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Article - Chicago Defender -- the following is Part 1 of an article from
the October 10th, 1995 issue of the Michigan Chronicle.
A Door to the Masses
Robert S. Abbott and the Chicago Defender: A Door to the Masses
by Mark Perry
On 31 August 1868 Baha'u'llah, the Founder of the Baha'i Faith, with His
family and companions, passed through the sea gate into 'Akka, the
prison city of the Ottoman Empire, from which He would, in succeeding
years, raise His Banner to proclaim across the farthest reaches of the
world "the unity of all mankind." On 28 November of that same year a
poor baby was born in the American South, seemingly cut off from any
light of justice and hope.
Yet the Banner would suddenly and powerfully attract his attention, gain
increasingly the heartfelt respect of his mature years, and win his
allegiance in the twilight of his life.
Robert S. Abbott was the son of former slaves. In 1897, at the age of
29, he moved to Chicago, where eight years later he established one of
the most influential newspapers in United States history, the Chicago
Defender. Through the voice of the Defender, Abbott played a major role
in the promotion of racial equality in America. Of all African-American
newspapers his was the most outspoken in the defense against racial
prejudice and the denial of human rights. In many regions of the South
it was banned by law, and any African-American person--man or
woman--possessing or distributing it could become the victim of mob
violence. One of his most significant achievements was in raising the
call in the Defender for Southern African-Americans to escape the
oppression of their homelands and migrate to the relative safety of the
North. The Southern African-Americans responded eagerly and from 1917
trekked northward in great waves to begin a new stage in their history.
The life of Robert Abbott, like the lives of many other early believers
in the world religions throughout history, cannot be adequately treated
in conversational biographic form. The basic facts of his career are
clear and readily understood. Rather, it is the essence of his spiritual
journey, his relation to the Baha'i Faith, that arrests one's attention.
The enthusiasm Abbott felt for the Baha'i teachings may have originated
in his early spiritual education. In many ways his family and upbringing
were atypical of the social and cultural norms of the Reconstruction
period in his native Georgia. The son of Thomas Abbott and Flora Butler
Abbott, former slaves, he was born in 1868 on St Simons Island off the
coast of Georgia. In 1869 his father died. In that same year his future
stepfather, John Hermann Sengstacke, arrived in Georgia from Germany, where
he had been raised. Flora had gained a speaking knowledge of German from the
immigrant shopkeepers for whom she had frequently worked, and it was not
long before this coincidence brought her to John's attention in the small
community. John and Flora were married in 1874.
John Sengstacke was not an ordinary German immigrant. Although he was
European in appearance, he, too, was the son of a slave mother. In 1847
his father, Herman Sengstacke, a wealthy merchant new to America, had
witnessed the plight of a slave girl, Tama, standing on the seller's
block. Out of compassion he bought her and lawfully married her in
Charleston, South Carolina. The following year John was born to them.
Since the law specified that children follow the condition of their
mother, John, and his sister to come, were legally slaves; therefore,
John's father eventually decided to send them to be raised by relatives
in Germany. Thus, when John Sengstacke became Abbott's strict and loving
stepfather, he brought to the boy an indelible consciousness of the
oneness of humanity and the inherent dignity of humankind. Throughout
the years--even during World War II when some of Abbott's relatives
became Nazis--he maintained regular correspondence with those members of
his family in Germany who accepted him as their own and helped them with
significant sums of money.
Abbott also protected another family in Georgia, the descendants of
Captain Charles Stevens, who had owned his father, Thomas Abbott. The
Depression reversed the Stevens family fortunes, and they turned for aid
to Robert, the millionaire son of the Captain's slave. Not only did he
respond generously, but he afterwards helped to educate their children.
He contributed to their upkeep for nearly six years, and, in the
process, a warm personal relationship was re-established. For like his
father, Thomas, he felt a loyalty and sense of responsibility to these
to these people when they were faced with extreme difficulties.
His was extraordinary behavior.
If the youthful Abbott's social environment was progressive, so to was
the religious sense gained from his stepfather. John Sengstacke labored
as a missionary Congregational minister in a Baptist region near
Savannah, Georgia, where the incessant sectarian antagonism he faced
finally led him, shortly before his death in 1904, to write in his diary
what one cannot but think may well have influenced his stepson
throughout his upbringing: "There is but one church, and all who are
born of God are members of it. God made a church, man made
denominations. God gave us a Holy Bible, disputing men made different
kinds of disciples." Abbott's missionary childhood in rural Georgia was
filled with images of his father working to uplift a people who
desperately needed self-development and self-knowledge of Sundays as
days of rest and devotion, of work days spent with his father as he made
his rounds and tended his duties in the church and community. Abbott's
childhood education was religiously orthodox yet distinctly independent,
fundamentalist in form yet socially progressive in spirit. Undoubtedly
this unusual home life set the standard for his own career in the world
and paved the way for his acceptance of a religion the principles of
which were unique and yet similar to his own.
--The following is Part 2 of an October 10th, 1995 article from the
Michigan Chronicle
Robert S. Abbott and the Chicago Defender: A Door to the
Masses
by Mark Perry
Nevertheless, Abbott's path to the Baha'i Faith was a journey that challenged
many of his childhood ideals and also opened to him endless opportunities.
His was a social environment devoted not to justice for the descendants of
slaves but to an oppression that cannot but be recognized as a medieval
anachronism; his was a suppressed culture ignorant of its own potential;
his was the only people in America forbidden to read and to gain thereby
all the advantages locked up in the written treasuries of past ages; his
was a people whose utter despair sparked what may be described as one of
the greatest manifestations of faith--pure and persevering--that Western
Christianity has ever witnessed; and his was a life of humanitarian service
that, although imperfect and compromised by circumstances, must be regarded
as one of the most remarkable achievements in the history of American
society.
There were others of Abbott's generation who won the laurels for representing
African-Americans in academia, politics, education, science, medicine, the
arts and international affairs; others who demonstrated greater talents;
others who more surely captured the imagination, admiration and affection of
the public, and still others whose names seem more securely fixed in the
memory of posterity. Nevertheless, Abbott's contribution remains
unprecedented and all the more distinguished by the fact that he was one of
only a handful among his peers and contemporaries in the elite of American
society - those of African and European background - to embrace the Baha'i
Faith.
The African slaves in America, though illiterate, were clearly people of
the Book, for in the words of the Bible they gained their solace and
spiritual strength. The power of the word can perhaps be measured by
both the assiduity with which illiteracy was forced upon the enslaved
population, and by the alacrity with which Robert Abbott took up his pen
and the advantages of law to champion the rights of his brothers and
sisters still struggling under the heels and shadows of slavery's
inheritors. Out of Chicago, where the Faith of Baha'u'llah was first
mentioned in America, his weekly newspaper, the Defender, made its first
tentative claims for the ears of oppressor and oppressed alike. Abbott
survived by unstinting toil and effort; by pennies, nickels and dimes,
and by the unfailing aid of friends and family. His makeshift and
inauspicious beginnings seemed barren, miserable and all but ridiculous.
The slaves' descendants had had free access to the word for only one
generation. They were still barred from proper schooling and thus
remained, for the most part, beyond the reach of any literature. They
had minimal economic resources and commercial experience to support such
an enterprise. They were yet to contend with innumerable and powerful
enemies in both the rural and urban societies. They had no example to
follow, no traditions to recall, no elders to guide them in an
unfamiliar world. To found a newspaper for the African-American masses
in 1905 seemed the height of folly, the creation of a deluded
imagination, and at best woefully premature in a city the internal
political and social terrors of which were typified in those years by
the notorious "jungle" of the Stockyards, ominously overshadowing
Abbott's original readership in the streets of Chicago's South Side.
Yet slowly the venture took wing, beginning on 5 May 1905 as a newsletter
the size of a handbill, sixteen by twenty inches, six columns, and four
pages, and running to three hundred copies. From 1909 to 1912 the Defender
won its first loyalty from the public by a muckraking campaign against
Chicago's notorious red light district - known as the "Levee" - which
festered on the doorstep of the African-American community. In 1912 - the
portentous year when 'Abdu'l-Baha, the Son of Baha'u'llah and His appointed
successor, visited North America to spread His Father's Faith - the first
regular newsstand sales began. The publisher was his own delivery man,
depositing papers while gathering news in the neighborhoods and storefronts.
In 1915 the handbill finally reached the size of a standard newspaper, at
eight columns and eight pages. By 1916 there were subscribers in seventy-one
localities in the United States.
In May 1917, twelve years after its founding, the Defender boldly launched
a highly successful campaign promoting the mass exodus of African-Americans
from the stagnant rural south to the "promised land" of the vibrant,
war-driven cities of the North, swelling the African-American population of
Chicago alone from 40,000 to 150,000 in a few years and eventually seeing
them arrive at the daily rate of 1,000. Financial success was achieved by
1918, along with the power that catapulted Abbott to the foremost ranks of
African-American political leaders that included W.E.B. Dubois, A. Philip
Randolph, and Marcus Garvey. In 1921 the Defender moved into its own plant,
a remodeled synagogue. Abbott became a millionaire and by 1929 drew a salary
of $2,000 a week. The Depression and mismanagement brought the business
nearly to and end in the mid-1930s, yet Abbott recovered and upon his death
in February 1940 bequeathed to his heirs a viable newspaper that is still
publishing today from its South Side headquarters.
--the following is part 3 of an October 10th, 1995 article from the
Michigan Chronicle
Robert S. Abbott and the Chicago Defender: A Door to the
Masses
by Mark Perry
Little did readers across the nation know that for most of his career Abbott
had been inspired by the Baha'i Faith. In 1912, when the Defender's first
newsstand sales began, 'Abdu'l-Baha visited Chicago three times, and Abbott
attended His first talk in the city at Jane Adams's Hull House. Referring
to the African-Americans and whites in America, 'Abdu'l-Baha said that:
"...numerous points of partnership and agreement exist between the two
races; whereas the one point of distinction is that of color. Shall this,
the least of all distinctions, be allowed to separate you as races and
individuals? In physical bodies, in the law of growth, in sense endowment,
intelligence, patriotism, language, citizenship, civilization and religion
you are one and the same. A single point of distinction exists--that of
racial color. God is not pleased with - neither should any reasonable or
intelligent man be willing to recognize - inequality in the races because
of this distinction.
"But there is need of a superior power to overcome human prejudices, a
power which nothing in the world of mankind can withstand and which will
overshadow the effect of all other forces at work in human conditions.
That irresistible power is the love of God... Baha'u'llah has proclaimed the
oneness of the world of humanity. He has caused various nations and divergent
creeds to unite. He has declared that difference of race and color is like
the variegated beauty of flowers in a garden... Let all associate therefore,
in this great human garden even as flowers grow and blend together side by
side without discord or disagreement between them."
On that Occasion Abbott met 'Abdu'l-Baha, Who placed His hand on
Abbott's head and said, as Abbott recalled years later, "He would get
from me some day a service for the benefit of humanity."
Little is known about Abbott's relationship with the Baha'i community in the
years after his meeting with 'Abdu'l-Baha in 1912 and before his conversion
in 1934, but his interest in the Faith was sustained in various ways. He was
a member of the Chicago commission on Race Relations, which investigated the
causes of the 1919 Chicago race riot. Two house-bombing victims of the riot,
Mrs. Mary Byron Clarke and her husband, both active Baha'is, were included
in the Commission's report and may have caught Abbott's attention. Another
Baha'i, Dr. Zia Bagdadi, "was, as a fellow Baha'i recalled, the one white
man who went into the African-American sections during the riot and brought
food to the hungry."
Of all the Chicago Baha'is, Dr. Bagdadi ranked, along with Miss Kaukab
MacCutcheon, as the most active promoter of the Baha'i Faith among the
city's African-Americans; moreover, he was among the American Baha'is most
dedicated to the principle of race unity. Since he served as one of
'Abdu'l-Baha's attendants during his days in Chicago in 1912, it is quite
likely that Dr. Bagdadi first met Abbott at the Hull House talk and was
present when 'Abdu'l-Baha spoke to the fledging publisher. In the 1930's
Bagdadi, like MacCutcheon before him, succeeded in publishing Baha'i
articles" in the Defender. After Abbott's conversion Shoghi Effendi
('Abdu'l-Baha's grandson and His appointed successor) wrote through his
secretary to Dr. Bagdadi, stating that Abbott "may truly be regarded as
your spiritual son." Thus is appears that Abbott's primary connection with
the Baha'i community before his conversion was his friendship with Dr.
Bagdadi. Nothing more of this friendship is yet known.
As early as 1924 the Baha'i Faith won a degree of allegiance from Abbott
that resulted in his being included, with his wife, Helen, in the Chicago
Baha'i community membership list. Abbott's interest led him to seek and
read many Baha'i books and continued to inspire him until at last he became
a Baha'i during the 1934 National Baha'i Convention.
On Sunday, 3 June, the final day of that Convention, held in Foundation
Hall at the Baha'i House of Worship in Wilmette, those assembled witnessed
a touching and impressive incident." Dr. Bagdadi described the event a few
days later in a letter to Shoghi Effendi: "Just before the closing of this
Convention, speaking on the subject of publicity, I happened to think of Dr.
Abbott, publisher of a newspaper in Chicago. I mentioned how I succeeded in
publishing Baha'i articles on the first page of his paper. As I finished
this statement, someone in the audience shouted, "Dr. Abbott is now here
with us." The Delegates expressed their desires to hear a word from him,
and he responded by declaring his faith in the Baha'i Cause! This was one
of the happiest moments in the Convention."
©Copyright 1995, Chicago Defender
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