Forget 'The Star-Spangled Banner'—listen to the black national anthem
The first football game I ever attended at Howard University, a historically black college in Washington, D.C., started off like most football games.
When our marching band began playing “The Star-Spangled Banner,” thousands of spectators in the stands stood quietly, some hand over heart, others reflexively mouthing the words of America’s national anthem. But then, after the last lyrics were sung (“…and the home of the brave”), the band paused briefly before launching into “Lift Every Voice and Sing.”
It felt like a recreation of that iconic moment at the 1968 Summer Olympics in Mexico City when black American athletes Tommie Smith and John Carlos each raised a black-gloved fist in silent protest against racism. They had just won the gold and bronze medals in the 200m sprint, respectively, and were standing on the podium, as “The Star-Spangled Banner” played in the background. It was a Black Power salute for the ages.
On Monday Night Football, San Francisco 49ers quarterback Colin Kaepernick followed this tradition of black protest, continuing his ongoing refusal to stand during the national anthem before game time. Kaepernick previously said he won’t “show pride in a flag for a country that oppresses black people and people of color.” While his actions have attracted the support of some, they’ve raised the ire of others, particularly in the days after the 15th anniversary of 9/11 when nationalistic feelings are running high.
But Kaepernick’s protest and those he’s inspired are reminders of America’s unfulfilled promise of freedom to black people. More than a century ago, the man behind “Lift Every Voice and Sing” understood these unfulfilled promises.
In 1900, James Weldon Johnson wrote a poem that would become the lyrics to music written by his brother, John Rosamond Johnson. “Lift Every Voice and Sing” was first performed publicly that same year during a celebration for Abraham Lincoln’s birthday at the segregated Stanton School in Jacksonville, FL. Only 37 years earlier, Lincoln ended slavery by signing the Emancipation Proclamation in 1863, but the post-Civil War Reconstruction era had ended without ensuring equal treatment of black Americans under the law.
Black people weren’t far from their enslaved past, but a hopeful future was coming.
The words of James Weldon Johnson echoed the era’s African-American leaders, Booker T. Washington and W.E.B. Du Bois: Black people weren’t far from their enslaved past, but a hopeful future was coming.
By 1919, however, that future hadn’t arrived. That year, the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) adopted Johnson’s “Lift Every Voice and Sing” as its official song. The year it chose was no coincidence. After World War I ended in 1918, black Americans returned home after fulfilling their patriotic duty to discover that their families were still sharecropping, Southern blacks were still denied the right to vote, and race-based harassment and violence remained a matter of fact in black lives.