Saturday, August 3, 2019
Baldwins Fire Next Time :: Baldwin Fire Next Time Essays
     Baldwin's Fire Next Time                 We always say "Love conquers all" is commonly said and heard in our    daily lives.  Ironically, this is necessarily not true as James Baldwin    views our society.  He illustrates the stereotypes of both Blacks and    Whites.  In his argumentative  autobiography,   The Fire Next Time, the    author brilliantly perceives the idea that love, instead of fear, liberates    society.     To truly "liberate" society, one must discover his/her    individual and personal identity by learning to love.                 Baldwin describes "fear" to be ignorance, and "love" as knowledge.    He joined the congressional church due to fear. He was afraid to become    involved with his friends who began to drink and smoke.  To avoid such    situations, Baldwin was driven into the church because he "supposed that    God and safety were synonymous."  (16)  Timidity blinded him to believe    that following God's words shielded him from the evils of society.  However,    because of Baldwin's love for his church, he reads the Bible, only to    realize that was strictly about the teachings of White people.   He thought    that going to the church will protect him, and shield him against what he    feared.  Instead of freeing the community from discrimination between    Blacks and Whites,  the Bible supported the existence of racial barriers by    teaching one should behave. Realizing the hypprocarcy involved with    Christianity, the author broke away from the congressional church, to    search his own way of liberating the society.                       Baldwin emphasizes that liberation is love, and "love is more    important than color."  (71)  The author states that fear creates the need    for power.  The Nation of Islam was fearful of the Whites  dominating over    the Blacks.  Fear always dominated the minds of black people.  This fear    caused  Elijah to strive for power to liberate the community.  The Nation    of Islam wanted absolute control of the White society. Baldwin was given    the opportunity to become an influential figure in the Nation of Islam    movement, he rejected Elijah Muhammed's offer. He was totally against the    belief that the movement held.                        Baldwin says, "love takes off the masks that we fear we cannot live    without and we know we cannot live within."  (95)  Whites cannot love    because they fear "to be judged by those who are not white.".  Because    Blacks are stereotyped to be "uncivilized", whites have the "private fears    to be projected onto the Negro."  (96)   Fear only promotes further racism,    and the labyrinth of attitudes.  He states that the problem with racial    oppression will never be resolved unless the white man gives up his power.                        Baldwin states that "mirrors can only lie," because they only    reflect the surface of people instead of revealing the deep truth.  					    
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