Les Payne, a Pulitzer Prize winning reporter, is a columnist for Newsday. The paper’s recent associate editor was responsible for national/foreign and health & science news at the paper for a quarter century; he also served as Newsday’s New York Editor. His news staffs won every major award in journalism, including six Pulitzer Prizes.
The author, editor, and social critic delivered the prestigious H. L. Mencken Lecture at the Enoch Pratt Library in Baltimore. He lectures frequently about social and political issues, the future of journalism, African art, and the life and death of Malcolm X.
The Inaugural Professor for the David Laventhol Chair, at Columbia U. Graduate School of Journalism, Payne has received three honorary doctorate degrees, including one from his alma mater, the University of Connecticut, where he delivered the ’03 Commencement Address to the graduating class, at Storrs, Ct.
The Negro invasion must be vigilantly fought, fought until it is
permanently checked, or the invaders will slowly but surely drive the whites
out of Harlem.
Harlem Home News, July 1911
Along the boulevards of Harlem
these days, hands are wringing over the shifting demographics of the two races
that still matter in this republic.
“No Longer Majority Black; Harlem
is in Transition” teased the headline from the New York Times. A profound and
accelerating shift has gripped the neighborhood that for nearly a century has
been synonymous with black urban America. The hometown paper then
conceded, without apology, that this reported loss of Harlem’s
black majority trumpeted in Tuesday paper actually occurred a decade ago, but
was largely overlooked.
Others are not so sure it has occurred even now. You can’t
get agreement on the boundaries of Harlem, so
it’s nearly impossible to gauge the shift, said Randy Daniels, the former New
York Secretary of State, who lived in the hamlet for some two
decades.
Harlem, of course, has not
always been black. The virtually all-white hamlet first took on color in 1900
as Negroes from the Lower West Side moved
north. After a show of resistance, backed by churches, newspapers and the
stout-hearted, the mostly German inhabitants packed in their singing clubs, zithers,
and Weinstuben and headed for the hills.
By the onset of the Harlem Renaissance in 1930, the hamlet
was a brown new bag.
As designated by previous occupants, this New Harlem was
still bordered on the South by 110th
Street, north by 155th Street, on the east by the river,
and on the west by St. Nicholas
Avenue and Morningside Drive. As the population
exploded, however, the borders of this black Promised Land crept across
Morningside and St. Nicholas toward the Hudson,
and even north toward WashingtonHeights.
Beyond the grounding of its real estate, Harlem
had become a state of mind. New York
was heaven to me, Malcolm X wrote in his autobiography, upon first touching
down. And Harlem was seventh heaven! With its
jazz, hustle and mesmerizing art and church music, Harlem
was identified as any terrain across 110th
Street where blacks settled en
masse.
Ralph Ellison, the author of Invisible Man, made this very
point about Harlem’s floating boundaries in a
1966 appearance before Congress. I live on Riverside Drive at 150th Street, he said. It isn’t exactly
Harlem, but Harlem has a way of expanding. It
goes where Negroes go, or where we go in certain numbers. So, some of us think
of it as Harlem, though it is really WashingtonHeights.
The boundaries still seem to float depending upon who’s
chalking the lines.
The Times explained its racial population shift with an
accordion-like slide between central and greater Harlem.
The larger unit where blacks supposedly dropped to 41 percent in 2008—was
described as running river to river, and from East 96th Street and West 106th Street to West 155th Street. Long-time dwellers
disagree.
Instead, they say, the boundaries of Harlem
traditionally start at 110th
Street and run to 155th, river to river, minus the
terrain east of 5th Avenue,
running from 96th Street
roughly to 125th Street.
This multi-block parcel has long been considered East
Harlem, and occupied over the years by Spanish and other ethnic
whites with never much of a black presence.
By adding East Harlem as a
component of the shift, the Times appears to pad its non-black population
ledgers and thus distort the overall demographics. Further, the paper’s
description of central Harlem, which
reportedly dropped from 98 percent black in 1950 to 62 percent in 2008, is
confusing to long-time residents.
Born in HarlemHospital and reared on its mean streets, Sherman
Edmiston was perplexed by the Times’ boundaries that would, among other
markers, exclude from central Harlem the EssieGreenArtGallery
that he owns and manages at 419
Convent Avenue. The impression the Times gave is
that Harlem is becoming predominantly white,
Edmiston said. The larger demographics shift is Latino, not white. And if you
walk your dogs around the corners up here, you’ll also see a lot of Asians.
The demographic shifting of Harlem,
whatever the precise boundary and numbers, is occurring at a time of evolving
patterns in other boroughs of the city. At less than 40 percent, white
Americans, for example, find themselves no longer constituting the majority of
the overall population of New York
City. This fact has not yet been reflected by the
demographics of those running things both public and private.
In the November mayoral election, exit polling showed for
the first time in the city’s history that white votes tallied less than 50
percent of the count. Some 46 percent of voters clocked in as whites; with
blacks at 23 percent; Hispanics at 21 percent; and Asians at 7 percent. Key
questions are raised about the meaning of the demographics shift, not just in Harlem but also in the city and nationwide.
When renting a room, G. K. Chesterton once remarked, one
should not simply inquire about the furniture, the linen, or even the rent. One
should instead fix the landlady with an unstaring eye and ask: Madam, what is
your total view of the universe? The Times gentrification story settled for an
inquiry about the linen. Quite beyond mere furniture and linen, that elusive Harlem of the universe remains much more a state of mind.
Harlem, indeed, has not
always been black; but, as Yogi Berra might say, it always will be.
1/11/2010 4:48 PM
J Windham wrote:
Harlem is a concept, ideal or even challenge like "the West, South, North or even for that matter blackness and whiteness. Physical places are often seen by their ambiance, reputation and promise to their residents and guests. Reply to this
Harlem is a concept, ideal or even challenge like "the West, South, North or even for that matter blackness and whiteness. Physical places are often seen by their ambiance, reputation and promise to their residents and guests.
Reply to this
Harlem will forever be in a state of change, let's hope it's a change for the better
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