Little-known aspect of physicist’s life revealed
By Ken Gewertz
Harvard News Office
Thursday, April 12, 2007
Staff photo Rose Lincoln/Harvard News Office
Sylvester James Gates Jr. (from right), Fred Jerome, and Rodger Taylor talk about Einstein’s activism.
Here’s something you probably don’t know about Albert Einstein.
In 1946, the Nobel Prize-winning physicist traveled to Lincoln
University in Pennsylvania, the alma mater of Langston Hughes and
Thurgood Marshall and the first school in America to grant college
degrees to blacks. At Lincoln, Einstein gave a speech in which he called
racism “a disease of white people,” and added, “I do not intend to be
quiet about it.” He also received an honorary degree and gave a lecture
on relativity to Lincoln students.
The reason Einstein’s visit to Lincoln is not better known is that it
was virtually ignored by the mainstream press, which regularly covered
Einstein’s speeches and activities. (Only the black press gave extensive
coverage to the event.) Nor is there mention of the Lincoln visit in
any of the major Einstein biographies or archives.
In fact, many significant details are missing from the numerous
studies of Einstein’s life and work, most of them having to do with
Einstein’s opposition to racism and his relationships with African
Americans.
That these omissions need to be recognized and corrected is the
contention of Fred Jerome and Rodger Taylor, authors of “Einstein on
Race and Racism” (Rutgers University Press, 2006). Jerome and Taylor
spoke April 3 at an event sponsored by the W.E.B. Du Bois Institute for
African and African American Research. The event also featured remarks
by Sylvester James Gates Jr., the John S. Toll Professor of Physics,
University of Maryland.
According to Jerome and Taylor, Einstein’s statements at Lincoln were
by no means an isolated case. Einstein, who was Jewish, was sensitized
to racism by the years of Nazi-inspired threats and harassment he
suffered during his tenure at the University of Berlin. Einstein was in
the United States when the Nazis came to power in 1933, and, fearful
that a return to Germany would place him in mortal danger, he decided to
stay, accepting a position at the recently founded Institute for
Advanced Study in Princeton, N.J. He became an American citizen in 1940.
But while Einstein may have been grateful to have found a safe haven,
his gratitude did not prevent him from criticizing the ethical
shortcomings of his new home.
“Einstein realized that African Americans in Princeton were treated
like Jews in Germany,” said Taylor. “The town was strictly segregated.
There was no high school that blacks could go to until the 1940s.”
Einstein’s response to the racism and segregation he found in
Princeton (Paul Robeson, who was born in Princeton, called it “the
northernmost town in the South”) was to cultivate relationships in the
town’s African-American community. Jerome and Taylor interviewed members
of that community who still remember the white-haired, disheveled
figure of Einstein strolling through their streets, stopping to chat
with the inhabitants, and handing out candy to local children.
One woman remembered that Einstein paid the college tuition of a
young man from the community. Another said that he invited Marian
Anderson to stay at his home when the singer was refused a room at the
Nassau Inn.
Einstein met Paul Robeson when the famous singer and actor came to
perform at Princeton’s McCarter Theatre in 1935. The two found they had
much in common. Both were concerned about the rise of fascism, and both
gave their support to efforts to defend the democratically elected
government of Spain against the fascist forces of Francisco Franco.
Einstein and Robeson also worked together on the American Crusade to End
Lynching, in response to an upsurge in racial murders as black soldiers
returned home in the aftermath of World War II.
The 20-year friendship between Einstein and Robeson is another story
that has not been told, Jerome said, but that omission may soon be
rectified. A movie is in the works about the relationship, with Danny
Glover slated to play Robeson and Ben Kingsley as Einstein.
Einstein continued to support progressive causes through the 1950s,
when the pressure of anti-Communist witch hunts made it dangerous to do
so. Another example of Einstein using his prestige to help a prominent
African American occurred in 1951, when the 83-year-old W.E.B. Du Bois, a
founder of the NAACP, was indicted by the federal government for
failing to register as a “foreign agent” as a consequence of circulating
the pro-Soviet Stockholm Peace Petition. Einstein offered to appear as a
character witness for Du Bois, which convinced the judge to drop the
case.
Gates, an African-American physicist who has appeared on the PBS show
Nova, said that Einstein had been a hero of his since he learned about
the theory of relativity as a teenager, but that he was unaware of
Einstein’s ideas on civil rights until fairly recently.
Einstein’s approach to problems in physics was to begin by asking
very simple, almost childlike questions, such as, “What would the world
look like if I could drive along a beam of light?” Gates said.
“He must have developed his ideas about race through a similar
process. He was capable of asking the question, ‘What would my life be
like if I were black?’”
Gates said that thinking about Einstein’s involvement with civil
rights has prompted him to speculate on the value of affirmative action
and the goal of diversity it seeks to bring about. There are many
instances in which the presence of strength and resilience in a system
can be attributed to diversity.
“In the natural world, for example, when a population is under the
influence of a stressful environment, diversity ensures its survival,”
Gates said.
On a cultural level, the global influence of American popular music
might be attributed to the fact that it is an amalgam of musical
traditions from Europe and Africa.
These examples have led him to conclude that “diversity actually
matters, independent of the moral argument.” Gates said he believes
“there is a science of diversity out there waiting for scholars to
discover it.”
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