Dancing with the Panthers Part One (Campbell & Rice, c2000)
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This episode of Dancing with the Panthers features a conversation recorded around the year 2000 with Rev. Dr. Finley C. Campbell and historian Dr. Jon Rice, reflecting on their involvement with the Black Panther Party roughly thirty years earlier. Barbara Jean Walsh introduces the discussion by explaining that both men—Campbell in Indiana and Rice in Chicago—became deeply influenced by the Panthers’ philosophy, especially its emphasis on multiracial unity, socialism, and community self‑determination.
Dr. Campbell opens with personal reflections on race, class, and the spread of economic oppression, using a chance encounter as a metaphor for the interconnectedness of racial and class struggle. He recounts how he was “drafted” into the Panthers’ Ministry of Education in Indiana, helping organize Black Student Unions and translating Panther ideology for largely white academic audiences. Campbell describes his political awakening, shaped by the Panthers’ Ten‑Point Program, their critique of capitalism, and their insistence that commitment—not racial purity—defined solidarity.
Dr. Rice then shares his experience as a young volunteer in the Chicago chapter beginning in 1969. He traces the Panthers’ roots to the moral courage of the civil rights movement, arguing that the collapse of legal segregation revealed deeper economic inequalities that required more radical solutions. Rice explains how the Panthers studied global revolutionary movements, equated racism with capitalism, and sought to build class‑based coalitions across racial lines. This vision led to groundbreaking alliances with groups like the Young Patriots (poor white migrants) and the Young Lords (a Puerto Rican organization), forming Chicago’s original Rainbow Coalition.
Both speakers emphasize the Panthers’ boldness, youth, and idealism, as well as the challenges they faced—from internal discipline to external repression such as COINTELPRO. The episode highlights the Panthers’ community programs, their efforts to unite marginalized groups, and the lasting impact of leaders like Fred Hampton, who was only 21 when he was killed. Together, Campbell and Rice offer a vivid, personal account of a turbulent era and the revolutionary imagination that shaped it.