
 galvanized the community,
 
 00:37:44.556 --> 00:37:49.143
 but she also saw the
 contradictions of where
 that violence would lead.
 
 00:37:50.435 --> 00:37:53.271
 For a few days there
 was a lot of brotherhood,
 
 00:37:53.273 --> 00:37:57.191
 but after that we all got
 more scared of each other.
 
 00:38:00.278 --> 00:38:07.328
 As a result of the rebellions,
 looting and crime began to
 seem normal and natural.
 
 00:38:12.290 --> 00:38:20.290
 I was among the six people who
 were allegedly responsible for
 the explosion in 1967.
 
 00:38:29.016 --> 00:38:32.520
 We actually were not in town.
 We were not responsible
 
 00:38:32.521 --> 00:38:39.110
 but, uh, we had done a lot of
 the agitation in relation to the
 propaganda, the activities.
 
 00:38:40.526 --> 00:38:46.533
 And I did feel that if it hadn\'t
 been for the active organizing,
 the theorizing that we did,
 
 00:38:46.700 --> 00:38:49.870
 that it would not have
 taken the shape that it did.
 
 00:39:46.051 --> 00:39:50.555
 In 2008, Grace invited
 me to a tiny island off
 the coast of Maine.
 
 00:39:54.518 --> 00:40:00.690
 So if you will be on that
 side of me as we go across...
 I\'ll feel more comfortable.
 
 00:40:01.983 --> 00:40:07.113
 She and Jimmy began
 coming here every year after
 the turbulent summer of 1967.
 
 00:40:07.321 --> 00:40:09.908
 It gets more rickety by the day!
 
 00:40:12.326 --> 00:40:16.665
 I hoped that coming here
 would help me understand
 how she went from being this
 
 00:40:16.831 --> 00:40:18.958
 ‘60s militant to the
 woman I know today.
 
 00:40:23.713 --> 00:40:30.345
 As we sat here, against
 the background of
 the ocean, of the trees,
 
 00:40:31.096 --> 00:40:36.435
 we just began talking.
 And we started these
 conversations which are
 
 00:40:36.601 --> 00:40:39.813
 now published as
 “Conversations in Maine.”
 
 00:40:45.235 --> 00:40:47.863
 Every summer Grace
 and Jimmy would
 join their old friends,
 
 00:40:48.030 --> 00:40:51.366
 Lyman and Freddy Paine,
 in Lyman’s family home.
 
 00:40:59.625 --> 00:41:03.128
 Over the years, we had
 these long conversations.
 
 00:41:27.360 --> 00:41:34.201
 Talking together, we were
 able to create a kind of
 consciousness among ourselves.
 
 00:41:35.785 --> 00:41:43.785
 And I think we realized
 a rebellion is an
 outburst of anger,
 
 00:41:43.878 --> 00:41:46.713
 but it\'s not revolution.
 
 00:41:47.171 --> 00:41:51.635
 Revolution is evolution toward
 something much grander
 
 00:41:51.636 --> 00:41:55.513
 in terms of what it means
 to be a human being.
 
 00:41:57.223 --> 00:42:00.268
 You can have discussion,
 you can have a meal,
 you can plot whatever.
 
 00:42:00.270 --> 00:42:05.065
 We plotted picket lines.
 We plotted anything we,
 we wished to do.
 
 00:42:06.233 --> 00:42:10.278
 At the end, it was always,
 “Okay, let’s put on some
 music and let’s relax.”
 
 00:42:10.280 --> 00:42:13.781
 And music, relaxing, and
 dancing... part of the thing.
 
 00:42:15.866 --> 00:42:19.371
 So, then...
 Traditions!
 Welcome to the house!
 
 00:42:20.746 --> 00:42:23.666
 Shea?
 Delicious!
 
 00:42:24.251 --> 00:42:30.548
 I started going in ‘78 and
 then went back every year,
 uh, with Grace and Jim.
 
 00:42:33.093 --> 00:42:35.803
 It was my first exposure
 to talking about
 
 00:42:35.971 --> 00:42:38.765
 \"What\'s this all mean?
 Where are we headed?\"
 
 00:42:39.433 --> 00:42:41.518
 Ideas matter.
 
 00:42:41.685 --> 00:42:45.480
 And when you take
 a position, you
 
 00:42:45.646 --> 00:42:49.108
 should try and examine
 what its implications are.
 
 00:42:49.735 --> 00:42:53.196
 It is not enough to say,
 “This is what I think,
 this is what I feel,”
 
 00:42:53.198 --> 00:42:54.781
 and leave it at that.
 
 00:42:55.865 --> 00:42:57.450
 I can remember, for example...
 
 00:42:57.993 --> 00:43:01.121
 Do you mind if I just change,
 change my tape for a moment?
 
 00:43:03.790 --> 00:43:06.501
 Grace has stacks of
 these old recordings.
 
 00:43:06.503 --> 00:43:09.755
 Physical proof of
 how much she
 values conversation.
 
 00:43:13.175 --> 00:43:17.971
 We’re the only living things
 that have conversations,
 as far as we know.
 
 00:43:18.596 --> 00:43:19.931
 When you have a conversation,
 
 00:43:20.640 --> 00:43:24.060
 you never know what’s
 going to come out of
 your mouth or out of
 
 00:43:24.226 --> 00:43:25.353
 somebody else’s mouth.
 
 00:43:25.561 --> 00:43:27.355
 Bullshit, Grace! Come on!
 
 00:43:27.356 --> 00:43:31.276
 Freddy, I’m sorry.
 I don’t think this is bullshit.
 I really don’t.
 
 00:43:31.278 --> 00:43:32.820
 Okay, I’m sorry.
 
 00:43:32.821 --> 00:43:33.861
 It all goes back to Hegel.
 
 00:43:34.530 --> 00:43:39.116
 For Grace, conversation is
 where you try to honestly
 confront the limits
 
 00:43:39.118 --> 00:43:42.120
 of your own ideas in
 order to come to a
 new understanding.
 
 00:43:42.495 --> 00:43:44.665
 Talk is cheap, but they talk
 about their feelings
 
 00:43:44.666 --> 00:43:46.375
 about what was important
 about their feelings
 
 00:43:46.376 --> 00:43:48.543
 and then turn around
 and say that to the mother!
 
 00:43:48.545 --> 00:43:52.463
 Look... look, Nancy,
 I really, really,
 really get... I, I’m sorry.
 
 00:43:52.465 --> 00:43:56.051
 When you just say
 talk is cheap like that...
 I, I can’t, I can’t...
 
 00:43:56.053 --> 00:43:58.345
 I find it very, very
 difficult to take.
 
 00:43:58.511 --> 00:44:01.056
 I want to tell you honestly.
 Their talk was NOT cheap.
 
 00:44:01.223 --> 00:44:04.058
 You’re making an in......
 You’re saying that this
 is important and this is...
 
 00:44:04.060 --> 00:44:06.061
 You’re saying things
 like “Talk is cheap”!
 
 00:44:06.063 --> 00:44:08.605
 No, you’re say...
 You’re not listening to me.
 
 00:44:08.606 --> 00:44:11.441
 You’re saying that we can
 talk about what’s important
 in a revolutionary movement
 
 00:44:11.443 --> 00:44:13.568
 but we don’t have
 to act like it.
 
 00:44:13.693 --> 00:44:14.570
 Grace was hard on people.
 
 00:44:14.571 --> 00:44:15.731
 There\'s no question about it.
 
 00:44:15.778 --> 00:44:18.156
 Grace, I, I think what
 Nancy’s raising is...
 
 00:44:18.948 --> 00:44:21.188
 You know, I sometimes
 think she didn’t
 mean it personally.
 
 00:44:21.618 --> 00:44:25.705
 But she would be so intent
 on whatever her idea was
 
 00:44:26.248 --> 00:44:29.460
 and be so sure
 
 00:44:29.461 --> 00:44:34.756
 that she needed to push
 you in that and if you
 resisted, she’d get mad.
 
 00:44:34.758 --> 00:44:36.918
 I think it’s insensitive.
 I think it’s hypocritical.
 
 00:44:37.801 --> 00:44:38.926
 Well, I... I’m sorry.
 This, this, you know...
 
 00:44:38.928 --> 00:44:42.596
 I feel the number of
 adjectives that you are
 using with regard to her
 
 00:44:42.598 --> 00:44:45.308
 are very excessive.
 I really do.
 
 00:44:45.891 --> 00:44:48.211
 And I think you really
 should look at it.
 Well, I should.
 
 00:44:49.855 --> 00:44:51.398
 Did she make people cry?
 
 00:44:51.400 --> 00:44:53.691
 Oh God yeah, she made
 all kinds of people cry.
 
 00:44:54.316 --> 00:44:57.236
 Myself included. But all
 kinds of people. Yeah.
 
 00:44:57.570 --> 00:44:59.740
 I could probably give
 you a rather long list.
 
 00:45:05.661 --> 00:45:09.791
 Freddy in the afternoon
 would make cranberry sauce,
 
 00:45:09.793 --> 00:45:11.835
 and I would read to her.
 
 00:45:12.961 --> 00:45:16.340
 “Jackson understood
 that the psychic scars
 carried by white workers
 
 00:45:16.341 --> 00:45:19.426
 were as damaging to our
 national well-being as the
 
 00:45:19.593 --> 00:45:23.013
 scars carried by
 African Americans.
 The hidden scars...”
 
 00:45:23.805 --> 00:45:29.268
 There are times when
 expanding our imaginations
 is what is required.
 
 00:45:34.106 --> 00:45:41.365
 The radical movement
 has overemphasized
 the role of activism
 
 00:45:42.783 --> 00:45:46.203
 and underestimated
 the role of reflection.
 
 00:45:54.503 --> 00:45:57.130
 Black worker power!
 
 00:45:58.173 --> 00:46:01.426
 I watch you go
 to church on Sunday /
 
 00:46:04.261 --> 00:46:06.598
 Then you forget all
 you learned on Monday...
 
 00:46:09.308 --> 00:46:13.980
 After 1967, there had
 been major white flight
 out of the city of Detroit.
 
 00:46:16.816 --> 00:46:20.028
 Some neighborhoods
 literally turned from
 white to black overnight.
 
 00:46:45.761 --> 00:46:49.975
 After the rebellion there was
 a great sense of power
 
 00:46:49.976 --> 00:46:53.645
 and that sense that
 the city belongs to us.
 
 00:46:56.105 --> 00:46:58.608
 What a lot of people
 don’t realize is that
 
 00:46:58.610 --> 00:47:00.526
 the call of Black Power
 
 00:47:01.278 --> 00:47:04.615
 was to the country.
 It wasn’t just to
 African Americans.
 
 00:47:04.616 --> 00:47:07.241
 And Detroit was exciting because
 
 00:47:07.243 --> 00:47:09.703
 it was emerging Black Power.
 
 00:47:10.745 --> 00:47:13.581
 I came to Detroit in 1970.
 
 00:47:13.583 --> 00:47:15.625
 I got a job in the Ford plant.
 
 00:47:16.418 --> 00:47:18.545
 I was there to be
 part of a revolution.
 
 00:47:19.630 --> 00:47:21.881
 I started coming by
 Jimmy and Grace’s house
 
 00:47:21.883 --> 00:47:23.966
 to be part of
 these study groups.
 
 00:47:25.343 --> 00:47:28.971
 It started off with discussions
 around current events.
 
 00:47:28.973 --> 00:47:32.183
 If after about four to
 six months, people thought
 
 00:47:32.185 --> 00:47:34.101
 that you were a serious person,
 
 00:47:34.103 --> 00:47:38.065
 you then got invited to
 what was called a
 revolutionary study group,
 
 00:47:39.106 --> 00:47:43.153
 and that was based around
 “Revolution and Evolution
 in the Twentieth Century.”
 
 00:47:47.156 --> 00:47:51.786
 During Grace’s lifetime hundreds
 of revolutions have taken
 place around the world.
 
 00:47:53.205 --> 00:47:56.291
 People thought of
 revolutions chiefly in
 terms of taking state power,
 
 00:47:57.750 --> 00:48:03.215
 but we’ve had revolutions and
 we’ve seen how the states
 which they have created
 
 00:48:03.216 --> 00:48:07.468
 have turned out to be
 like replicas of the states
 which they opposed.
 
 00:48:08.261 --> 00:48:11.598
 You have to bring
 those two words together
 
 00:48:12.723 --> 00:48:17.478
 and recognize that we
 are responsible for the
 evolution of the human species.
 
 00:48:18.021 --> 00:48:20.440
 It’s a question of two-
 sided transformation
 
 00:48:20.441 --> 00:48:23.735
 and not just the oppressed
 versus the oppressor.
 
 00:48:25.570 --> 00:48:30.408
 We had to change ourselves
 in order the change the world.
 
 00:48:34.036 --> 00:48:36.080
 How does that relate
 specifically to you?
 
 00:48:36.998 --> 00:48:39.375
 Well, one of the things I
 think I have to understand
 
 00:48:39.376 --> 00:48:42.128
 is I grew up in a
 male-oriented movement.
 
 00:48:42.670 --> 00:48:45.215
 I subordinated myself
 very consciously.
 
 00:48:45.216 --> 00:48:49.260
 Then what I was
 noticing was that there
 was a lot of women around,
 
 00:48:49.261 --> 00:48:52.180
 and I felt that if I didn’t
 begin struggling with Jimmy,
 
 00:48:52.346 --> 00:48:54.808
 I would give them the
 completely wrong impression.
 
 00:48:56.601 --> 00:48:59.478
 She and Jimmy would
 fight like mad over stuff,
 
 00:48:59.480 --> 00:49:05.318
 but I also think it was a
 strategy she was learning
 and, and trying out.
 
 00:49:05.776 --> 00:49:08.405
 And even in the interplay
 between them
 
 00:49:08.406 --> 00:49:12.825
 you saw a microcosm
 of the struggle that people
 were having otherwise.
 
 00:49:14.828 --> 00:49:20.541
 Here in Detroit, people
 literally thought the
 revolution was next week,
 
 00:49:20.543 --> 00:49:23.211
 week, that we would be
 creating something
 very, very new.
 
 00:49:23.378 --> 00:49:24.420
 And, and in fact we did.
 
 00:49:26.631 --> 00:49:29.091
 In the early 1970s, there
 were a number of people
 
 00:49:29.258 --> 00:49:31.595
 who had formerly been
 in the old left movements
 
 00:49:31.596 --> 00:49:34.346
 who were emerging
 and running for office.
 
 00:49:34.348 --> 00:49:38.893
 Coleman Alexander
 Young had helped to
 organize Ford in the 1940s.
 
 00:49:38.895 --> 00:49:42.855
 In the 1950s he had been a
 victim of the McCarthy era.
 
 00:49:42.856 --> 00:49:45.566
 He was about to go to prison.
 You know, they were going to
 
 00:49:45.733 --> 00:49:47.276
 send him to prison
 as a communist.
 
 00:49:49.653 --> 00:49:55.451
 In 1973, Coleman Young ran for
 mayor against the former police
 commissioner and won.
 
 00:49:57.620 --> 00:50:01.875
 The readiness of people to
 accept a black mayor, I think,
 
 00:50:01.876 --> 00:50:05.878
 was tied very much to the
 recognition that a white mayor
 
 00:50:06.045 --> 00:50:09.548
 would no longer be able
 to maintain law and order.
 
 00:50:09.550 --> 00:50:13.803
 To all dope pushers.
 To all rip-off artists.
 
 00:50:14.261 --> 00:50:17.723
 I don’t give a damn if
 they’re black or white,
 
 00:50:18.600 --> 00:50:21.645
 if they wear Superfly suits
 
 00:50:21.686 --> 00:50:24.815
 or blue uniforms
 with silver badges.
 
 00:50:24.816 --> 00:50:26.400
 Hit the road!
 
 00:50:28.651 --> 00:50:31.780
 I remember that sense
 of incredible hope.
 
 00:50:32.030 --> 00:50:35.241
 You were standing up
 against racism, you were
 standing up for change.
 
 00:50:35.243 --> 00:50:36.743
 And he does bring change.
 
 00:50:52.966 --> 00:50:55.970
 We are 25 million strong.
 
 00:50:55.971 --> 00:50:59.975
 Cut us in or cut it out.
 It is a new ball game!
 
 00:51:02.310 --> 00:51:05.646
 Don’t stop at the mayor’s
 office. Go on higher.
 
 00:51:07.440 --> 00:51:09.566
 Our time has come!
 
 00:51:09.568 --> 00:51:11.861
 A new day has begun!
 
 00:51:21.203 --> 00:51:23.831
 My eyes have been
 glued to the screen.
 
 00:51:24.958 --> 00:51:28.043
 The sheer size of that crowd.
 
 00:51:29.086 --> 00:51:30.213
 Do you wish you were there?
 
 00:51:30.215 --> 00:51:31.296
 No.
 
 00:51:32.006 --> 00:51:35.093
 First of all, I’d be thinking
 about different things.
 
 00:51:35.260 --> 00:51:38.680
 When you get old...
 I’d be thinking of
 where the toilets are.
 
 00:51:40.806 --> 00:51:44.768
 From Pacifica, this
 is “Democracy Now.”
 
 00:51:44.770 --> 00:51:48.273
 Grace Lee Boggs, did you watch
 the inauguration in Detroit?
 
 00:51:49.773 --> 00:51:51.901
 I sure did. I certainly did.
 
 00:51:52.568 --> 00:51:57.990
 One of the difficulties when
 you’re coming out of oppression
 and out of a bitter past
 
 00:51:58.533 --> 00:52:04.413
 is that you get a concept
 of the messiah and you expect
 too much from your leaders.
 
 00:52:05.123 --> 00:52:07.083
 And I think we have
 to get to that point that
 
 00:52:07.085 --> 00:52:10.920
 we are the leaders
 we’ve been looking for.
 
 00:52:15.091 --> 00:52:20.055
 One learns very soon
 that the changes we need
 are not going to come
 
 00:52:20.056 --> 00:52:23.516
 from the top by electing
 somebody else.
 
 00:52:24.225 --> 00:52:26.853
 Struggled and sacrificed
 and worked till their
 hands were raw,
 
 00:52:27.020 --> 00:52:28.438
 so that we might
 live a better life.
 
 00:52:28.521 --> 00:52:36.521
 And I recognize that crime
 is a problem. I lay it side by
 side with unemployment...
 
 00:52:37.155 --> 00:52:41.033
 Well, I’m going to tell
 you what it felt like when
 Coleman Young won.
 
 00:52:42.451 --> 00:52:47.873
 Somebody comes in
 and he says, “Free at
 last! Free at last!
 
 00:52:47.875 --> 00:52:49.708
 White folks can kiss our ass.”
 
 00:52:50.751 --> 00:52:52.545
 I started to cry.
 
 00:52:52.586 --> 00:52:59.385
 I cried because I said
 these folks really think
 this means freedom.
 
 00:53:00.928 --> 00:53:05.391
 And that’s when I knew that
 we were in for a rough ride.
 
 00:53:05.933 --> 00:53:10.355
 The unsold inventory has
 been unusually large this
 year because of continuing
 
 00:53:10.521 --> 00:53:11.898
 declines in new car sales.
 
 00:53:11.900 --> 00:53:13.900
 Toyota, Datsun, Honda...
 
 00:53:13.901 --> 00:53:17.021
 Toyota, Datsun, Honda...
 They all started selling
 vehicles in the United States.
 
 00:53:17.695 --> 00:53:21.156
 As auto companies began
 moving factories overseas,
 
 00:53:21.323 --> 00:53:23.826
 unemployment in Detroit
 steadily rose.
 
 00:53:24.995 --> 00:53:28.290
 People fled the city as
 the crime rate exploded.
 
 00:53:30.041 --> 00:53:34.086
 I began to see that black
 power could not solve
 
 00:53:34.088 --> 00:53:35.921
 the crisis that was developing.
 
 00:53:37.340 --> 00:53:39.383
 Desperate to keep
 jobs in Detroit,
 
 00:53:39.385 --> 00:53:42.720
 Coleman Young turned
 to the corporate leaders
 he once fought against.
 
 00:53:42.721 --> 00:53:44.680
 May I say to you, Mayor Young,
 
 00:53:44.846 --> 00:53:49.310
 speaking for the business
 leadership of the Detroit
 metropolitan area,
 
 00:53:49.311 --> 00:53:51.395
 that you have our support.
 
 00:53:52.521 --> 00:53:54.065
 It really became
 business as usual.
 
 00:53:54.066 --> 00:53:57.735
 Coleman Young was running
 the city, but his only vision
 
 00:53:57.901 --> 00:54:00.613
 for economics was
 what he was raised with:
 
 00:54:01.155 --> 00:54:06.535
 that large General Motors
 plants, large production
 facilities would be the
 
 00:54:06.703 --> 00:54:09.788
 way that you could
 create economic security.
 
 00:54:13.000 --> 00:54:20.175
 The Ford Rouge plant in
 the 1930s has 95,000 people
 working under one roof.
 
 00:54:21.968 --> 00:54:27.640
 Today there are fewer than
 100,000 GM, Ford, and
 Chrysler workers in the
 
 00:54:27.806 --> 00:54:31.018
 United Auto Workers in the
 United States. Total.
 
 00:54:32.395 --> 00:54:35.940
 That’s how history changes you.
 
 00:54:35.941 --> 00:54:42.863
 How hard it is to become
 part of the new and not
 get stuck with the old.
 
 00:54:43.365 --> 00:54:47.493
 And how, how powerful
 that tendency is to keep
 you boxed into the past.
 
 00:55:29.326 --> 00:55:33.121
 Detroit has by far the highest
 murder rate in the nation...
 
 00:55:33.123 --> 00:55:37.418
 Number of families requiring
 food assistance increased
 five-fold from 1981 to...
 
 00:55:37.420 --> 00:55:40.713
 In a city that is
 second in the nation
 with drug-related crime...
 
 00:55:46.845 --> 00:55:49.388
 We love our neighborhood...
 
 00:55:49.390 --> 00:55:52.350
 Pack up your crack
 and don’t come back!
 
 00:55:52.351 --> 00:55:54.560
 We love our neighborhood...
 
 00:55:54.561 --> 00:55:57.521
 Pack up your crack
 and don’t come back!
 
 00:55:58.981 --> 00:56:02.610
 The drugs wars was devastating.
 
 00:56:02.611 --> 00:56:06.446
 Everything else was dealing
 with the aftermath of that.
 
 00:56:06.448 --> 00:56:09.908
 How do you deal with people
 breaking into your home?
 
 00:56:10.076 --> 00:56:12.870
 How do you deal with
 murder on your street?
 
 00:56:12.871 --> 00:56:19.001
 You do a, uh, demonstration
 in front of a, a dope house?
 You can do that.
 
 00:56:19.003 --> 00:56:24.881
 But we were getting to a point
 where we needed a picket sign
 inside of our heads and hearts.
 
 00:56:26.968 --> 00:56:31.890
 You know, sometimes when
 we’re, when we’re on the ground,
 working in the field, people are
 
 00:56:32.056 --> 00:56:37.436
 up against some really,
 um, hard, um condition.
 
 00:56:37.603 --> 00:56:45.153
 How do you... how do
 you prevent yourself
 from burnout?
 
 00:56:45.320 --> 00:56:53.320
 And uh, how do you... continue
 to feel like you could...
 work with folks and
 
 00:56:56.121 --> 00:56:57.998
 continue to motivate them?
 
 00:56:59.500 --> 00:57:06.006
 I stayed involved because
 I’ve stayed in one place
 for the last 55 years.
 
 00:57:09.551 --> 00:57:17.476
 I think it’s because I
 grew to love Detroit and
 to feel responsible
 
 00:57:17.643 --> 00:57:22.023
 for Detroit that I
 was able to grow...
 
 00:57:22.981 --> 00:57:29.946
 And trying one thing after
 another and trying to learn
 from everything that I try.
 
 00:57:29.948 --> 00:57:36.370
 That\'s the only way. The
 illusion of a quick answer
 leads to burnout.
 
 00:57:38.831 --> 00:57:41.500
 As Grace struggled to
 understand the violence
 
 00:57:41.708 --> 00:57:43.711
 that was devastating
 her community,
 
 00:57:43.713 --> 00:57:47.423
 she returned to the evolving
 ideas of Malcolm and Martin.
 
 00:57:49.091 --> 00:57:53.596
 Malcolm really struggled and
 toward the end of his life
 
 00:57:53.763 --> 00:57:57.058
 began to be critical
 of black nationalism
 
 00:57:57.060 --> 00:58:01.270
 and went down to make
 common cause with King.
 
 00:58:02.730 --> 00:58:07.651
 After Malcolm was killed, I
 would attend these meetings,
 
 00:58:07.653 --> 00:58:12.531
 and I would see young people...
 14, 15, 16-year olds
 
 00:58:12.533 --> 00:58:16.118
 getting up and limiting
 Malcolm to sort of
 
 00:58:16.285 --> 00:58:18.746
 “meet violence with violence.”
 
 00:58:18.748 --> 00:58:21.581
 And I knew something
 was terribly wrong.
 
 00:58:23.208 --> 00:58:31.208
 Why is non-violence such
 an important... not just as
 a tactic, not just as strategy...
 
 00:58:32.470 --> 00:58:35.388
 But an important philosophy?
 
 00:58:35.390 --> 00:58:42.311
 Because it respects
 the capacity of human
 beings to grow.
 
 00:58:42.313 --> 00:58:46.106
 It gives them the opportunity
 to grow their souls.
 
 00:58:46.108 --> 00:58:49.651
 And we owe that to each other.
 
 00:58:49.653 --> 00:58:53.823
 And I... it’s taken me a
 long time to learn that.
 
 00:58:54.781 --> 00:59:01.871
 All of who you are
 clapping, I suggest you
 do some more thinking.
 
 00:59:09.630 --> 00:59:13.885
 But as I saw the violence
 increase in our cities,
 
 00:59:13.886 --> 00:59:21.766
 I wondered would it have
 been possible to combine
 Malcolm’s militancy
 
 00:59:21.935 --> 00:59:24.645
 with King’s non-violence?
 
 00:59:27.065 --> 00:59:32.236
 I began reading King
 much more carefully.
 
 00:59:32.320 --> 00:59:40.320
 In 1965 the explosion
 in Watts burst out,
 
 00:59:41.245 --> 00:59:44.665
 and King flew to California.
 
 00:59:46.125 --> 00:59:52.506
 He was amazed to hear that
 these young people had
 never heard of him...
 
 00:59:52.508 --> 00:59:57.136
 That they thought
 non-violence was foolish.
 
 00:59:57.138 --> 01:00:01.473
 And he began thinking,
 “What do I do about that?”
 
 01:00:02.266 --> 01:00:08.981
 I am convinced that if we
 are to get on the right
 side of the world revolution,
 
 01:00:09.148 --> 01:00:14.986
 we as a nation must undergo a
 radical revolution of values.
 
 01:00:14.988 --> 01:00:19.283
 We must rapidly begin...
 We must rapidly begin
 
 01:00:19.450 --> 01:00:22.953
 the shift from a
 thing-oriented society
 
 01:00:22.955 --> 01:00:28.668
 to a person-oriented society.
 
 01:00:28.670 --> 01:00:34.173
 King said what our young
 people in our dying cities
 
 01:00:34.175 --> 01:00:40.888
 need are direct action
 programs which enable
 them to transform themselves
 
 01:00:40.890 --> 01:00:43.933
 and their institutions
 at the same time.
 
 01:00:49.271 --> 01:00:53.150
 It’s an incredible city. That’s
 one of the things that’s very
 exciting about Detroit
 
 01:00:53.151 --> 01:00:57.613
 also because it’s not
 going to be re-industrialized.
 
 01:00:57.615 --> 01:01:00.450
 It’s because something else
 has got to come out of it.
 
 01:01:00.451 --> 01:01:02.826
 And we’re, we’re really
 thinking about how do
 we rebuild it now?
 
 01:01:02.828 --> 01:01:04.620
 How do we take this space?
 
 01:01:04.786 --> 01:01:07.415
 How do we make
 something new out of it?
 
 01:01:12.878 --> 01:01:18.425
 In 1992, Jimmy and Grace
 helped launch a program
 called Detroit Summer
 
 01:01:18.426 --> 01:01:22.305
 to transform the vacant
 lots and buildings of Detroit,
 
 01:01:22.306 --> 01:01:26.516
 hoping that in the
 process, young people
 would transform themselves.
 
 01:01:26.518 --> 01:01:27.976
 Thank you for coming back, girl.
 
 01:01:27.978 --> 01:01:34.150
 When they can see themselves
 making a difference, they
 also become different.
 
 01:01:34.151 --> 01:01:39.196
 That has to be part,
 an integral part of the
 process of revolution.
 
 01:01:39.198 --> 01:01:44.285
 I have one line. Grace gave
 it to me Friday morning.
 
 01:01:44.286 --> 01:01:48.621
 Part of our organizing
 work, we want to bring the
 neighbor back to the ‘hood.
 
 01:01:48.790 --> 01:01:49.790
 How you doin\'?
 
 01:01:49.956 --> 01:01:55.045
 So I was 16 and I volunteered
 to be a part of Detroit Summer.
 
 01:01:55.046 --> 01:01:58.215
 Um, I was actually the very
 first person to sign up.
 
 01:01:59.258 --> 01:02:01.843
 And I had profound questions.
 
 01:02:01.845 --> 01:02:06.390
 Why does everybody talk about
 Detroit in the past tense?
 You know, “It’s just a sty.”
 
 01:02:07.100 --> 01:02:12.521
 I’m living in Detroit now, and
 I don’t want to feel inferior
 all the time because Detroit
 
 01:02:12.730 --> 01:02:14.690
 isn’t the city
 that it used to be.
 
 01:02:16.775 --> 01:02:22.531
 When I first met Grace,
 Detroit Summer had been
 around for eight years.
 
 01:02:23.490 --> 01:02:28.161
 Grace gave us a tour of the
 community gardens and the
 murals, which seemed nice,
 
 01:02:28.328 --> 01:02:30.371
 but I wasn’t sure
 what the point was.
 
 01:02:30.373 --> 01:02:32.208
 What is this?
 What does this mean?
 What’s the significance?
 
 01:02:32.210 --> 01:02:35.293
 You’ll have to get
 them. Ask them.
 
 01:02:35.295 --> 01:02:38.881
 It would take another
 decade for me to really get it.
 
 01:02:38.883 --> 01:02:41.591
 We started Back Alley Bikes
 
 01:02:41.593 --> 01:02:43.385
 as a way to get kids
 to the project sites.
 
 01:02:44.095 --> 01:02:49.266
 And now we just have so
 many coming in that we can’t
 handle all of them really.
 
 01:02:49.268 --> 01:02:50.268
 That\'s amazing.
 
 01:02:50.851 --> 01:02:54.563
 This idea of Back Alley Bikes
 was a very small thing.
 
 01:02:54.730 --> 01:02:57.900
 A seed, you know, planted
 just a few years ago.
 
 01:02:57.901 --> 01:03:02.655
 And now it’s mushroomed
 into all these bikes, and
 the idea of a bike auction.
 
 01:03:02.656 --> 01:03:06.908
 That’s the idea... sort
 of one thing leading
 organically to another.
 
 01:03:06.910 --> 01:03:12.080
 It takes time, but you
 know... it’s, but it’s,
 uh... it’s a question...
 
 01:03:12.248 --> 01:03:15.166
 Can you think about
 time in another way?
 
 01:03:25.553 --> 01:03:29.765
 Lemme tell you
 something. Grace and
 I in ourself is nobody.
 
 01:03:29.766 --> 01:03:33.310
 It is only in relationship to
 other bodies and many
 
 01:03:33.476 --> 01:03:35.813
 somebodies that
 anybody is somebody.
 
 01:03:35.815 --> 01:03:42.278
 Let me tell you that. Don’t get
 it in your cotton-pickin’ mind
 that you are somebody yourself.
 
 01:03:44.280 --> 01:03:52.280
 The day after Jimmy died,
 I got up in the morning and, uh,
 
 01:03:52.413 --> 01:04:00.413
 I decided to have some
 oatmeal for breakfast
 
 01:04:00.588 --> 01:04:04.008
 and that I would do that
 from now on, that I would not...
 
 01:04:04.175 --> 01:04:06.385
 That I would just
 establish a routine.
 
 01:04:08.845 --> 01:04:11.056
 One gets used to living alone.
 
 01:04:12.516 --> 01:04:17.980
 I wish Jimmy were here.
 He would love to be here.
 
 01:04:18.813 --> 01:04:20.315
 But he isn’t.
 
 01:04:21.441 --> 01:04:26.071
 So life continues to
 be very challenging.
 
 01:04:30.075 --> 01:04:35.205
 It’s a long time, you know.
 And a lot has happened since.
 
 01:04:46.383 --> 01:04:53.681
 I don’t think that enough
 has been written by women
 who are on their own
 
 01:04:53.683 --> 01:04:58.645
 after 40 years of close
 relationships to people.
 
 01:05:00.690 --> 01:05:04.776
 You look at the pictures
 of me on that DVD.
 
 01:05:07.321 --> 01:05:13.785
 I’m so demure. I’m
 so, so overshadowed.
 
 01:05:16.288 --> 01:05:19.833
 I remember someone
 saying they wanted to
 write a biography of Jimmy
 
 01:05:19.835 --> 01:05:24.546
 and my writing to a publisher
 and asking if they would be
 interested, and they said they
 
 01:05:24.713 --> 01:05:28.050
 would be more interested
 in a biography, an
 autobiography by me.
 
 01:05:29.301 --> 01:05:32.136
 And I couldn’t believe it. Why
 would they be interested in me?
 
 01:05:34.681 --> 01:05:38.726
 And it wasn’t until I did that
 that I knew who I was to some
 
 01:05:38.893 --> 01:05:41.563
 degree and could begin
 to develop myself.
 
 01:05:44.733 --> 01:05:47.151
 Grace’s autobiography
 introduced her to a new
 
 01:05:47.320 --> 01:05:49.196
 generation of people
 beyond Detroit.
 
 01:05:50.113 --> 01:05:52.575
 Especially Asian
 Americans like me.
 
 01:05:53.741 --> 01:05:57.996
 People began asking me
 to speak on the Asian
 American movement.
 
 01:05:57.998 --> 01:06:00.290
 And I discovered my ignorance.
 
 01:06:01.208 --> 01:06:06.713
 People are so... searching
 for icons that they
 sort of fixed onto me.
 
 01:06:06.715 --> 01:06:10.843
 Even though I wasn’t
 an Asian American icon.
 
 01:06:12.636 --> 01:06:16.473
 The varieties of Asian
 Americans that I see around
 are so, are so enormous.
 
 01:06:16.640 --> 01:06:18.058
 I mean, it’s just incredible.
 
 01:06:18.850 --> 01:06:21.728
 I met Grace when I was
 still struggling with
 a sense of, you know,
 
 01:06:21.730 --> 01:06:25.606
 where do Asians fit in
 in a world that’s mostly
 white and black?
 
 01:06:27.485 --> 01:06:32.448
 When we think about Grace
 in the 20th century, she
 is very much an outsider.
 
 01:06:35.826 --> 01:06:39.788
 In the 21st century,
 she represents the uniting
 
 01:06:39.790 --> 01:06:43.125
 of people from different races
 and different backgrounds in
 
 01:06:43.291 --> 01:06:45.210
 a way that is now
 defining America.
 
 01:06:45.836 --> 01:06:47.796
 Let me make a
 challenge to you, okay?
 
 01:06:47.798 --> 01:06:54.428
 With people of color becoming
 the new American majority in
 many parts of the country,
 
 01:06:54.430 --> 01:06:59.433
 how are we going to create
 a new vision for this country?
 
 01:07:00.350 --> 01:07:04.646
 A vision of a new kind of
 human being which is what
 is demanded at this moment.
 
 01:07:04.648 --> 01:07:06.273
 So that’s your challenge.
 
 01:07:08.858 --> 01:07:13.071
 Even in her 90s, Grace
 still travels the country,
 talking about revolution,
 
 01:07:13.946 --> 01:07:16.866
 but she always brings the
 conversation back to Detroit.
 
 01:07:17.743 --> 01:07:23.706
 I can’t begin to tell you
 the number of young
 people who come to Detroit,
 
 01:07:25.083 --> 01:07:30.923
 and they come in order to
 be part of this new world
 that is being created.
 
 01:07:35.093 --> 01:07:37.555
 How many of you have
 been to Detroit before?
 
 01:07:37.556 --> 01:07:39.890
 You’re going to see
 a lot of abandonment,
 
 01:07:39.891 --> 01:07:43.226
 but you’ll see it’s about
 rebuilding a new way of life
 
 01:07:43.228 --> 01:07:47.523
 for people who’ve been
 completely left behind
 by a capitalist system
 
 01:07:47.731 --> 01:07:50.441
 which has gone elsewhere
 looking for profits.
 
 01:07:54.530 --> 01:07:59.368
 People had to find new ways
 to promote economic survival
 
 01:07:59.370 --> 01:08:03.746
 when unemployment was reaching
 upwards of 50% as it has now.
 
 01:08:05.415 --> 01:08:11.046
 Grace was at the forefront of
 the movements in Detroit that
 were developing urban gardens
 
 01:08:11.048 --> 01:08:13.590
 and eventually even
 bigger urban farms.
 
 01:08:13.591 --> 01:08:17.595
 Most gardeners...
 I’d say 90% of gardeners...
 don’t garden on land they own.
 
 01:08:17.596 --> 01:08:21.931
 They’re gardening on vacant
 lots that are next to their
 house or across the street.
 
 01:08:23.475 --> 01:08:26.478
 To think of gardens
 as the basis of hope
 
 01:08:28.188 --> 01:08:32.400
 was something that
 was unthinkable just
 a few years ago.
 
 01:08:34.026 --> 01:08:36.863
 As Detroit Summer was
 emerging and they were
 
 01:08:37.030 --> 01:08:39.575
 doing murals and they
 were doing gardens,
 
 01:08:39.576 --> 01:08:41.118
 the question I was
 always asking was,
 
 01:08:41.285 --> 01:08:43.161
 “What does this have to
 do with the movement?”
 
 01:08:43.163 --> 01:08:45.038
 They\'re nice projects.
 
 01:08:46.873 --> 01:08:50.043
 I think what I’ve begun to
 understand is that individuals
 
 01:08:50.210 --> 01:08:52.838
 who experience and get
 involved in those projects
 
 01:08:52.840 --> 01:08:56.216
 become leaders, become
 thinkers, become
 compassionate people
 
 01:08:56.218 --> 01:08:59.051
 that see themselves
 as makers of history.
 
 01:09:00.761 --> 01:09:03.806
 Twenty years after first
 volunteering for Detroit Summer,
 
 01:09:03.808 --> 01:09:09.230
 Julia Putnam is planning a
 school on Detroit’s east side:
 The Boggs Educational Center.
 
 01:09:09.231 --> 01:09:13.775
 So this is the house we
 saw when we envisioned
 this place as a school
 
 01:09:13.776 --> 01:09:18.446
 and got really excited
 about the idea of school
 as another home.
 
 01:09:21.700 --> 01:09:27.581
 I mean, it’s really gutted
 to the point where the
 possibilities are endless.
 
 01:09:28.998 --> 01:09:33.878
 It starts with imagining
 the kids in this space
 and in the community,
 
 01:09:34.296 --> 01:09:41.678
 and how it’s going to grow
 more by trial and error than
 it’s going to grow by blueprint.
 
 01:09:42.220 --> 01:09:47.225
 That’s always my downfall.
 I think I can get it
 perfect and then do it,
 
 01:09:47.226 --> 01:09:52.146
 as opposed to knowing
 that I... that you do
 it by making mistakes.
 
 01:09:52.898 --> 01:09:54.983
 Yep. You make
 your path by walking.
 
 01:09:59.821 --> 01:10:01.323
 Detroit in the summer,
 it’s more than a season /
 
 01:10:01.531 --> 01:10:04.951
 When I moved to the city it
 was the core of the reason /
 
 01:10:05.118 --> 01:10:07.536
 Can I clarify all the
 distortion you’re seeing? /
 
 01:10:07.621 --> 01:10:10.248
 Gotta break your mind
 out of prison while
 the warden is sleeping
 
 01:10:11.083 --> 01:10:13.293
 One of my favorite
 quotes by Grace is that
 
 01:10:13.501 --> 01:10:16.338
 “Creativity is the key
 to human liberation.”
 
 01:10:18.173 --> 01:10:20.300
 I actually try to spend my
 birthday every year with
 
 01:10:20.466 --> 01:10:22.218
 Grace having like a
 one-on-one conversation.
 
 01:10:22.385 --> 01:10:24.220
 Hey, Grace?
 
 01:10:24.805 --> 01:10:26.598
 Hi, how are you?
 What\'s up?
 
 01:10:26.723 --> 01:10:31.020
 She’s still seeking new
 answers. She’s still
 asking me about hip hop,
 
 01:10:31.021 --> 01:10:35.565
 so to me the way that
 she has conversation is
 such an artistic approach.
 
 01:10:37.066 --> 01:10:40.445
 Conversation is now Grace’s
 main form of activism.
 
 01:10:41.821 --> 01:10:44.450
 She’s constantly inviting
 people into her home,
 
 01:10:46.535 --> 01:10:48.036
 but it’s not just to chat.
 
 01:10:49.913 --> 01:10:52.456
 She pushes everyone
 to evolve their ideas.
 
 01:10:53.250 --> 01:10:57.045
 You begin to shape the
 idea of what you mean
 by quality education.
 
 01:10:57.211 --> 01:10:58.213
 You know? And so...
 
 01:10:58.215 --> 01:11:02.926
 People... First of all,
 everybody who talks
 about quality education
 
 01:11:03.093 --> 01:11:04.886
 is really talking about how
 
 01:11:04.888 --> 01:11:09.808
 can our people become
 more like white people
 and advance in the system.
 
 01:11:11.601 --> 01:11:16.356
 I don’t... you know, I,
 I... let me... I, I beg to
 differ with you on that.
 
 01:11:16.358 --> 01:11:23.155
 Most people think of ideas as
 fixed. Ideas have their power
 because they are not fixed.
 
 01:11:23.156 --> 01:11:27.450
 Once they become fixed,
 they’re already dead.
 
 01:11:27.451 --> 01:11:31.955
 Making a paradigm shift
 in the educational system...
 
 01:11:31.956 --> 01:11:36.668
 Well... well, what subject is
 that technological shift
 most evident? Mathematics.
 
 01:11:36.670 --> 01:11:38.170
 No, it’s not mathematics.
 
 01:11:38.171 --> 01:11:39.045
 Huh?
 
 01:11:39.046 --> 01:11:39.921
 No, it\'s not mathematics.
 
 01:11:39.923 --> 01:11:40.923
 I believe it is.
 
 01:11:41.006 --> 01:11:42.048
 No, I don\'t.
 
 01:11:42.050 --> 01:11:44.885
 That’s basically what we’re
 trying to tell our kids to do.
 
 01:11:45.343 --> 01:11:49.013
 You’ve got to learn mathematics,
 you’ve got to learn technology
 
 01:11:49.180 --> 01:11:51.850
 and so that we can
 compete on the world market.
 
 01:11:53.060 --> 01:11:56.480
 That becomes part of it, but it
 doesn’t have to be solely that.
 
 01:11:56.481 --> 01:11:58.231
 No, but it’s a
 whole lot of that.
 
 01:11:58.233 --> 01:11:59.608
 Well, it’s a whole lot of that.
 
 01:11:59.610 --> 01:12:01.360
 That’s what kids are rejecting.
 
 01:12:01.361 --> 01:12:03.111
 And I don’t blame them.
 
 01:12:03.113 --> 01:12:05.946
 So we’ve got to think
 about what is education for?
 
 01:12:11.036 --> 01:12:12.536
 I...you have me thinking.
 
 01:12:16.416 --> 01:12:18.418
 People talk about the
 light bulb going on?
 
 01:12:18.420 --> 01:12:23.173
 I think that the light bulb
 goes on very often in
 conversations that people have,
 
 01:12:23.465 --> 01:12:28.053
 and we, we don’t pay
 attention to it because it’s
 so much a part of life.
 
 01:12:28.055 --> 01:12:34.601
 These are five books
 that a teacher of education
 is talking about...
 
 01:12:35.101 --> 01:12:38.771
 And after every
 conversation, Grace gives
 you something to read.
 
 01:12:40.440 --> 01:12:41.275
 Six.
 
 01:12:41.276 --> 01:12:44.403
 Six books? I’m gonna... okay...
 
 01:12:45.361 --> 01:12:53.361
 As you interviewed me this
 morning, I thought how much our
 ideas come out of conversation,
 
 01:12:53.705 --> 01:12:58.375
 and we don’t recognize that. I
 mean, our stories are basically
 
 01:12:58.541 --> 01:13:01.211
 the dialogues that
 we carry on with one
 
 01:13:01.213 --> 01:13:05.881
 another as we sort of
 begin looking at the
 past and future together.
 
 01:13:07.801 --> 01:13:11.180
 Over the years, my relationship
 with Grace has evolved.
 
 01:13:11.638 --> 01:13:14.056
 Amazing Grace.
 
 01:13:15.141 --> 01:13:17.185
 Is that amazing?
 
 01:13:19.395 --> 01:13:24.693
 I’ve seen so many people put
 her on a pedestal, and I realize
 I’ve been doing the same thing.
 
 01:13:25.735 --> 01:13:28.071
 But these days, I find
 myself pushing back.
 
 01:13:28.488 --> 01:13:30.865
 Come here and give me a hand.
 
 01:13:31.283 --> 01:13:34.495
 Grace is so good at subtly
 directing conversations.
 
 01:13:36.288 --> 01:13:39.500
 She deflects the personal
 questions and puts a
 positive spin on everything.
 
 01:13:41.543 --> 01:13:43.545
 It’s starting to drive me crazy.
 
 01:13:45.546 --> 01:13:48.800
 Were there ever times
 where you’ve felt regret
 about anything?
 
 01:13:50.010 --> 01:13:52.888
 I don’t think I’ve ever
 felt regret about what,
 
 01:13:53.055 --> 01:13:55.473
 what has happened to
 me or what my life...
 
 01:13:56.141 --> 01:14:00.228
 or anything that,
 that I did or didn’t do.
 
 01:14:03.106 --> 01:14:09.195
 I’ve always thought of the
 negative as an opportunity
 to create a positive.
 
 01:14:11.030 --> 01:14:12.281
 Always?
 
 01:14:12.283 --> 01:14:16.870
 You use the word
 frustration, and I think you...
 
 01:14:20.123 --> 01:14:26.630
 that sort of provides a sort
 of framework for the
 questions you’ve been asking.
 
 01:14:28.048 --> 01:14:32.010
 And frustration is not
 one of the things that
 I’ve felt through my life.
 
 01:14:32.718 --> 01:14:37.933
 I would never describe
 my life as having been
 frustrated at any point.
 
 01:14:41.686 --> 01:14:45.606
 I guess I’m trying
 to find, like, some
 kind of connection to you.
 
 01:14:46.566 --> 01:14:51.863
 You’re so confident about
 your positions and your ideas.
 
 01:14:52.155 --> 01:14:57.743
 Well, you know, if I had
 undertaken the challenges that
 other people have undertaken,
 
 01:14:57.745 --> 01:15:01.998
 if I had decided to become
 a mother, for example, which
 you have decided to become,
 
 01:15:03.333 --> 01:15:06.336
 I could imagine a
 lot of frustrations.
 
 01:15:06.338 --> 01:15:08.796
 So in that sense,
 
 01:15:10.798 --> 01:15:14.595
 I’ve lived more the life
 of a man than of a woman.
 
 01:15:16.221 --> 01:15:20.225
 I can’t relate to someone
 who doesn’t doubt themselves
 is what I’m saying.
 
 01:15:20.600 --> 01:15:24.103
 Or question, you know...
 “Did I ever make a mistake?”
 
 01:15:24.105 --> 01:15:27.941
 Because your whole thing
 about self-transformation
 
 01:15:28.108 --> 01:15:31.278
 should require, like,
 an internal struggle.
 
 01:15:36.616 --> 01:15:39.786
 Well, I think probably...
 
 01:15:44.498 --> 01:15:47.293
 That’s a, that’s a criticism
 
 01:15:49.630 --> 01:15:53.591
 that I should be
 making of myself, that...
 
 01:15:55.926 --> 01:16:01.433
 that I should be talking so
 much about transformation
 and not experiencing it.
 
 01:16:01.933 --> 01:16:07.313
 I think this encounter
 will, will be with
 me for quite a while.
 
 01:16:08.023 --> 01:16:14.570
 I’ll have to sort of internalize
 it and see what it,
 what it means to me.
 
 01:16:14.571 --> 01:16:20.701
 You know, it has to be
 incorporated into who
 I am and my trajectory.
 
 01:16:21.578 --> 01:16:25.456
 And that will probably
 happen because I,
 I’m pretty good at that.
 
 01:16:32.130 --> 01:16:37.093
 Every time I visit Detroit,
 I wonder if this will be my
 last conversation with Grace.
 
 01:16:39.470 --> 01:16:44.058
 Oh dear, it takes so much
 effort just to get around.
 
 01:16:48.521 --> 01:16:55.028
 On the one hand, I have
 endured. And on the
 other hand I have changed.
 
 01:16:58.531 --> 01:17:02.201
 I can remember swearing
 when I was young
 
 01:17:02.203 --> 01:17:07.873
 that I would not change
 because if I changed,
 I would betray the revolution.
 
 01:17:09.083 --> 01:17:13.338
 And as I’ve grown older,
 I’ve understood that I
 should change and,
 
 01:17:14.255 --> 01:17:18.551
 and changing is really more
 honorable than not changing.
 
 01:17:21.053 --> 01:17:26.726
 It’s the 97th birthday of
 writer and radical activist
 Grace Lee Boggs.
 
 01:17:26.728 --> 01:17:28.895
 Good morning, Miss Grace.
 
 01:17:31.356 --> 01:17:32.690
 One...
 
 01:17:32.691 --> 01:17:33.775
 Two...
 
 01:17:33.776 --> 01:17:35.193
 Three...
 
 01:17:35.195 --> 01:17:36.903
 Four...
 
 01:17:38.863 --> 01:17:41.408
 Time is irreversible.
 
 01:17:42.783 --> 01:17:47.496
 The arrow is pointing forward.
 We have no idea what
 the future holds.
 
 01:17:51.460 --> 01:17:55.921
 What’s very hard for older
 people to understand... you
 know, it’s like someone said,
 
 01:17:56.088 --> 01:17:57.965
 “You can’t practice
 being president.”
 
 01:17:58.966 --> 01:18:03.388
 You can’t practice being old.
 And aging is not for sissies.
 
 01:18:03.390 --> 01:18:06.433
 You don’t know how much...
 
 01:18:07.558 --> 01:18:10.186
 How much pride,
 
 01:18:10.978 --> 01:18:15.566
 how much responsibility,
 how much fear
 
 01:18:16.651 --> 01:18:18.445
 are tied up in that.
 
 01:18:20.821 --> 01:18:26.661
 I, I’ve thought about
 what it is like to live
 longer than anybody else.
 
 01:18:27.661 --> 01:18:34.878
 Longer than your siblings.
 You’d be amazed how
 alone you feel in the world.
 
 01:18:40.591 --> 01:18:45.888
 I have been very
 conscious that I’m in
 the process of dying.
 
 01:18:47.848 --> 01:18:53.896
 To me, that’s not a
 terrible thing. So I see this
 as a period of transition...
 
 01:18:54.646 --> 01:19:00.611
 that I can make a transition
 by the things that I
 choose to engage in.
 
 01:19:06.451 --> 01:19:08.870
 Hey Grace! I’m making that
 bacon that you had left over.
 
 01:19:08.871 --> 01:19:10.788
 Hi! Hi, everybody.
 
 01:19:11.038 --> 01:19:13.625
 I’m very conscious of
 that sense of time.
 
 01:19:13.791 --> 01:19:16.503
 How long will I live?
 How long should I live?
 
 01:19:17.545 --> 01:19:21.800
 At the same time, I’m
 very conscious of what time
 it is on the clock of the world.
 
 01:19:29.140 --> 01:19:34.186
 As I have grown older, I think
 more in terms of centuries,
 
 01:19:34.188 --> 01:19:38.858
 whereas 8 or 9 years ago, I
 was only talking about decades.
 
 01:19:41.276 --> 01:19:47.450
 And it’s so obvious that we are
 coming to a huge turning point.
 
 01:19:50.745 --> 01:19:55.625
 You begin with a protest, but
 you have to move on from there.
 
 01:19:57.876 --> 01:20:02.923
 But just being angry,
 just being resentful,
 just being outraged
 
 01:20:03.090 --> 01:20:05.468
 does not constitute revolution.
 
 01:20:09.180 --> 01:20:15.020
 So many institutions of
 our society need reinventing.
 
 01:20:16.353 --> 01:20:22.068
 The time has come for
 a new dream. That’s what
 being a revolutionary is.
 
 01:20:25.905 --> 01:20:29.450
 I don’t know what the
 next American revolution
 is going to be like,
 
 01:20:30.368 --> 01:20:36.875
 but you might be able to
 imagine it if your imagination
 were rich enough.
