Ralph Bunche an American Icon

Of all the great leaders in this nation to me Ralph Bunche stands out as a true american hero.
He paved the way for Andrew Young and Condi Rice!
He was a man who maintaned under great stress, and attacks from the right and left.
The black left accused him of being a sell out, an uncle tom, and the right
accused him of being a Communist.
McCarthy labeled him a Communist until he showed up to a senate hearing with a true
Communist, who said Bunche was no Communist.
Also In 1939, the Republican National Committee asked Bunche to conduct research on why black voters defected from the party in the two previous national elections (Rivilin 1990, 8-9).
http://www.britannica.com/nobel/art/obunche001p1.jpg
Ralph Johnson Bunche (August 7, 1904 – December 9, 1971) was an American political scientist and diplomat who received the 1950 Nobel Peace Prize for his mediation in Palestine in the late 1940s that led to an armistice agreement between the Jews and Arabs in the region. He was the first African-American, and first individual of non-European ethnicity or race to be so honored in the history of the Prize.
Bunche was born in Detroit, Michigan to an African-American family; his father was a barber, his mother an amateur musician. They moved to Los Angeles when he was a child to improve his parents' health. His parents died soon after, and he was raised by his grandmother, who looked "white" but was an active member of the black community.
Bunche was a brilliant student, a top debater, and the valedictorian (top ranked student) of his graduating class at Jefferson High School. He attended the University of California, Los Angeles and graduated summa cum laude in 1927 -- again as the valedictorian of his class. Using the money his community raised for his studies, and a scholarship from the University, he studied for a master's and a doctorate in political science at Harvard. He chaired Howard University's Department of Political Science from 1928 until 1950. He lived in the Brookland neighborhood of Washington, DC.
In 1936 Bunche authored a pamphlet entitled A World View of Race. In it Bunche wrote: "And so class will some day supplant race in world affairs. Race war will then be merely a side-show to the gigantic class war which will be waged in the big tent we call the world."
World War II years
Bunche spent time during World War II in the Office of Strategic Services (the predecessor of the CIA). before joining the State Department In 1943 Bunche went to the State Department where he became associate chief of the division of dependent area affairs under Alger Hiss. He became, with Hiss, one of the leaders of the Institute of Pacific Relations (IPR).
He participated in the preliminary planning for the United Nations at the San Francisco Conference of 1945, and in 1946 he was a member of the first U.S. delegation to the U.N. He then became an employee of the U.N. as the first Director of its new Trusteeship Department, at the appointment of Secretary-General Trygve Lie.
.N. mediator
Beginning in 1947, he was involved with the Arab-Israeli conflict. He served as assistant to the U.N. Special Committee on Palestine, and thereafter as the principal secretary of the U.N. Palestine Commission. In 1948 he traveled to the Middle East as the chief aide to Count Folke Bernadotte, who had been appointed by the U.N. to attempt to mediate the conflict. In September, Bernadotte was assassinated by members of the radical Zionist group Lehi. Bunche became the U.N.'s chief mediator and concluded the task with the signing of the 1949 Armistice Agreements, the work for which he received the Peace Prize and many other honors.
He continued to work for the United Nations, mediating in other strife-torn regions including The Congo, Yemen, Kashmir, and Cyprus, eventually rising to the position of undersecretary-general in 1968.
As a prominent African-American, Bunche was an active and vocal supporter of the civil rights movement, though he never actually held a titled position in the major organizations of the movement.
Bunche died in 1971 and is buried in Woodlawn Cemetery in The Bronx.
bust of Ralph Bunche, Bunche Hall UCLAA bust of Ralph Bunche, on the entrance to Bunche Hall, overlooks the Sculpture Garden at UCLA.
Ralph Bunche Park is in New York City, across First Avenue from the United Nations headquarters. Ralph Bunche house is in the Brookland neighborhood of Washington, DC, where he resided for many years.
Bunche is a recipient of the Silver Buffalo Award, the highest adult award given by the Boy Scouts of America.

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1 Comments:
I was priviledged to hear Dr Bunche speak at Texas Christian University in 1961. I had grown up in a small TX town where there was a "white" main street & a "black" main street; the public schools were "seperate but equal". I was mesmerized by Dr Bunche, not only for his candor and straight talk, but by the fact that he was a black man of immense intellect. He totally changed my perspective in one evening. Although I'd never thought about it, I realized that skin tone had absolutely nothing to do with intelligence. He truly changed my life!
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