Black Agenda Report
Black Agenda Report
News, commentary and analysis from the black left.

  • Home
  • Africa
  • African America
  • Education
  • Environment
  • International
  • Media and Culture
  • Political Economy
  • Radio
  • US Politics
  • War and Empire

ESSAY: Black Folks and Foreign Policy, June Jordan, 1983.
Editors, The Black Agenda Review
25 Mar 2026
🖨️ Print Article
June Jordan

“Who will we become if we remain the silent partners to this white arrogance?”

Acidly sarcastic yet full of bitter truth, June Jordan’s essay “Black Folks and Foreign Policy” contains the kind of hard critique that Black folk need right now. Published in the June 1983 issue of Essence magazine — you read that right, Essence magazine — Jordan’s piece is a short and sharp indictment of Black complicity with US imperialism, and the terrible distance that has emerged between Black folks and US imperialism’s global victims. 

In “Black Folks and Foreign Policy,” Jordan returns to the house negro-field negro dichotomy popularized by Malcolm X in his “Message to the Grass Roots” speech, given on November 10, 1963, at the Northern Negro Grass Roots Leadership Conference in Detroit. But where Malcolm was speaking at a moment that appeared to be on the cusp of Black revolution, led by the Black masses — by the “field Negroes” — two decades later, Jordan laments that “now every last one of us is a house nigger.” She charges that Black folk in the United States have retreated to the apparent comfort of the “Big House,” and here, again, she echoes Malcolm X’s comment on the disturbed psychology of the House Negro represented by their identification with the Plantation Master. As Malcolm stated, “Imagine a Negro: “Our government”! I even heard one say “our astronauts.” They won’t even let him near the plant – and “our astronauts”! “Our Navy” – that’s a Negro that is out of his mind.”

For Jordan, Black folks in the United States have come to occupy the Big House. And the field? Jordan writes: “The fields beyond belong to the Vietnamese, the Black peoples of Southern Africa, the Palestinians of Northern Africa, and the Brown and Black peoples of Nicaragua — our victim cousins making their way to freedom.” Yet Jordan also recognizes that US imperialism knows that the separation of house and field negroes allows the system to continue — and that the Big House will only catch fire if we “join our cousins in the field.” And as Malcolm X once stated, when that fire comes, we can only pray “for a wind, for a breeze.”

We reprint June Jordan’s “Black Folk and Foreign Policy” below.

Black Folks and Foreign Policy

June Jordan

Used to be a time when most of us were field niggers. Back then hardly any of us stayed up in the Big House, watching de Massa do his thing, throwing salt or arsenic in the soup. But now every last one of us is a house nigger, for a fact. From Brooklyn to Los Angeles, we all stay in the Big House and, what’s more, we pays de Massa taxes for our troubles!

This Big House belongs to me and you. The fields beyond belong to the Vietnamese, the Black peoples of Southern Africa, the Palestinians of Northern Africa, and the Brown and Black peoples of Nicaragua—our victim cousins making their way to freedom. And whether they speak Spanish or Xhosa or Arabic, these new field niggers expect the rest of us here in the Big House to watch de Massa and take appropriate care of de Massa’s soup!

Why don’t we do that?

We can’t say we’re too few or too weak or too ignorant! How many of our victim cousins own a pair of jeans? How many of them own a radio or have the choice between meat and brown rice?

Over here we eat so much we have to jog around the block. We walk away from public libraries that can tell us of the life of Fannie Lou Hamer and how to build a nuclear bomb. We have telephones and 35 million other house niggers we can call.

Yet, how can we hope to keep our jobs, our books, our music, our base of safety from the avaricious Massa, unless we make this Big House safe for the needy from Soweto to Beirut to Managua to Detroit? Who will we become if we remain the silent partners to this white arrogance?

Everyday de Massa spends your and my piece-a money on nuclear blippety-do and general killer equipment. He delivers more than 6.8 million dollars a day to Israel—a country that has fewer people in it than the city of Detroit! Our money flies to Israel in the form of planes and tanks that do de Massa’s dirty work: Israel sells the stuff straight to South Africa or peddles it elsewhere to subjugate any First World peoples resistant to Israeli/South African/American rule. Can you imagine Detroit with an extra 6.8 million dollars a day pouring into it? 

Granted de Massa and his friends have no business assuming God created the fields of the earth for a white man’s paradise plantation. But we have no excuse letting them take our piece-a money to carry out their fantasies.

This year, Representative Ronald V. Dellums (D. Calif.) is a leading plaintiff in an extraordinary lawsuit (Sanchez v. Reagan) against the President and the Secretary of State, among others. He charges the President with violating the Constitution and the War Powers Act by conducting a war without congressional approval (in 1981, Reagan approved 19 million dollars for the CIA’s efforts to “destabilize” Nicaragua’s revolutionary government).

Is this man crazy?

Well, no. He understands that the heart that hates niggers in the Big House is the same one hatting niggers in the field. He knows that if the house niggers and the field niggers ever got together, Massa would be paying overdue!

Inside the Big House our mothers and grandmothers worked down on their knees so that we could stand up. They kept their eyes on a house ahead of them, a house full of family come to freedom. Now we sleep inside the Big House. Will we let ourselves and our family in the fields just grovel down and die, domesticated by de Massa? Or will we join our cousins in the field — and clean it up?

June Jordan, “Black Folks and Foreign Policy,” Essence, June 1983

Also see June Jordan, “Apologies to All the People in Lebanon,” (1982) and “The Beirut Jokebook,” (1982). 

June Jordan
Black politics
Internationalism
compradors

Do you need and appreciate Black Agenda Report articles? Please click on the DONATE icon, and help us out, if you can.


Related Stories

Glen Ford, BAR Executive Editor
Time to Sharpen Our Weapons and Wits
27 May 2026
Six years ago, George Floyd was murdered by police.
Gary Wilson
From Louisiana to Havana: Law as a weapon against Black power and liberation
20 May 2026
The same legal machinery that once protected Jim Crow segregation has found a new way to strip Black voters of political power without touching
Mark P. Fancher
If Iran has the Strait of Hormuz, What Can Black People Use for Leverage and Power?
13 May 2026
Tennessee just erased its only majority-Black voting district.
Mark P. Fancher
Political Snobbery Delays Black Liberation
29 April 2026
The conditions are ripe for growing Black political consciousness, but revolutionary movements must broaden their reach to all sectors and clas
Margaret Kimberley, BAR Executive Editor and Senior Columnist , ​​​​​​​ Ajamu Baraka, BAR editor and columnist
Ajamu Baraka Remembers Rev. Jesse Jackson
18 February 2026
What is Jesse Jackson’s legacy? Ajamu Baraka, Black Agenda Report editor and columnist, provides his reflections.
Editors, The Black Agenda Review
ESSAY: Resurrection City: The Dream…The Accomplishments, Jesse Jackson, 1968
18 February 2026
“The Poor People’s Campaign is the greatest single challenge ever unleashed upon our colonial system.”
Anthony Karefa Rogers-Wright
Breaking it Down with Barron: The New York City Mayoral Race, New York City Politics, and a Primer for an Independent Black Revolutionary Polity
30 July 2025
Charles Barron dissects the NYC mayoral race, Mamdani’s struggles with Black voters, and why independent Black radical politics are e
Jon Jeter
Mamdani’s Train is Running But Blacks Wonder if There is Space for Them
02 July 2025
Zohran Mamdani’s democratic socialist vision won NYC’s primary but lost Black voters to scandal-plagued Cuomo by 20 points, exposing the l
Kamala Harris and Donald Trump
Margaret Kimberley, BAR Executive Editor and Senior Columnist
Fear is Still the Motivation for Black Voters
27 November 2024
Kamala Harris is now a historical footnote who is heading for the dustbin of history.
Charisse Burden-Stelly, PhD
Harry Haywood, Black People, and the 2024 U.S. Election
27 November 2024
Harry Haywood’s work is a guiding light to help Black people analyze our position in the U.S.

More Stories


  • Anthony Karefa Rogers-Wright
    Fourth and Long: The Curious Juxtaposition of Jaxson Dart and Colin Kaepernick
    03 Jun 2026
    The same sports media that celebrate Jaxson Dart's endorsement of Donald Trump called Kaepernick's anti-police violence protest disrespectful. The racial double standard has not changed since the…
  • Raymond Nat Turner, BAR poet-in-residence
    Short word problems: do the math
    03 Jun 2026
    "Short word problems: do the math" is the latest from BAR's Poet-in-Residence.
  • Dhoruba bin-Wahad
    Dhoruba Bin Wahad, Co-Founder of Black Liberation Army, Reflects on the Legacy of Assata Shakur and Revolutionary Sacrifice
    03 Jun 2026
    On May 30, 2026, a Celebration of the Life and Legacy of Assata Shakur was held at the Riverside Church in New York City. Dhoruba Bin Wahad, co-founder of the Black Liberation Army, wrote these words…
  • Erica Caines
    The Persecution of Kaia Sealy and the Manufactured Crisis in Trinidad and Tobago
    03 Jun 2026
    Trinidad and Tobago's Prime Minister says she backs Trump's conservatism and capitalism, and the criminal case against a hairdresser paralyzed in a police shooting shows exactly what that partnership…
  • Clau O'Brien Moscoso
    Bolivia in Crisis: In Conversation with Evo Morales
    03 Jun 2026
    Former Bolivian president Evo Morales Ayma spoke with Black Agenda Report correspondent Clau O’Brien Moscoso.
  • Load More
Subscribe
connect with us
about us
contact us