Ira L. Black/Corbis via Getty Images
Time Magazine
By Andrew R. Chow
By Andrew R. Chow
July 13, 2020
When the National Football League kicks off its season on Sept. 10,
it will do so with a song that is unknown to some Americans and
essential to others. “Lift Every Voice and Sing,” otherwise known as the
Black national anthem, was introduced to many by Beyoncé when she sang
it at Coachella two years ago. But the song has long been a pillar of
Black culture and life, sung at church ceremonies, political protests,
school graduations and family gatherings. “Four generations of my
family, at least, have lived with this anthem,” Imani Perry wrote in May Forever We Stand, her book about the song. “It is our common thread.”
During the NFL’s opening week, “Lift Every Voice
and Sing” will be performed before each game, ahead of “The Star
Spangled Banner,” as an effort to reinforce the league’s professed
newfound alignment with Black Lives Matter. But this decision—which has
been met with skepticism
across the ideological spectrum—is just the latest example of the
song’s reinvigoration in American public life. It’s been performed at
protests across the country following the police killing of George Floyd, slipped into national anthems at NASCAR races and even co-opted by Joe Biden for one of his campaign proposals, “Lift Every Voice: The Biden Plan For Black America.”
Here’s a history of the song, and an examination of how its influence has persisted over 120 years.
“A universal signifier of Black identity”
“Lift Every Voice and Sing” was written during a
fraught moment in African-American history. At the dawn of the 20th
century, post-Civil War reconstruction efforts were being dismantled;
segregation had been codified through Plessy v Ferguson; and a Jim Crow
reign of terror and exploitation was taking hold across the country.
In this hostile climate, many Black communities turned inward,
forming their own schools, newspapers, musical groups, religious and
social organizations. James Weldon Johnson and John Rosamond Johnson,
two brothers from Jacksonville, Fla., were steeped in these
institutions: James was a poet, lawyer and the principal of a segregated
school, while John Rosamond taught music there.
In 1899, James set out to write a poem
commemorating the birthday of Abraham Lincoln. “My thoughts began
buzzing round a central idea of writing a poem about Lincoln but I
couldn’t net them,” he wrote in his autobiography, Along This Way.
Instead, he wrote a poem about Black struggle and perseverance and
asked his brother to set his words to music. The result, which moved
James himself to tears, captured a painful history of oppression (“Stony
the road we trod/ Bitter the chastening rod”) while ending on a note of
resilience: “May we forever stand/ True to our God/ True to our native
land.
”
The song was first performed the following year at
Johnson’s school by a group of 500 children. The Johnsons would soon
move out of Jacksonville following a deadly fire that ripped through the
city. They brought the song to a Harlem arts scene that was quickly
becoming a hotbed of creativity. Meanwhile, the song would also
independently spread outward from its original city. “The school
children of Jacksonville kept singing it; they went off to other
schools and sang it; they became teachers and taught it to other
children,” James said in 1935.
As the song was passed along communally, it was also boosted by
powerful Black leaders and organizations, including the National
Association of Colored Women’s Clubs and Booker T. Washington. In 1919,
the NAACP named it its official song; James Weldon Johnson would be
appointed the organization’s first African American executive secretary a
year later.
Before long, “Lift Every Voice and Sing” would
become, in Perry’s words, “a universal signifier of Black identity.” It
was sung at church services, civic organization meetings, pageants and
graduations; it anchored Emancipation Day and Negro History Week celebrations and daily school rituals.
“I sang the Negro National Anthem when I was hungry,” Congresswoman Maxine Waters wrote in Lift Every Voice and Sing: A Celebration of the Negro National Anthem,
edited by Julian Bond and Sondra Kathryn Wilson. “I sang the Negro
National Anthem when my tooth was hurting because of an exposed cavity—I
sang the Negro National Anthem when I did not know there was a future
for a little black girl with twelve sisters and brothers.”
A symbol of resistance
As Black activists continued to mobilize in their
fight against discrimination and segregation, “Lift Every Voice and
Sing” took on an increasingly political bent, symbolizing defiance in
the face of white oppression. In 1929, it was sung in support of the
unionization of Black porters; In 1936, it opened the first conference
of the National Negro Congress, an anti-fascist organization fighting
for Black liberation. Maya Angelou, in her autobiography I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings, recalled singing the song with her Black classmates in Oakland as a rejoinder to a visiting racist white politician.
When the Civil Rights Era began in the 1950s, “Lift Every Voice and
Sing” was sung during organizational meetings for the Montgomery Bus
Boycott and quoted in speeches by Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. But as
folk music rose to the fore, the song was soon supplanted by a new wave
of freedom songs like “We Shall Overcome” and “We Shall Not Be Moved,”
whose simple and direct choruses were sung with fervor at marches from
Selma to Washington.
“Lift Every Voice and Sing,” however, would soon
regain its urgency, as harrowing police violence and unwavering systems
of segregation would mar the early pacifist optimism of the Civil Rights
Movement. In Forever We Stand, Perry writes that by the late
’60s, “We Shall Overcome” “seemed naive and even insipid in comparison
to the reach for soul and the deliberate invocation of the African
continent and diaspora.”
As a new generation of Black activists, artists and
politicians rose to the fore in the ’70s, they adopted “Lift Every
Voice and Sing” as a symbol of resistance. Following King’s
assassination, a crowd in Roxbury, Mass., sang the song, with Reverend
Virgil Wood declaring, “We will not sing the anthem that has dishonored
us, but we will sing the one that has honored us.”
The song was played regularly at Black nationalist
meetings, and in 1972 became the anthem for Black students in Newark who
staged walkouts demanding Black teachers and Black curriculum. Three
years later, James Brown slipped a line from the song into the national anthem before Muhammad Ali’s bout against Chuck Wepner, pleading, “we wanna be free.”
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