Sunday, August 25, 2024

Anti-Fascist Series #14: Unity Triumphs

 “The Day the Klan Came to Town”by B. Campbell / B. Khodabandeh, 2021

This is a graphic story – in both senses – about a massive Ku Klux Klan raid on the working-class town of Carnegie, Pennsylvania in 1923, a town full of mills and mines.  It’s done in pictures and text, with some written explanations on both ends. If you’ve dipped into graphic novels or the “The Idiot’s Guides to…” you’ll know the kind of graphics I’m talking about.  This one is in black and white in a kind of raw, wood-cut style.

What is different about this actual event is that it was not just an attack on African-Americans, it was also an attack on European-Americans - Italians, Jews, Irish, Catholics, Armenians, the Orthodox and whomever wasn’t a light-skinned Protestant.  In essence, mostly newly-arrived immigrants.  This was the second iteration of the Klan, which pretended to be an upstanding civic organization standing for whiteness, God and Americanism.  This nativist, fascistic strain continues in U.S. society to this day.

The Klan came to Carnegie to hold a massive rally with the national Imperial Wizard of the Klan, Hiram Wesley Evans, burning crosses and all.  The police chief of the town allows the Klan to march due to ‘free speech.’  The Klan members are armed with clubs, knives and guns.  Little kids and women fawn over them.  Some Klan women knock down a pregnant Italian woman in the street.  The governor, a Republican, refuses to call out the National Guard. Some of the Klansmen are in the U.S. army when they are disrobed.  There is a discussion of parade permits.  The mayor tries to stop the march but is helpless.  The tiny police force is mobilized but does nothing.

Most of the Klansmen wear conical hats that do not cover their faces, or use a bandanna for the mouth.  They march towards the Irish part of town armed, singing Christian songs.  All the suspect ethnicities realize the danger and organize to stop the march.  They block one key bridge with a vehicle and assemble behind it.  The Irish, African-Americans and Italians are armed with clubs and knives too.  The book shows a Russian Jew firing a warning shot at the Klan march.  When the Klan finally arrive in the neighborhood the throng will not let them through and instead attacks their lead car. The very confusing melee is on, rocks rain from the buildings on the Klan dropped by women, guns are fired in response, reinforcements join the neighborhood fighters, many are injured and eventually one dark-skinned man is knifed in front of a Catholic church and dies, and one Klan member is shot.  The confrontation is ultimately won by the united front of working-class ethnicities.  The Klan turn tail and leave because of the armed resistance.

The book’s sections are not linear however.  They jump to a long back story of Italians in WWI, then an Italian village, then the voyage to the U.S. and Ellis Island, which breaks the narrative.  Nor is it clear where these events are happening in Carnegie from the pictures, as none of us have a map of it in our heads. There are two creeks that run through town, which is just southwest of Pittsburgh, almost an outer suburb. The author Campbell grew up in Carnegie and unearthed this history through diligent research, facts which no one in his town knew.  He had to imagine part of it as it had been buried alive.

It illustrates a deep problem with the U.S., a country that repeats its nightmares year after year. We are in yet another cycle, which will not stop until the material economic roots of racism and nativism are removed.  Now that Italians, Irish, most Jews and the Orthodox are closer to ‘whiteness’ and ‘Americanism,’ it remains for new minorities to take their place alongside the remaining Latinos and African-Americans.  In a racist society this process never stops.

Nevertheless the idea that the oppressed working class should unite against fascism across ethnic, national and cultural barriers is the key takeaway from the story.  This obvious truth is still too complex for many identitarian politicians and activists in the U.S. because they are intent on including the upper class in their front, or breaking up alliances.  This illustrated book doesn’t clearly show the support of the upper class strata in Carnegie for the Klan, but it was certainly there across the country at the time.  It could have shown the Carnegie town ‘fathers’ as friends of the Klan, but it didn’t from what I could tell.

A new and valuable story for anti-fascists to take to heart.

Prior blog reviews on this issue, use the blog search box, upper left, to investigate our 17 year archive, using these terms:  “Anti-fascist series,” “Ku Klux Klan,” “A Fever in the Heartland,” “A Time to Kill” (Grisham); “No Fascist USA!” “BlacKKKlansman” (Lee); “The Bloody Shirt,” “Monument,” “Comrade Harry McAllister,” “Proud Boys and the White Ethnostate.”

And I bought it at May Day Books, which has more than textual books – buttons, some shirts, pamphlets, newspapers and magazines, graphic novels, songbooks and left books on art and music.

Red Frog / August 25, 2024

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