No, I’m Not Hard Enough on the Executive Council Members of ASALH
Someone asked me today whether I was not being to hard on people by saying that they should get off the board if they cannot give money or raise money to keep Woodson’s journal alive. No, I have been too easy on people.
Look, the Journal of African American History is the oldest scholarly journal in the black world. It is 100 years old. We have no scholarly journal that is older. It is a big deal.
You sit boards to make organizations thrive, not to gut them by your inability. End the a century-old tradition so that some folks can keep a seat on the board? Nah.
Let’s take those on the board with money. Some think their money is too good for the Journal of African American History. All my life I have known folks who think their money is too good for the cause they espouse, and they tend to go get money from white people and keep their own. It sickened me in the 1980s and it still sickens me today.
Now some people are tapped out. It’s killing them to pay the $1,300 in dues. I understand, but I don’t excuse what they are doing. This world is not an easy place, for sure. But just because you can’t take any more, don’t tap out Woodson’s journal. If fact, get off the board and keep the board dues you have been spending. Do tradition and yourself a favor. Clearly, the board needs dues closer to $2,000, but people who can’t pay $1,300 won’t vote for even $1,500. These maxed-out members of the board should leave with dignity and respect just as others did it when we raised the dues from $500 to $1,300. Nothing shameful about it.
As for V.P. Franklin’s $15k stipend. It ain’t much, and it is deserved. Really wish we could pay him more. He has done a labor of love for many a year. Having said that–you gotta let go of things you love, especially if the organization needs it as this move seems to suggest. We can save much more than we gain by selling out by finding another scholar(s) who can do it with institutional support. Walk away and free up $25K in expenses. What is the journal that Woodson founded when it is not published by ASALH but by someone else, especially a predominately white institution? How can an advocate of self-determination square this move with their beliefs? All the sophistry is the world cannot erase the hypocrisy, and frankly.
So I say to all my friends of ASALH, expect more of the people who are the keepers of this great tradition. If they can’t keep the jewel of ASALH–that what I call Woodson’s journal–don’t keep them. Thank them for their service and ask them to step aside.