Al Printice “Bunchy” Carter would have rode with Nat Turner

"If Bunchy had been on the same plantation as Nat Turner you can
believe he would have rode with Nat Turner. That’s the type of person
Bunchy was.” Kumasi



NBC television has resurrected Al Prentice “Bunchy" Carter” with a new
series called ‘Aquarius’. The imperialist media has brought back both
Carter and Charles Manson. 

Carter was an iconic black revolutionary from Los Angeles
 

Manson was a cold-blooded serial killer who led the Manson Family that murdered many in California. Somehow Hollyweird has united these two polar opposites for television.

It is not that weird when we understand that these forces are part of the state whose job it is to keep Africa, Africans and all oppressed people confused.

Gerald Horne whose upcoming volume is "Confronting Black Jacobins: The U.S., the Haitian Revolution, and the Origins of the Dominican
Republic" taught Carter's daughter Danon at the University of
California, Santa Barbara and has written extensively on Hollywood.

Horne says Hollywood has done a number on Africans in America from
"Birth of a Nation” to “Gone With The Wind” depicting black women as
mammies, servants and sex objects. . Linden Beckford, Jr. a graduate
of Grambling University is currently writing a biography of Carter.

CARTER IS ALMOST FORGOTTEN

Unlike Huey P. Newton, Bobby Seale, Eldridge Cleaver and George
Jackson, Carter has almost been forgotten from the history of Africans
in America except for die hards.

Yes, the Fugees (Wyclef Jean, Lauryn Hill, and  Pras Michel) mention Carter on the 1996 soundtrack film “When We Were Kings” about the famous “Rumble in the Jungle" heavyweight championship match between MuhammadAli and George Foreman which took place in 1974.

And yes M-1 and Stickman (dead prez) did “B.I.G. respect” a song on their Mix tape “Turn off the Radio' that mentions Carter. Elaine Brown, who was the first woman to head the Black Panther Party when Huey P. Newton was in exile in Cuba recorded a song “Assassination” about Carter and John Huggins.

Who were Carter and John Huggins and why are they important for the 21st Century?

Carter was born on October 12th 1942 in Shreveport, Louisiana. He was assassinated on January 17th 1967 along with John Huggins (February 11, 1945 – January 17, 1969) at Campbell Hall at UCLA in Los Angeles. Huggins was born in New Haven, Connecticut.

He was briefly enlisted in the United States Navy before attending Lincoln University, where he met his wife Ericka Huggins.

They moved together to Los Angeles and both became deeply involved in
the Black Panther Party. Huggins had a Caribbean connection.

His father was born in Nevis and his mother was born in the United States.

Unlike Carter, Huggins was from a relatively well-off middle class
background. Carter’s background was working class.

CARTER AND  HUGGINS WERE KILLED EIGHT YEARS BEFORE LUMUMBA

It is a tragic coincidence in history that eight years before Carter
and Huggins joined the ancestors the first democratically elected
president of the Congo, Patrice Emery Lumumba, Joseph Okito,
vice-president of the Senate and Maurice Mpolo sports and youth
minister were killed by an unholy alliance of the CIA, Belgian
imperialism, and other agents of imperialism headed by Mobuto Sese
Seko Ngbendu Wa Za Banga aka Colonel Joseph Mobuto on January 17,
1961.

Carter and Huggins were gunned down by members of the cultural
nationalist US Organization.

An FBI memo dated November 29, 1968 described a letter that the Los Angeles FBI office intended to mail to the Black Panther Party office.

This letter, which was made to appear as if it had come from the US Organization, described fictitious plans by US to ambush BPP members. The FBI memo stated that "It is hoped
this counterintelligence measure will result in an 'US' and BPP
vendetta.

WE NEED SOME STRONGER STUFFF

Many feel that the leader of US, Ron Karenga was working for the other
side. An article in the Wall Street Journal described Karenga as a
thriving businessman-specializing  in gas stations – who maintained
close ties to eastern Rockefeller family and L.A's Mayor.

Sam Yorty pointed out Michael Newton in the volume, “Bitter Grain: Huey P. Newton and the Black Panther Party”.

The Wall Street Journal article said, “A few weeks after the assassination of Martin Luther King …Mr. Karenga slipped into Sacramento for a private chat with Governor Reagan, at the governor’s request.

The black nationalist also met clandestinely with Los Angeles police chief Thomas Reddin after Mr. King was killed.”

At that moment in history many cultural nationalist maintained that
the cultural revolution must take place before a political one could
proceed.

Huey P. Newton, the co-founder of the Black Panther Party
countered with the view that, “We believe that culture itself will not
liberate us. We’re going to need some stronger stuff.”

The Black Panther Party led by Newton and Bobby Seale had different tendencies within the organization.It was an anti-imperialist alliance; many like Carter embraced revolutionary nationalism while others like Newton, George Jackson and Fred Hampton took a Marxist-Leninist-Maoist {MLM} position. Hampton openly said he was fighting for socialism leading to communism.

CARTER NAMED GERONIMO

Carter was a firm supporter of the Native American struggle. It was
Carter who changed Elmer Pratt into Geronimo ji-Jaga Pratt (September
13, 1947- June 2, 2011) after the great Native American warrior.

Geronimo "the one who yawns"; (June 1829 – February 17, 1909) was a
prominent Apache leader who fought against Mexico and Arizona for
their expansion into Apache tribal lands for several decades during
the Apache Wars.

Geronimo replaced Carter as the Deputy Minister of Defense of the Southern California Chapter of the BPP after Carter was taken out. Carter left a memo saying his wish was for Geronimo to replace him.

LA PANTHERS HAD TO TAKE THE MAU MAU OATH

While not an anticommunist, before joining the Party Carter was
recruited by Raymond “Maasi”Hewitt to a Maoist study group called the
Red Guard.

I was a part of the same group however; Carter came in after I left Los Angeles. Carter was influenced by Jean-Jacques Dessalines of Haiti and Dedan Kimathi of the Land and Freedom Army (so-called Mau Mau).

The Los Angeles Chapter under Bunchy
leadership required that members take the Mau Mau Oath.

Here is the Mau Mau Oath

“I speak the truth and vow before God

And before this movement.

The movement of Unity,

The Unity which is put to the test

The Unity that is mocked with the name of "Mau Mau.

That I shall go forward to fight for the land,

The lands of Kirinyaga that we cultivated.

The lands which were taken by the Europeans

And if I fail to do this

May this oath kill me

May this seven kill me,

May this meat kill me”

DAYS AT LOS ANGELES CITY COLLEGE

Carter and a small segment of people who lived in my area of Los
Angeles had an international world view. He was a legendary figure in
my neighborhood.

After he was released from prison he attended Los Angeles City College. Carter was my senior and I didn’t meet him until he was released from jail. 

He and others like Sigidi Abdullah, (S.O.S Band), “Take Your Time (Do It Right)”, Rhongea Southern (now Daar Malik El-Bey) who worked closely with Abdullah, Earl Randall, who went on to work with Willie Mitchell at Hi Records and wrote Al Green’s “God Bless Our Love”

Fred Goree who became  Masai Karega Kenyatta and a DJ on WCHB 1440AM in Detroit went to L.A.C.C. at the same time. Sigidi told me that Carter asked him to organize a talent show at L.A.C.C.

I remember singing the Spinners, "I'll Always Love You" at this event. El-Bey was my guitarist.

Carter's political consciousness was raised before he joined the
Black Panther Party.

According to Kumasi, who Huey P. Newton ask to replace Carter as the leader of the Southern California Chapter of the BPP talked to me about the L.A. legend.

Says Kumasi, “When Malcolm X first came to Los Angeles he built the first outpost right there in our neighborhood.

The Mosque (Temple 27) itself was close to us and all of us had visited the Mosque.  As a matter of fact, Bunchy, and many of the Renegade Slausons (Bunchy had his own set of Slausons inside the Slausons)  were the first youth Fruit of Islam (FOI) in L.A. Carter was only 15 years old at that moment of history.

CARTER WAS A 20th CENTURY RENAISSANCE  MAN

Carter was a 20th Century Renaissance man. He was great at many things and was a poet, and a singer, Elaine Brown has written that many
Panthers sang together. "John (Huggins) sang bass, to my contralto and
Bunchy’s falsetto", he was also a great dancer.

David Hilliard maintains that if it were not for racism Carter may have become an Olympic swimmer. Brown says while all this is true Carter was first and foremost a revolutionary.

This is extraordinary if you consider that Carter suffered a childhood bout of polio, and moved to Southern Central L.A., where his mother Nola Carter enrolled him in a “therapeutic” dance class.

Carter’s Louisiana-born mother is still in the land of the living at
the time of this writing. She is almost a century old and has lost two
sons.

Arthur Morris, Carter’s older step brother who acted as Carter’s
bodyguard. Morris was the first member of the BPP to lose his life. He
was killed in March of 1968. Little Bobby Hutton (who was influenced
by Carter was killed on April 6, 1968].

Her youngest son Kenneth Fati Carter is currently locked down in Pelican Bay Prison in California.

CARTER BRINGS CLEAVER TO LOS ANGELES

Raymond Nat Turner’s, (Black Agenda Report’s poet-in-residence]
mother, Caffee Greene, hired Carter to work at the Teen Post in Los
Angeles.

Greene first hired Raymond “Maasi” Hewitt who was replaced by
Carter. It was at the Teen Post that I first heard Eldridge Cleaver
speak. Cleaver and Carter were both Nation of Islam Ministers in
prison.

Turner saw the cultural side of Carter.  Says Turner, “Yeah, I
heard Bunchy sing Stevie's "I'm Wondering" and "I Was Made to Love
her" and I used to hear Tommy (Lewis) play piano at the Teen Post my
mom directed.'

He continued “It was also fun to watch Bunchy dance—Philly Dog, Jerk & Twine…a lil’ 'Bitter Dog' with the Philly Dog ever once in a while… "Bebop Santa from the Cool North Pole" "Black Mother" were also great to hear.” Tommy Lewis, Robert Lawrence and Steve Bartholomew were murdered by the Los Angeles police at a service station on August 25, 1968.

Kumasi opines that Carter and George Jackson were like Henri
Christophe and Jean-Jacques Dessalines. While they were well-versed in
history, revolutionary theory and current events both were soldiers
ready to take to the battlefield.

Carter made a contribution to Africa, Africans and oppressed humanity. We should remember him every October 12th.

Norman (Otis) Richmond, aka Jalali, was born in Arcadia, Louisiana, and grew up in Los Angeles. He left Los Angles after refusing to fight in Viet Nam because he felt that, like the Vietnamese, Africans in the United States were colonial subjects. Jalali is producer/host for the Diasporic Music show on UhuruRadio.com every Sunday at 2pm ET. His column Diasporic Music appears monthly in The Burning Spear newspaper. He can be contacted Norman.o.richmond@gmail.com

Author

spot_img
- Advertisement -spot_img

Support African Working Class Media!

More articles from this author

Prince: The great musician and his connection to Africans worldwide

"There is an African connection to Prince's film 'Purple Rain' as Director Christopher Kirkley re-imagines Prince's 'Purple Rain' on the mother continent."

Gil Scott and Jimmy Ruffin

  “The artist must elect to fight for Freedom or Slavery. I have made my choice. I had no choice. I had no alternative." Paul Roberson Robeson...

Mobutu, Ali-Foreman and the music in 1974

Mobutu Sese Seko Kuku Ngbendu Wa Za Banga was one of the worst African leaders who ever lived. Mobutu had a hand in the deaths of Patrice Lumumba (A Great Son of Africa), Maurice Mpolo and Joseph Okito on January 17, 1961.

Similar articles

The African People’s Socialist Party calls for unity with Russia’s defensive war in Ukraine against the world colonial powers

On March 17, 2022, the African People's Socialist Party conducted a press conference featuring Chairman Omali Yeshitela, who put forward the official position of...

Fresh La Vwadezil’s ‘Mande Yo Pou Mwen’ justly criticizes oppressive powers for Haiti’s mass displacement

    HAITI—On March 17, 2021, singer-songwriter Fresh La—whose birth name is Donald Joseph and who is the lead singer of his band called “Vwadezil”—released a...

Cops Assassinate African Youth in Broad Daylight

The day after St. Petersburg police brutally executed Dominique, the African People’s Socialist Party (APSP), defenders of the African working class, called a news conference led by Director of Agitation and Propaganda (AgitProp) Akilé Anai.

spot_img