Fidel Castro and Che Guevara sailed from Mexico on the Gramma to liberate Cuba while I was in high school. Fanon, a Caribbean Black intellectual, was the prophet of decolonization. His books were sold on the streets and discussed in leftist youth circles. As a practicing psychiatrist Fanon explained the need for violence and chaos in the de-colonization process, that only violence can destroy the colonized's mental pain and recreate a new, free man. He fought in Algeria against the French. which was one of the last anticolonial, anti-European rebellions.
His ideas made a lasting impression but he is never mentioned today. In our days promoting violence is taboo and would be censured everywhere. Yet his idea that for a humiliated, colonized subject the only way to psychologically liberate himself is through violence, makes some sense. By fighting he becomes a man and recovers his self respect. It may seem incredible today, when teaching in an university in the occupied territories am totally considered a colonizer, that in those times, the sixties, I had been a Galut Jewish youth, a refugee (a real one) living in a hostile society, I saw myself belonging to an oppressed minority and Fanon's books spoke to me. When somebody wrote on the college's wall "Haga patria, mate a un judio" (Be a patriot, kill a Jew) - well, I felt that Fanon was right. That was then, today I am a free man.
His ideas made a lasting impression but he is never mentioned today. In our days promoting violence is taboo and would be censured everywhere. Yet his idea that for a humiliated, colonized subject the only way to psychologically liberate himself is through violence, makes some sense. By fighting he becomes a man and recovers his self respect. It may seem incredible today, when teaching in an university in the occupied territories am totally considered a colonizer, that in those times, the sixties, I had been a Galut Jewish youth, a refugee (a real one) living in a hostile society, I saw myself belonging to an oppressed minority and Fanon's books spoke to me. When somebody wrote on the college's wall "Haga patria, mate a un judio" (Be a patriot, kill a Jew) - well, I felt that Fanon was right. That was then, today I am a free man.