Current:Home > StocksWilliam Strickland, a longtime civil rights activist, scholar and friend of Malcom X, has died -Edge Finance Strategies
William Strickland, a longtime civil rights activist, scholar and friend of Malcom X, has died
View
Date:2025-04-16 16:57:32
BOSTON (AP) — William Strickland, a longtime civil right activist and supporter of the Black Power movement who worked with Malcom X and other prominent leaders in the 1960s, has died. He was 87.
Strickland, whose death April 10 was confirmed by a relative, first became active in civil rights as a high schooler in Massachusetts. He later became inspired by the writings of Richard Wright and James Baldwin while an undergraduate at Harvard University, according to Peter Blackmer, a former student who is now an assistant professor of Africology and African American Studies at Easter Michigan University.
“He made incredible contributions to the Black freedom movement that haven’t really been appreciated,” Blackmer said. “His contention was that civil rights wasn’t a sufficient framework for challenging the systems that were behind the oppression of Black communities throughout the diaspora.”
Strickland joined the Boston chapter of the Northern Student Movement in the early 1960s, which provided support to sit-ins and other protests in the South. He became the group’s executive director in 1963 and from there became a supporter of the Black Power movement, which emphasized racial pride, self-reliance and self-determination. Strickland also worked alongside Malcolm X, Baldwin and others in New York on rent strikes, school boycotts and protests against police brutality.
Amilcar Shabazz, a professor in the W.E.B. Du Bois Department of Afro-American Studies, University of Massachusetts, said Strickland followed a path very similar to civil rights pioneer Du Bois.
“He underwent a similar kind of experience to committing himself to being an agent of social change in the world against the three big issues of the civil rights movement — imperialism or militarism, racism and the economic injustice of plantation capitalism,” Shabazz said. “He committed himself against those triple evils. He did that in his scholarship, in his teaching, in his activism and just how he walked in the world.”
After the assassination of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr., Strickland co-founded the independent Black think tank, the Institute of the Black World. From its start in 1969, it served for several years as the gathering place for Black intellectuals.
From there, he joined the University of Massachusetts Amherst, where he spent 40 years teaching political science and serving as the director of the W.E.B. Du Bois Papers. He also traveled to Africa and the Caribbean, where Shabazz said he met leaders of Black liberation movements in Africa and Cuban leader Fidel Castro.
Strickland also wrote about racism and capitalism for several outlets including Essence and Souls and served as a consultant for several documentaries including “Eyes on the Prize” and the PBS documentary “Malcolm X — Make It Plain,” Blackmer said.
Comparing him to Malcolm X, Blackmer said one of Strickland’s gifts was being able to take weighty issues like “complex systems of oppression” and make them “understandable and accessible” to popular audiences.
“As a teacher, that is how he taught us to think as students — to be able to understand and deconstruct racism, capitalism, imperialism and to be fearless in doing so and not being afraid to name the systems that we’re confronting as a means of developing a strategy to challenge them,” Blackmer said.
For relatives, Strickland was an intellectual giant with a sense of humor who was not afraid “to speak his mind.”
“He always spoke truth to power. That was the type of guy he was,” said Earnestine Norman, a first cousin recalling their conversations that often occurred over the FaceTime phone app. They were planning a trip to Spain where Strickland had a home before he started having health problems.
“He always told the truth about our culture, of being Africans here in America and the struggles we had,” she continued. “Sometimes it may have embarrassed some people or whatever but his truth was his truth. His knowledge was his knowledge and he was not the type of person as the saying goes to bite his tongue.”
veryGood! (4)
Related
- Residents worried after ceiling cracks appear following reroofing works at Jalan Tenaga HDB blocks
- House GOP rules vote on gas stoves goes up in flames
- Katy Perry Responds After Video of Her Searching for Her Seat at King Charles III's Coronation Goes Viral
- Dearest Readers, Let's Fact-Check Queen Charlotte: A Bridgerton Story, Shall We?
- A Mississippi company is sentenced for mislabeling cheap seafood as premium local fish
- How Teddi Mellencamp's Cancer Journey Pushed Her to Be Vulnerable With Her Kids
- Do Hundreds of Other Gas Storage Sites Risk a Methane Leak Like California’s?
- ALS drug's approval draws cheers from patients, questions from skeptics
- Moving abroad can be expensive: These 5 countries will 'pay' you to move there
- Millie Bobby Brown's Sweet Birthday Tribute to Fiancé Jake Bongiovi Gives Love a Good Name
Ranking
- Nevada attorney general revives 2020 fake electors case
- The hidden faces of hunger in America
- What Will Be the Health Impact of 100+ Days of Exposure to California’s Methane Leak?
- What's it take to go from mechanic to physician at 51? Patience, an Ohio doctor says
- South Korean president's party divided over defiant martial law speech
- Amanda Gorman addresses book bans in 1st interview since poem was restricted in a Florida school
- Hawaii's Kilauea volcano erupts as volcanic glass fragments and ash fall on Big Island
- Mercaptans in Methane Leak Make Porter Ranch Residents Sick, and Fearful
Recommendation
Meta donates $1 million to Trump’s inauguration fund
Coming out about my bipolar disorder has led to a new deep sense of community
Dolphins QB Tua Tagovailoa's injury sparks concern over the NFL's concussion policies
#Dementia TikTok Is A Vibrant, Supportive Community
The White House is cracking down on overdraft fees
SoCal Gas Knew Aliso Canyon Wells Were Deteriorating a Year Before Leak
California’s New Methane Rules Would Be the Nation’s Strongest
Florida nursing homes evacuated 1000s before Ian hit. Some weathered the storm