Bobby Seale was born on October 22, 1936, in Dallas, Texas. Seale was one of a generation of young African-American radicals who broke away from the traditionally nonviolent Civil Rights Movement to preach a doctrine of militant black empowerment. Following the dismissal of murder charges against him in 1971, Seale somewhat moderated his more militant views and devoted his time to effecting change from within the system.
Seale grew up in Dallas and in California. Following service in the U.S. Air Force, he entered Merritt College in Oakland, Calif. There, his radicalism took root in 1962 when he first heard Malcolm X speak. Seale helped found the Black Panthers in 1966. Noted for their violent views, they were actually an anti-racist organization that combated police brutality. They also ran medical clinics and served free breakfasts to school children, among other programs. In 1969 Seale was indicted in Chicago for conspiracy to incite riots during the Democratic National Convention the previous year. The court refused to allow him to have his choice of lawyer. When Seale repeatedly rose to insist that he was being denied his constitutional right to counsel, the judge ordered him bound and gagged. He was convicted of 16 counts of contempt and sentenced to four years in prison. In 1970–71, he and a codefendant were tried for the 1969 murder of a Black Panther suspected of being a police informer. The six-month-long trial ended with a hung jury.
Following his release from prison, Seale renounced violence as a means to an end and announced his intention to work within the political process. He ran for mayor of Oakland in 1973, finishing second. As the Black Panther Party faded from public view, Seale took on a quieter role, working to improve social services in black neighborhoods and environmental justice. Seale’s writings include such diverse works as Seize the Time (1970), a history of the Black Panther movement, and Barbeque’n with Bobby (1988), a cookbook. Seale also authored Power to the People: The World of the Black Panthers, a 2016 book lavishly illustrated by photographer Stephen Shames.
“A people who have suffered so much for so long at hands of a racist society must draw the line somewhere…. the black communities of America must rise up as one man to halt the progression of a trend that leads inevitably to their total destruction.”
— Bobby Seale
Today, we honor Bobby Seale as our Evolved Man of the Week.
One response to “The Evolved Man of the Week: Bobby Seale”
[…] but also politically. Unquestioned black love and pride! Men like the iconic Fred Hampton and Bobby Seale rose to prominence during the black power era despite all the controversy surrounding Huey and […]
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