2025-11-14
31 分钟This is The Guardian.
Welcome to The Guardian Long Read, showcasing the best long-form journalism covering culture, politics and new thinking.
For the text version of this and all our long reads, go to TheGuardian.com forward slash long read.
A radical Jamaican journalist in 1920s London by Yvonne Singh, read by Carl Queensborough.
There was no greater vantage point to see America burn than the Pennsylvania Railroad.
Working in the summer of 1919 as a dining car waiter, Claude McKay was so fearful that he had resorted to traveling with a revolver secreted in his starched white jacket.
During this volatile time, which became known as the US's Red Summer, a wave of racial violence engulfed the country.
In a situation replicated across the Western world, hundreds of thousands of first World War veterans had returned home and were now looking for work.
Among them were black troops who had fought for the Allied powers.
and hoped that they would be awarded equal rights in return for their service.
It was not to be.
Competition for labor and jobs would reveal ugly prejudices and trigger a prolonged spell of rioting and lynching across the US.
Between April and November 1919, hundreds of people, most of them black Americans, were killed and thousands injured.
McKay, a 28-year-old Jamaican immigrant and aspiring poet, was shaken by the violence.
It was the first time I had ever come face to face with such manifest, implacable hit of my race, and my feelings were indescribable," he later said.
I had heard of prejudice in America, but never dreamed of it being so intensely bitter.
The experience would prove formative to his writing.
During the Red Summer riots, he wrote the impassioned sonnet, If We Must Die.
It was published in 1919 by the New York-based leftist publication, The Liberator, which had been founded by Max Eastman and his sister, Crystal.
The powerful verse, acknowledged by one contemporary as the Marseillais of the American Negro, concluded with the lines, It established McKay, who was living in Harlem at the time, as a literary talent.