John Bracey, a pioneer in Black studies at UMass, dies at 81
Published: 02-06-2023 8:17 PM |
AMHERST — John Bracey, a pioneer in Black studies and founding member of the W.E.B Du Bois Department of Afro-American Studies at the University of Massachusetts, died over the weekend at 81, according to the university.
Chancellor Kumble R. Subbaswamy announced in a campuswide email Monday the passing of Bracey, who came to UMass in 1972 and continued to teach in the department where he helped create one of the nation’s first doctoral programs in African American studies.
“He was a true champion for Black Studies and Black students, and his tireless work made us a much better university,” Subbaswamy wrote.
Subbaswamy thanked Bracey for his historic contributions and cited both his reputation, and the excellence of UMass, as serving to attract well-known author James Baldwin, who taught on campus for several years, and Betty Shabazz, activist and widow of Malcolm X, who earned a doctorate in education. UMass is also home to the archives of both Horace Mann Bond and W.E.B. Du Bois.
Barbara Krauthamer, dean of the College of Humanities & Fine Arts, called Bracey a luminary, and extended condolences to his family.
“John’s lifetime of activism in Black studies, thoughtful leadership, and meaningful student mentorship created a lasting impact that extends far beyond our college and the university,” Krauthamer said.
Bracey was born in Chicago and raised in Washington, attending Howard University and Roosevelt University in Chicago, where he earned his bachelor’s degree in 1964. Throughout the 1960s, Bracey was active in the civil rights, Black liberation and peace movements as part of the Congress of Racial Equality, Chicago Friends of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee, Students for a Democratic Society and the Revolutionary Action Movement.
While serving as a faculty member, Bracey was also a fixture in the region at events, delivering the keynote speech at the Martin Luther King Jr. breakfasts in Amherst on multiple occasions. In 2000, Bracey spoke about “The cost of racism to white America,” observing, “you’re going to have to end racism to have a society worth living in.”
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Seven years later, he spoke at the breakfast about the beloved community, a concept King brought up in the 1960s. “The beloved community is a community of people who love each other because they are human beings,” Bracey said.
In 2018, Bracey was the main speaker at the annual King celebration in Northampton, offering his opinion on Donald Trump’s presidency. “We got through slavery, we can get rid of this fool,” he said.
At UMass, Bracey served in several roles, including as chairman of the department and co-director of the graduate certificate in African Diaspora Studies.
Bracey had been involved in an initiative known as the UMass Black Presence, a website serving as a living history of the experiences, contributions and stories of Black students, alumni, faculty and staff. That project included oral history interviews and research on historical figures.
Yolanda Covington-Ward, who chairs the W.E.B. Du Bois Department of Afro-American Studies, said Bracey was a giant in his field and one of the strongest pillars of the department. His death has left people grieving and trying to come to terms with the loss.
“Indeed, he was an institution within himself,” Covington-Ward said. “His commitment to supporting and guiding our students was invaluable; he impacted the lives of so many students and faculty.”
In 2021, UMass Amherst established the John H. Bracey Jr. Fellowship Fund to provide summer fellowship support for doctoral students in the Afro-American studies department who have achieved candidacy and are engaged in research and writing their dissertations.
Bracey’s writing and research focused on African social and cultural history, radical ideologies and movements, and the history of African American women, while his recent interests focused on the interactions between African Americans and Native Americans, Afro-Latino and Jewish Americans.
His publications include several co-edited volumes, including “Black Nationalism in America,” “African American Women and the Vote: 1837-1965,” “Strangers and Neighbors: Relations between Blacks and Jews in the United States,” co-written with Maurianne Adams, and “African American Mosaic: A Documentary History from the Slave Trade to the Twenty-First Century,” co-authored with Manisha Sinha.
Scott Merzbach can be reached at smerzbach@gazettenet.com.