|
WORLD
POLICY JOURNAL
| ARTICLE:
Volume XX, No 3, Fall 2003 |
Print
|
 |
|
|
Friendly
|
Remembering
Ralph Bunche
Lawrence
S. Finkelstein*
[Go
to interactive
discussion forum]
If
you want to get an idea across, wrap it up in a person.
—Ralph
Bunche
Diplomats,
even those renowned in their lifetimes, are destined, it seems,
to be forgotten by fickle publics. So it has proved with Ralph Bunche.
In 1950, the year he won the Nobel Peace Prize, New York City gave
him a ticker tape parade on Broadway. Today, he has faded from the
memory of most. This unjustly forgotten Nobel Laureate deserves
recognition more than anyone else for formulating the U.N. principles
of peacekeeping. He also helped shape the United Nations Charter
and negotiated the Israeli-Arab armistice lines that endured from
1948 until the Six-Day War in 1967. His biographer and longtime
U.N. colleague, Brian Urquhart, called Bunche (who died in 1971)
the most remarkable public servant he had known.
He left his
mark at home as well as abroad. An African American, born a century
ago in Detroit, Bunche was an early campaigner for civil rights
and a principal collaborator with the eminent Swedish sociologist
Gunnar Myrdal in preparing the landmark study, The American Dilemma:
The Negro Problem and Modern Democracy (1944).
It was this
writer’s good fortune to have worked under Dr. Bunche when, as a
civil servant in the State Department and the U.N. Secretariat,
he was helping to plan the United Nations and then bringing it to
life. Perhaps his most significant characteristic was his drive
to excel. It was there from childhood, and he drove himself harder
than anyone else. This seemingly inherent instinct was reinforced
by the conviction that he could help his race by showing that a
black man could be an achiever in a white society.
His stamina
was phenomenal. His recollection of the first round of armistice
negotiations between Israel and Egypt on the island of Rhodes illustrates
the point. He told friends that conditions were primitive. The facilities
of the Hotel des Roses were limited. The cuisine was execrable.
At the final stage of negotiations, the participants were stretched
to the limit. All suffered from dysentery, including himself. But,
as he remarked, "I was the strongest. I outlasted them."
He exercised his prerogative in chairing the meeting to keep all
parties negotiating nonstop until they could no longer resist agreement.
Thus, according to its recipient, was the Nobel Prize won. 1
He was modest
in demeanor and shunned ostentation. He wanted to turn down the
prize, saying that those who served the United Nations did not do
so for personal rewards. Secretary General Trygve Lie had to order
him to accept because doing so would benefit the newborn organization.
Dr. Bunche’s reluctance by no means meant that he felt insecure.
He knew he had achieved a great deal and showed his pride in small
ways. He would, for example, point to the gold UCLA basketballs
adorning the chain attached to his vest—tokens of his place on the
UCLA team that won the Southern Conference championship three years
running.
He was loyal
to his friends, to the institutions he served, and to his convictions.
He believed in rules, but could bend them when required by his convictions.
Thus, during the San Francisco Conference in 1945 at which the United
Nations was launched, he surreptitiously passed to an Australian
delegate the draft declaration of principles for governing dependent
territories, classified "secret," that the U.S. delegation
was not authorized to introduce. This draft in essence became Chapter
XI of the U.N. Charter.
He was a tough
and resilient negotiator. Once he reached a conclusion, he stood
behind it stubbornly. Once, at a critical moment during a very tense
international crisis, he said he knew he was doing the right thing
because he was taking flak from both sides. His sense of humor,
especially his ability to laugh at himself, proved a solvent for
tension. He loved and enjoyed people, though he could be scathing
in his private appraisals. He suffered stoically when differences
divided him from treasured colleagues. He was a good talker and
an excellent listener. The latter attribute was perhaps most important
in explaining his success as a diplomat. He quickly grasped another
negotiator’s bottom line, and showed extraordinary skill in phrasing
the ideas that bridged the differences between opponents. He had
no superiors as a diplomatic draftsman.
He kept secrets
scrupulously. As a negotiator, he inspired trust and could be relied
upon to keep his word. Brian Urquhart recalls that at one point
after wresting agreement during Israeli-Arab truce negotiations,
he remarked that he was about to destroy all notes of his confidential
talks with contending delegates so that in the future none might
be embarrassed. Although suffering spells of bitter depression when
things were going badly, he was essentially an optimist. He believed
throughout his career that the world could and would be a better
place. He served his causes completely, at great cost to his always
fragile health, despite contention with colleagues whom he respected,
and notwithstanding the pain caused his family by the priority he
gave to his humanitarian mission.
The Ladder
Upward
First, last and always, Ralph Bunche saw himself as a Negro (the
preferred term during his lifetime), proudly and without reservation.
He was greatly influenced by his devoted grandmother Nana, whose
pride in her identity provided a model for her grandson. He suffered
from, and resented, racial segregation, and always sought to overcome
it for "my group."
Young
Ralph excelled as a student in Detroit, and then in Los Angeles,
where his family moved in 1917. He graduated summa cum laude from
UCLA and was class valedictorian; he had been a debater, a varsity
athlete, and a contributor to the college newspaper, all the while
working to earn his keep. After going on to graduate school at Harvard,
he became in 1934 the university’s first African American to earn
a Ph.D. in government, having written a prize-winning dissertation.
Initially, he had proposed a thesis on the League of Nations and
the suppression of slavery. Then he considered comparing Brazil’s
multiracialism with America’s continued segregation. Finally, he
settled on a thesis that contrasted France’s administration of two
African territories: Dahomey, then an outright French possession,
and neighboring Togoland, which France administered under a League
of Nations mandate. His dissertation anticipated the themes—Africa,
race, colonialism, and international organizations—that proved central
to his career in the years that followed.
Further field
studies in 1936–37, mainly in Africa, broadened his skills and strengthened
his résumé. To prepare for his travels, he became
the postdoctoral student of three leading anthropologists, Melville
Herskovits at Northwestern University, Bronislaw Malinowski at the
University of London, and Isaac Shapira at the University of Capetown.
While in London, he met many Africans who were destined for leadership,
among them Jomo Kenyatta, later to become Kenya’s first president,
with whom he studied Swahili. Among Ralph Bunche’s legacies are
14,000 feet of film he shot in Africa with a camera lent to him
by Eslanda Robeson, Paul Robeson’s wife. 2
His Harvard
studies intermingled with a very different professional career as
a faculty member at Howard University in Washington, D.C., beginning
in 1928 after he received his M.A. from Harvard. He founded and
chaired the political science department at the university. He wrote
prolifically about race and civil rights, including A World View
of Race (1936) and the four major studies he contributed to
Myrdal’s American Dilemma. Howard’s cadre of leading black
intellectuals not only provided stimulus to the young scholar but
also inspired him to become a leading activist on these issues.
In 1936, he co-founded the National Negro Congress, which grew out
of a conference at Howard on "The Position of the Negro in
the Present Economic Crisis."
It was his
growing reputation as an Africanist and student of colonialism that
prompted an invitation to join the U.S. government. He made the
move because, unlike other black leaders, he believed that the European
war and Nazism threatened African Americans as well other Americans.
He thus accepted an offer to join the Office of Coordinator of Information
as a senior civil service analyst in the Africa and Far East section.
When OCI became the Office of Strategic Services (OSS) in 1942,
he was named chief of the Africa section in the research and analysis
branch. Impressed by his work, senior State Department executives
overcame resistance to the appointment of a black official and arranged
his transfer to State’s postwar planning unit. He joined the U.S.
delegations to a number of major conferences concerned with postwar
international institutions. His performance in dealing with the
issues of colonialism at the San Francisco Conference at which the
United Nations Charter was approved led to his being recruited by
the U.N. Secretariat in April 1946 as acting director of the Trusteeship
Division. That December, he became a full-fledged international
civil servant as the division’s director. Thereafter, he served
the United Nations with total dedication almost until his death
a quarter-century later.
Bunche’s job
performance earned him appointment, which he did not relish, to
the committee set up in 1947 to resolve the future status of Palestine.
When the committee could not decide between partition and federation,
he managed the remarkable feat of drafting proposals for each in
the committee’s report to the General Assembly. What he learned
then about the Middle East, and about how the United Nations worked,
stood him in good stead when, with Count Folke Bernadotte, the U.N.
mediator, he negotiated various Arab-Israeli truces in 1948. The
truces required impartial supervision, and the task fell to Bunche,
who without precedents to aid him, had to create the organization’s
first peace-keeping operation, the U.N. Truce Supervision Organization,
or UNTSO, which remains in operation to this day.
When the Swedish
diplomat was assassinated in September 1948, Bunche became acting
mediator. (But for an unforeseen delay that prevented Bunche from
sharing the same vehicle in Jerusalem, both men might have been
slain by a Jewish extremist opposed to partition). 3 He
was thus in place to perform his Nobel Prize–winning feat of concluding
armistices in 1949 between Israel and four of its Arab neighbors,
in extended negotiations on the Island of Rhodes.
The Suez Crisis
of 1956 required insertion of a multinational peacekeeping force
as a buffer between Israel and Egypt. Bunche had a major role in
creating and guiding UNEF, the United Nations Emergency Force, drawing
on the guidelines already laid down for UNTSO. He also authored
the "peacekeeping manual" used by the United Nations for
decades. Until his death in 1971, he was the United Nations chief
troubleshooter, a role he performed in Lebanon, Bahrain, the Congo,
Cyprus, and Kashmir.
Ralph Bunche’s
career was marked by breadth of vision. He fought for Negro rights,
seeing them as universal human rights. He firmly believed that what
he did for his race served America, and that his service to America
was good for his race. He saw that peace was more than the avoidance
of war. He stated his credo relatively early in his career, in 1942:
"The real objective must always be the good life for all of
the people...peace, bread, adequate clothing, education, good health
and, above all, the right to walk with dignity on the world’s great
boulevards." He worked with Eleanor Roosevelt on the revolutionary
U.N. Declaration of Human Rights. He was always proudly an American
who dreamed the American dream of democracy. He knew that as an
international civil servant he served both his country and the world.
The world today
sorely needs Ralph Bunche’s gifts, his worldview, his passion
honed by tact, his intelligence informed by experience, his prestige
at home and abroad, and his devotion to his favorite Scriptural
passage: "They shall beat their swords into ploughshares, and
their spears into pruning hooks; nation shall not lift up sword
against nation, neither shall they learn war any more." •
Notes
For further
information on the Ralph Bunche Centenary Commemoration Committee,
see www.RalphBuncheCentenary.org.
1. Author’s
recollection of a conversation at Lake Success after Dr. Bunche’s
return from Rhodes, sometime in 1949.
2. Some of
that footage appears in A Black Scholar Investigates Colonialism,
one of 14 modules based on the documentary film Ralph Bunche:
An American Odyssey, produced by William Greaves and shown on
the Public Broadcasting System.
3. Bunche recounted
this episode in "The Psychology of Humanity: A Conversation
with Ralph Bunche and Mary Harrington Hall," Psychology
Today, April 1969, pp. 4–5; see also Brian Urquhart, Ralph
Bunche: An American Life (New York: W. W. Norton, 1993), p.
178.
*Lawrence
S. Finkelstein is retired from a career in government, U.N. and
nongovernmental service, and academia. He is a founding member of
the Ralph Bunche Centenary Commemoration Committee.
[Go
to interactive
discussion forum]
You will need the Adobe Acrobat Reader installed
on your computer to access full text PDF
article.
 back
|