On September
22, 1950 the world was surprised when an American
diplomat on loan to the United
Nations was awarded the Nobel Peace
Prize. It was not that his
achievement was unworthy—brokering the thorny negotiations that led to an armistice
agreements between Israel and the Arab States ending the bloody war that
began when Israel declared its independence—it was because Ralph Bunche was an African-American.
Bunch was born
in Detroit, Michigan on August 4,
1904 (some sources place the date a year earlier.) His father was a barber serving an
exclusively white clientele—and thus probably passing himself off as white in
his work. Some of his ancestors had been
free since before the American Revolution. His mother was an accomplished amateur
musician. Also in the house hold was his
maternal grandmother, “Nana” Johnson who
had been born into slavery but was also capable of “passing.” Despite their fair completions the family
strongly identified as Black and
lived in that community.
Both parents
were in fragile health and the whole family relocated to Albuquerque, New Mexico in hopes of improvement. Both however soon succumbed—probably to tuberculosis. Bunche, his two sisters, and his grandmother
relocated to Los Angeles.
To help support the family Ralph sold newspapers
and held numerous side jobs, including laying carpets, and being a house boy to a film actor while he
attended Jefferson High School. Despite the time lost to work, he excelled as
both a student and an athlete. He became
valedictorian of his graduating
class, and earned athletic scholarships to the University of California at Los Angeles (UCLA.) While the scholarships paid his school expenses, he earned
his personal expenses by working as a janitor.
He competed as a varsity basketball
player of league championship teams while also competing in Debate and writing for the campus
newspaper. In 1927 Bunche graduated summa cum laude and
valedictorian with a major in international relations.
His
accomplishments were a mater of great pride in his South Los Angeles
neighborhood. The community raised $1000
by subscription to supplement a scholarship so that Bunche could continue his
education at Harvard. He completed his Masters degree in political
science in just a year. He began
teaching at Howard University, the
nation’s most prestigious Black institution in the fall of 1928. For the next six years he alternated terms at
Howard and back at Harvard where he pursued his Doctorate. He was named Chair of Howard’s Department of Political Science, a title he held until 1950 despite
numerous absences to conduct research or in war time or diplomatic service.
He received
many honors and distinctions as a scholar.
The Rosenwald Fellowship in
1932 and 1933 enabled him to conduct research in Africa for a dissertation comparing French rule in Togoland
and Dahomey. The resulting paper won the Toppan Prize for outstanding original
research in the social sciences in 1934.
A fellowship from the Social
Science Research Council from 1936-37 enabled Bunche to do postdoctoral
research at Northwestern University,
the London School of Economics, and
the University of Cape Town in South Africa.
As he was
becoming the acknowledged leading academic on African affairs and European
Colonialism, he began to forcefully expound his sometimes controversial
views. His influential 1936 pamphlet A World View of Race argued, “…class will some day supplant race in world
affairs. Race war will then be merely a side-show to the gigantic class war which will be waged in the
big tent we call the world.” From
1936-40 Bunche was contributing editor to a leftist academic journal, Science
and Society: A Marxian Quarterly.
It was inevitable that
with his credentials and expertise Bunche would be called upon for service
during World War II. He began as a senior annalist on colonial affairs at the Office of Strategic Services (OSS.) There his knowledge of French possessions
helped provide information that kept most of the sub-Saharan colonies in Free
French hands and available as support for eventual action in North Africa. He also provided insight on Nazi attempts to turn South African Boers against the British Empire.
In 1943 Bunche moved to
the State Department where he served
under Alger Hiss as Associate Chief of
the Division of Dependent Area Affairs. There he worked not only on African issues
but as a leader of the Institute
of Pacific Relations, and the Anglo-American
Caribbean Commission.
Bunche was active in preliminary planning for the Dumbarton Oaks Conversations held in
Washington D.C. in 1944 and as an adviser to the U.S. Delegation for the Charter
Conference of the United Nations in 1945. He participated in the drafting
of the Charter. He worked closely with Eleanor Roosevelt in the creation and
adoption of the U.N. Declaration of
Human Rights.
Given his role in the birth of the institution, it
came as no surprise when UN
Secretary-General Trygve Lie asked to “borrow” Bunche from the State
Department in 1946. He was placed in charge
of the Department of Trusteeship to
oversee the numerous dependent areas that were placed under UN Trusteeship
following the war. It was delicate work,
balancing the demands of former colonial masters and the growing anti-colonial
nationalism of countries straining at the “transition” process to
self-government.
In June, 1947
Bunche was assigned to work on the seemingly intractable problem of
confrontation between Jews and Arabs in Palestine. He soon moved
from assistant to the UN Special
Committee on Palestine to Principal
Secretary of the UN Palestine Commission, which was charged with carrying
out the partition approved by the UN General Assembly. When the original
partition plan was dropped amid intense fighting between Arabs and Israelis in early 1948 the UN appointed
Swedish Count Folke Bernadotte as
mediator for the conflict with Bunche as his chief aide. Count Bernadotte was
assassinated in Jerusalem four
months later on September 17 by the Zionist group Lehi.
And Bunche was catapulted to chief mediator on Palestine. It was, theoretically
a “temporary” appointment.
For eleven
months Bunche conducted ceaseless negotiation from his headquarters on the Island of Rhodes. Israeli
negotiator Moshe Dayan later reported on Bunche’s unorthodox style. He often conducted one on one talks with the
parties over supposedly casual games of billiards. He generally kept the parties apart as much
as possible since their mere presence with each other in the same room inflamed
passions and tended to harden positions.
He shuffled the parties in an out getting little concessions here and
there from both parties until he could finally bring them together to sign the 1949
Armistice Agreements made
successively between February and July between Israel and it neighbors, Egypt, Lebanon, Jordon, and Syria.
No party got what they really wanted, but all parties got what they
could live with—at least for a while.
His accomplishments made Bunche an instant
celebrity. He was greeted in New York City by a ticker tape parade and his adopted home town of Los Angeles
declared a Ralph Bunche Day. He was
awarded the Spingarn Prize by the National Association of Colored People (NAACP) in 1949. He was awarded 30 honorary degrees over the
next three years. He could not keep up
with requests for speeches. And all of
this only intensified with the announcement of the Nobel Prize.
Of course,
Bunche was not without critics. His
participation in the avowedly Marxist academic publication, his endorsement of National Negro Congress in the ‘30’s,
and his close association with accused traitor Alger Hiss did not go
unnoticed. He was somewhat protected by
the enormous prestige of the Nobel Prize—and the fact that he was not longer at
the State Department. But he was subjected to an investigation by a Loyalty Board into American diplomats
working at the United Nations in 1953 and had to personally appear and refute
each of 14 spurious charges against him.
Although he had the support of President
Dwight Eisenhower, it was a painful and humiliating experience for him.
Many also did
not appreciate his loud public support for Civil
Rights causes. Academically, he had
participated in the groundbreaking research on American race relations by
Swedish sociologists Gunnar Myrdal
and often spoken out about the absence of scientific evidence for
differentiations among the races. He
publicly supported actions by both the NAACP and the Urban League. He endorsed
the campaigns of non-violent civil disobedience of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. and participated in the 1963 March on Washington. Controversy around him probably cost him
appointment as Secretary of State or
Ambassador to the United Nations under
John F. Kennedy.
The
beneficiaries of his greatest achievement have not looked kindly towards him in
recent years. Palestinians and Israelis have hardened even more toward one
another after years of ongoing conflict and bloodshed. Both wield their own oft revised views of
history as cudgels. And both sides now
feel that Bunche “sold them out” and blame the ongoing conflict in not getting
everything they demanded in those tense negotiations. Compromise and compromisers are no longer
welcome in either camp.
For his part,
the indefatigable Bunche resumed splitting his time numerous educational
commitments, lecturing, and undertaking more missions for the United
Nations. From 1955 to 1967, he was Undersecretary for Special Political
Affairs and from 1968 to his death was Undersecretary-General.
In 1960 Secretary-General Dag Hammarskjöld
appointed him as his special representative to oversee the UN commitments in
the war torn Congo and he served
similarly during conflicts in Cyprus,
Kashmir, and Yemen.
Bunche found
time to teach at Harvard from 1950-52, serve on the New York City Board of Education from 1958-64, serve as a member of
the Harvard Board of Overseers from
1960 to 65, as well as being a board member of trustee of the Institute of International Education,
and a trustee of Oberlin College, Lincoln University, and New Lincoln School.
Bunche died,
evidently of exhaustion, on December 9, 1971 at the age of 68.
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