Minority Groups In The 1960s Essay

2346 Words10 Pages

Throughout American history, minority races within the United States have nearly always been treated unequally and seen as inferior as opposed to their white counterparts. Many racial groups came to America to find a better life and ended up being gobbled up and shit out by the engine we call capitalism leaving them under the control of the dominant narratives of the ruling class, typically white men. Minority communities were silently pushed down and controlled by their white counterparts commonly through their dominant narratives, which led to the control of the police or the capitalistic inequality. Come the 1960s, these minority and underrepresented groups in America decide they are not going to lie down and be unprovokedly struck with …show more content…

They stood not only as a means to protect themselves but to fight the unjust world affecting their communities. In this paper I am going to go over the rise and growth of the racial revolutionary movements that occurred throughout the 1960s and early 70s and how they impacted the fight against racial oppression and the relationship between minority races within America. Though these revolutionary groups were not the first to fight for the end of Racial oppression within America, they were a strong component in the deconstruction of white privilege and racial imbalance. Following the lead of racial equality political activists such as Martin Luther King Jr. and Malcom X. The political group known as the Black Panther Party began to rise up to address and counter the widespread cultural and racial oppression that affected the lives of all non-white people living in America, fighting to rearticulate the overall racial ideology in America and bring racial justice to their communities. Through their early advocacy for the self- determination of non- white people in America The Black Panther united all minorities and mistreated groups together, brought all groups under a common culture, and opened spaces for new subjectivities to emerge, such as the Brown Berets, Red Guard and the Young Lords. The Black Panther Party was formed in 1966 in …show more content…

“Older Mexican Americans, wedded to the ideals of white identity and assimilation, often shunned any association, actual or metaphorical, with blacks. Younger people were more willing to learn from blacks, and this generation became the vanguard of the Chicano movement.” (Page 164, Lopéz) “We, Brown and Black, stand here together... Hermanos unidos ! We, Brown and Black, make this statement together, mano-a-mano, because we are one. Although you have attempted to separate us by geography, a barrio here, and ghetto there, we are in fact united by history . . . Our oppressions are one. Our dreams are one. Our demands are one. We suffer as one, we react as one, we struggle as one!” (Page 167, Lopéz) What led to their organizing efforts? What led to the solidarity of the racial