
2010 FEBRUARY 21
Reverend
Peterson broadcasts his politically incorrect message from L.A. daily.
Andrew Klavan
A Man
Alone
Jesse Lee Peterson versus the “black experience”
Winter 2010
In December 2001, the Toyota Motor Corporation
held a public meeting at the Los Angeles Chamber of Commerce in
conjunction with racial activist Jesse Jackson. The purpose of the
gathering was to discuss Toyota’s “Twenty-First Century Diversity
Strategy,” a ten-year program worth some $7.8 billion in contracts for
minority-owned businesses. At even a casual glance, the program seemed
a capitulation to Jackson, who had threatened to call for a black
boycott of the carmaker over some ads that he deemed racist. Toyota’s
denials that it had given in to racial extortion rang unconvincing.
Also in attendance that day was another black minister named Jesse—the
Reverend Jesse Lee Peterson. Peterson is the staunchly conservative
head of the Brotherhood Organization of a New Destiny, or BOND, which
is dedicated to “rebuilding the family by rebuilding the man”—educating
males, mostly black males, about personal strength and responsibility.
Peterson is also Jackson’s sworn nemesis and calls him, among other
things, a “racist demagogue” and a “problem profiteer.” For two years
prior to the Toyota meeting, he’d been holding rallies declaring Martin
Luther King, Jr. Day a “National Day of Repudiation of Jesse Jackson.”
So when it came time for the Q&A, Peterson asked Toyota’s reps if
BOND could apply for its grants without joining Jackson’s Trade Bureau
at an entry fee of up to $2,500.
“All hell broke loose in the room,” Peterson writes in his book
Scam:
How the Black Leadership Exploits Black America. “Several blacks
got up and started screaming obscenities at me.” Jesse Jackson
denounced “some parasites who want to pick up apples from trees they
didn’t shake.” When Peterson tried to leave the meeting, he claims that
Jesse’s son Jonathan confronted him and shoved him in the chest, while
others surrounded him, shouting obscenities.
Peterson sued, claiming that Jesse Jackson threatened him and that
Jonathan assaulted him. The jury split 6–6 on the assault charge, and
it was settled out of court. A lengthy 6–6 split on the other charges
ended when, according to the
Los Angeles Times, three jurors,
still professing to believe Peterson, surrendered to the argument that
he hadn’t proved his claims. Though Jesse Jackson had to admit under
oath that his Trade Bureau played a role in distributing the Toyota
grants—and though he acknowledged the “parasites” remark—he and his son
walked away largely unscathed.
I couldn’t help but think of Jesse Jackson
when I visited Peterson at BOND recently. I couldn’t help but think of
Jackson’s Rainbow/PUSH Coalition, with its monumental marble
headquarters in Chicago and branches in major cities around the
country. BOND’s offices, by contrast, are in a shabby storefront
sitting amid furniture stores, gas stations, and billboards in a flat
and dispiriting stretch of L.A.’s Mid-City West section. Whereas
Rainbow/PUSH reportedly receives double-digit millions in corporate
grants and sponsorships, BOND gets by on about half a million dollars a
year in mostly private donations (though some money comes in from
Toyota since the 2001 brouhaha). Its Home for Boys, a gabled house in a
pleasantly leafy residential neighborhood nearby, can hold eight
residents at a time, with some sharing rooms. That, along with BOND’s
After-School Character Building Program, which takes on ten to 12 kids
for six to nine weeks, represents an effort no larger than, say, a
church Sunday school: about 70 boys have graduated from both programs
so far. BOND chapters begun in Flint and Lansing, Michigan, have had to
close down for lack of funds.
But if BOND is austere, it nonetheless provides Peterson with a
platform from which to speak his indomitable piece. The building
includes a rudimentary chapel—a cross, a podium, maybe 30 office
chairs—where he preaches to a small congregation every Sunday (the
sermons are later posted on his website and YouTube). There’s also an
admirably equipped studio from which he puts on a radio and Internet
call-in show five mornings a week. As BOND’s president and CEO, he
makes regular TV appearances with Fox News stalwarts Bill O’Reilly and
Sean Hannity (who serves on BOND’s advisory board). He also writes a
no-holds-barred column on the popular conservative Christian website
WorldNetDaily, and he makes occasionally raucous speaking appearances,
including a recent debate at Yale University in which he denounced
affirmative action, to predictable hisses from the Yale Political Union.
Still, the contrast between Jesse Jackson’s wealth and fame and Jesse
Lee Peterson’s relatively modest circumstances seems an object lesson
in the fate of competing narratives and identities. The great social
thinker Shelby Steele has written that to “be black” in America
requires the wearing of a mask. Either you are a “challenger,” like
Jackson, who essentially tells whites: “I judge you racist until you do
something—such as giving me money—to prove otherwise.” Or you are a
“bargainer,” like Barack Obama, who says, “I will not use racism
against you, if you will not use race against me.”
But Jesse Lee Peterson will not “be black” in that sense at all. “The
‘Black Experience’ is a myth used to control people,” he has written.
His approach to the problems facing America’s entrenched black
underclass is profoundly personal. And his comparatively marginal place
in the culture raises the possibility that, for a public black in
America, to be a man only is to be a man alone.
Most black Americans are suffering not because
of racism but the lack of moral character,” Peterson tells me. We are
sitting in his office in BOND’s cramped second story. It’s a threadbare
space: cheap desk, cheap chairs, some books on cheap shelves, some
photos of friends and BOND graduates hanging on the off-white walls or
propped against them. “About 50 years ago, the government came in under
Lyndon B. Johnson, and it said to black people, ‘We’re gonna take care
of you. You can’t make it because of racism. But you can’t have a
father in the home, you can’t have a man in your home.’ ” He’s alluding
to welfare systems that subsidized single mothers and thus discouraged
marriage. “And many black people decided to go with that, and they took
the fathers out, and the government became the daddy of the family. And
the so-called civil rights leaders became the head of the people . . .
and they have managed to brainwash, dumb down, and demoralize the
people for their own personal gain.”
Like many outspoken conservatives, Peterson is only noticed by the
mainstream media when he makes statements that are, I suspect,
purposely calibrated to shock and annoy them: “Thank God for slavery”
(because it brought blacks out of Africa to America) and “Barack Obama
hates white people.” Like many black conservatives, he is subject to
continual name-calling and racial slurs. One man even pulled a gun on
him when he recognized him in a restaurant, Peterson says, and others
have threatened violence against the radio stations that run his show.
But in appearance and behavior, at least, he doesn’t fit the firebrand
mold. He’s a slender man of average height with a relaxed, quiet
aspect. A cleft palate, not repaired until he was in his teens, left
him with a slight speech impediment, and he has developed a careful
manner of speaking, not ferocious at all, not even in the pulpit. He is
self-effacing and humorous and notes his own lapses in grammar and
eloquence by telling me simply and without apology, “I didn’t get a
great education.” He is scrupulously direct and thorough when answering
questions, and his worldview is strikingly coherent and precise.
Like Steele—who provides both a blurb and a frontispiece quotation for
Peterson’s autobiography,
From Rage to Responsibility—Peterson
decries the transformation of the civil rights movement from a
principled appeal to the American creed to a politicized shakedown of
guilt-ridden whites. He condemns the government subsidies of single
motherhood that have helped set loose a plague of black illegitimacy
and its attendant plagues of generational poverty and crime. (See “
Heralds of a
Brighter Black Future,” Spring 2005.) And he bemoans the black
culture of dependency on government support that even welfare workers
privately call “welfare psychosis.”
But Peterson is no metropolitan academic. Despite his quiet demeanor
and delivery, his message is charged with that old-time religion. Where
Steele views the last 40 years of civil rights activism as a complex
and poisonous blend of white guilt, black opportunism, and government
incompetence and corruption, Peterson sees an intentional power grab by
an anti-American Left, a self-interested attempt to destroy the nation
by destroying manhood and marriage, part of the ongoing and eternal
struggle between the forces of Good and Evil. “You cannot control a
moral people,” he tells me. “You have to keep them immoral in order to
control them.”
When Peterson starts talking, the words
I
don’t agree with everything he says, but . . . leap screaming into
your mind. Even conservative commentator Dennis Prager, who serves on
BOND’s advisory board and calls Peterson “one of the handful of great
men anyone is privileged to meet in a lifetime,” makes a similar
disclaimer in his foreword to the autobiography. It’s a gesture of
mental self-defense, I think, against a preacher who seems very
peacefully and yet relentlessly to say what has become, in the current
American narratives of race and gender, virtually unsayable.
Take Peterson’s vision of restoring the lost black family, which is
unflinchingly religious and traditional. “There is a spiritual order to
life that was ordained by God,” he tells me. “And that order is God in
Christ, Christ in man, man over woman, woman over children. And it’s
not an ego trip, it’s just a spiritual order, that men are subject to
Christ and women are subject to men.”
At this point on the interview tape, you can hear me start to stammer
hilariously.
I don’t agree with everything he says, but. . . .
And yet, at the same time I’m stammering, several thoughts crowd in on
me. First, Peterson’s traditionalism is only an echo of Paul’s advice
to married couples in Ephesians, not to mention John Milton’s deathless
description of Adam and Eve: “He for God only; she for God in him.”
Second, his words are spoken in answer to a community where I’ve
repeatedly heard black women describe black men as “weak” and black men
describe black women as “mean.” Third (and I can’t wait to drop this
comment at my wife’s next dinner party), the happiest middle-class
white families I know are still fashioned on some version of Peterson’s
principle—the husband as head of the household—as long as that
leadership is understood, as Peterson understands it, to be subject to
an overarching moral order of love, gentleness, and grace.
“What men don’t understand is that they represent God in the family, in
the home, and . . . they’re supposed to love what’s right more than
anything else,” Peterson tells me. “And when they love that, then God
dwells in them and works through them to guide them in the right way so
that they can guide their families.”
Peterson’s program for restoring this paradigm
is fashioned from his personal experience—almost, in fact, a
universalization of his autobiography. Born in 1949 in the sleepy
little town of Comer Hill, Alabama, he grew up on the former plantation
where his great-grandparents had labored as slaves. His father would
not acknowledge him, and his mother had moved north to start a family
with another man. Peterson was raised by his grandmother and frequently
disciplined by his grandfather, who managed the old farm for its white
owners. But despite the fact that his great-grandfather had been
murdered by a white mob, and despite the Jim Crow world in which they
lived, “Not once did I hear them blame white folks or say that it was
because we were black,” he tells me. “They understood that it was
wrong, but they understood that it was a
moral issue, it was a
spiritual
issue. And so they taught us not to hate.”
It was not racism that troubled the young Peterson as much as what he
calls a “hunger for father.” He writes in his autobiography: “I used to
yearn, to literally ache in my gut, for him to come into my life and
make himself known to me, and claim me as his son.” Peterson did come
to know his father in his early teens and drew deep satisfaction from
occasional visits to him in East Chicago, Indiana, where he had a
family and owned a laundry business. At 16, Peterson moved in with his
mother and stepfather in the nearby city of Gary and there came to
learn of her deep resentment of the man who denied impregnating her.
“Her anger at him kept her from loving me,” Peterson writes.
On graduating high school, Peterson moved to Los Angeles and was soon
adrift in the sixties counterculture. After a series of odd jobs, he
learned how to play the welfare system. Merely by claiming to be a drug
addict, he was able to cadge $300 a month in government handouts, plus
rent and food stamps. He stopped working altogether, turned to
full-time drug use and sex, and “descended into a pit of
irresponsibility and laziness. It nearly destroyed me.” Peterson and
his friends in South Central L.A. would frequently gather around the
radio to listen to Louis Farrakhan. The fiery Nation of Islam preacher
“made me feel good to be black” and “caused me to hate the white people
around me.” Through most of his thirties, Peterson writes, “I was a
sullen, furious, and racist black man.”
It was another radio preacher who changed Peterson’s direction: Roy
Masters, a British convert from Judaism, who advocated praying to God
for self-knowledge and listening quietly for God’s response. Such
prayers led Peterson to confront his anger, not against whites, but
against his own parents, so that he came to understand himself outside
the context of his skin color. He visited his mother and forgave her
for her anger. She cried. He visited his father and forgave him for his
neglect. The older man was grateful. For Peterson, the experience was
liberating and set him on the path of ordination and a successful,
directed life.
It is, in its general outlines, an archetypal
black American life story—the same arc from poverty and prejudice to
drift and personal degradation to revelation and reclamation that
defines, say,
The Autobiography of Malcolm X or
Manchild in
the Promised Land. What distinguishes Peterson’s story, what
distinguishes Peterson, is the ferociously un-racial, nearly
anti-racial terms in which he came to understand his salvation. Having
nearly lost himself in the narrative of being an angry black man in a
racist America, he now seeks to reclaim angry black men by having them
reproduce his personal narrative of purely individual forgiveness,
liberation, and faith. With emotional, educational, and career
counseling of the young men who come to BOND, “we are putting the
fathers back by showing them how to overcome anger,” he says. “They
have to first forgive their fathers for not being there to guide them
and to fill that emptiness that they feel within themselves. They have
to forgive their mothers for being angry at the fathers and turning the
children away from the fathers. . . . And then they have to stop
resenting themselves. And when they can forgive, then you feel good
within yourself and you can move on with life.”
It seems clear why such a program would have less mass appeal than
Jesse Jackson’s I’m-black-you’re-racist-give-me-something-or-else
approach. Identity politics is easy; forgiveness is hard. The kind of
personal forgiveness that Peterson preaches is more difficult, too,
than the straighten-up-and-do-right Christianity of many more popular
white ministers, like Rick Warren and Joel Osteen, because it requires
an inner revolution rather than outward restraint.
And for now, at least, the evidence of BOND’s effectiveness is purely
anecdotal. Some of the graduates of the program are working for BOND—to
all appearances, happily and effectively. There are a few testimonials
on the website, and there are those smiling pictures of graduates and
participants in Peterson’s office. “One or two didn’t make it,” he
tells me. “But most do.”
Six young men, aged 16 to 30, are currently living in BOND’s nearby
Home for Boys. The place looks exactly like what any parent would
expect a well-tended home filled with males to look like. The bedrooms
are a bit rough-and-tumble in the folded-clothes department but clean
underneath. There are the requisite big-screen TV and X-Box in the
front room, a pleasant kitchen and a usable washer-dryer toward the
back, and a patio with a barbecue outside. Run by a live-in manager and
his assistant, the Home is a place for young men to learn how to find
work, save money, and pay bills. While most of the residents were at
school or work when I visited, 30-year-old Mensah Watts was there doing
the laundry on his day off from one of his two full-time jobs:
maintenance worker at UCLA and clerk at a CVS drugstore. He hopes to
become a writer and is working on a fantasy novel and a memoir in his
rare off hours. He credits Peterson with his reclamation from anger and
rebellion. For all that, however, there is no tracking system for BOND
graduates and no statistics with which to gauge the program’s success.
Statistics for failed approaches, on the other hand, are plentiful.
After 40 years of the racially based politics that Peterson condemns—40
years of activists crying bias, of billions of dollars in
race-sensitive government programs—the black illegitimacy rate, with
its high correlation to poverty levels, has more than tripled, to over
70 percent; the black homicide rate is more than seven times higher
than the combined white and Hispanic rate; and blacks’ average SAT
scores are 200 points below whites’. Whether we agree with everything
the minister says or not, it’s worth wondering if Shelby Steele isn’t
right when he says of Peterson’s life story that it “does what the
entire field of American sociology fails to do. It makes the point that
traditional values are
transformative in themselves and,
therefore, the best antidotes to social dysfunction.”
Andrew Klavan is a City Journal
contributing editor and the
author of such best-selling novels as Don’t Say a Word
and Empire
of Lies
. His new thriller for young adults, The Long Way Home, is out now.