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From Ike To Mao And Beyond

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  • From Ike To Mao And Beyond

    FROM IKE TO MAO AND BEYOND
    by Bob Avakian

    Revolutionary Worker Online, IL
    April 17 2006

    My Journey from Mainstream America to Revolutionary Communist

    >>From "Chapter One: Mom and Dad" and "Chapter Two: One Nation Under
    God-A '50s Boyhood"

    Revolution #044, April 23, 2006, posted at revcom.us

    Revolution is publishing a series of excerpts from Bob Avakian's
    memoir - as audio recordings of Bob Avakian reading from the book
    are made available online. (See announcement) This week we feature
    sections from Chapter One and Chaper Two.

    >>From Chapter One Mom and Dad Now, my parents weren't just together
    for over sixty years, they were extremely fond of each other the whole
    time. This was something that I always recognized and appreciated,
    and in particular with my mom I always recognized and appreciated her
    compassion and generosity and self-sacrificing qualities. But growing
    up as a boy in the '40s and '50s, in the more middle class stratum that
    I was from, in a lot of ways I kind of took my mother for granted. You
    know, she was always there, she was always supportive, she was always
    helpful, she was always so compassionate and sympathetic, and she was
    always sacrificing for other people in the family or for other people
    beyond the family. But as an adult I actually learned a lot of things
    about my mother, and learned to appreciate her much more fully, than
    I did as a kid. For instance, when she was still pretty young, back
    in the 1930s, she drove her family across the country at one point,
    which was not that common for a woman to do then. Another time, when
    she was teaching high school, there was one student there who needed to
    get certain credits for college-in particular she needed to take Latin,
    but there was no Latin class there. So, just for this girl's benefit,
    my mom arranged to teach Latin. But even more than those incidents,
    I've come to see how I've taken many of her values and made them
    my own.

    Also, my mother had a great love of the outdoors that she'd gotten
    from her family, in particular her father. She liked taking us to the
    mountains and out into nature, to all these beautiful places that I
    learned to love. One time, my younger sister Mary-Lou and myself and
    my parents had gone up into the mountains and on our way back home,
    we had to go through the little, dreary town of Merced, just a little
    ways from Fresno. It was getting to be about lunchtime, and Merced
    was about an hour away, and my mother was very determined that we
    were going to eat in the beautiful setting of the mountains. But the
    rest of us wanted to have ice cream or something, down in Merced.

    Finally after a long discussion we decided to have a vote, and
    my father ended up voting with us two kids to eat in Merced. This
    infuriated my mom and, looking back on it, with good reason. Of course,
    she had the right stand, yet she -didn't win out. But in order to
    try to win, at one point, when we said we were ready to vote on it,
    she said: "Okay, let's have a vote now-who wants to eat lunch up in
    the mountains by a beautiful rippling stream"-she said this in a very
    lilting and appealing voice-"and," she continued, "who wants to eat
    in hot old Merced!" She said the latter with such disdain that you
    would've thought we were going to be eating in a garbage dump.

    Unfortunately, even her way of stacking the argument didn't lead to
    her winning out in that case-although it did become a sort of family
    metaphor for indicating a strong preference while posing as neutral.

    She was completely right, of course, and now I would have no hesitation
    to side with her if she were here. But, that was my mom.

    It shows both her determination and her love for nature.

    I took that in from her and it's been with me ever since. My dad
    grew up on a farm, and later on he very much loved a home that my
    parents had in the Santa Cruz mountains, but as far as roughing it,
    that wasn't really his thing so much. As I said, my dad grew up
    in very modest circumstances, so it wasn't that he was spoiled. But
    "roughing it in nature" wasn't his idea of an ideal vacation the way it
    was for my mom. She often prevailed in that, for which I was very glad.

    My parents met in Berkeley. My mom was a student at Cal, which was
    also somewhat unusual for a woman at that time, and then because
    of the Depression and because my dad was still in law school, they
    couldn't afford to get married. So they were engaged for three years
    before they got married. And during that time, after she graduated
    from Cal and after a year of looking for work, my mom got a job
    teaching school in a small town a couple of hours from Berkeley-she
    taught high school there for two years. She could not say that she
    was engaged while she was teaching, because then they would think
    she would leave once she was married and would fire her. So she had
    to hide the fact that she was engaged, and a number of the guys who
    were teaching at the school were trying to ask her out. It was a very
    awkward thing. But after a couple of years, when my dad finished law
    school, my mom and dad got married.

    While my parents were from different backgrounds, neither of their
    families resisted their marriage. Despite a lot of insularity among
    the Armenian relatives, my father's parents felt the important thing
    was what kind of person you marry, not whether they were an Armenian.

    My mother was pretty readily accepted both because of the attitude of
    my father's parents, but also because she was a very likeable person.

    And my mother learned how to cook some of the Armenian foods,
    and picked up some of the other cultural things. Beyond that, my
    father would not have put up with any crap! So the combination of
    all that meant that she got accepted pretty quickly. I'm not aware
    of friction from my mother's parents toward my dad. They were nice
    people generally, although they too were pretty conservative in a
    lot of ways, and also, to be honest, my father, having graduated from
    law school, was someone who had a certain amount of stature when my
    parents got married.

    Despite the fairly conservative atmosphere in which she was raised,
    my mother was very far from being narrow and exclusive in how she
    related to people. If she came in contact with you, unless you did
    something to really turn her off or make her think that you were a
    bad person, she would welcome and embrace you. And that would last
    through a lifetime. Besides things like the Sunday "sacrifice night"
    meal, my parents, mostly on my mother's initiative, would do other
    "Christian charity" things, like in that Jack Nicholson movie, About
    Schmidt, where he "adopts" a kid from Africa and sends money. But
    they not only paid a certain amount of money, they took an active
    interest-they corresponded, they actually tried to go and visit some
    of the kids or even the people as grown-ups with whom they had had
    this kind of relationship. My mother had a very big heart and very big
    arms, if you want to put it that way. She embraced a lot of people in
    her lifetime. You really had to do something to get her not to like
    you. She was not the kind of person who would reject people out of
    hand or for superficial reasons.

    I remember when I was about four or five years old and somehow from
    the kids that I was playing with, I'd picked up this racist variation
    on a nursery rhyme, so I was saying, "eeny, meeny, miny moe, catch a
    nigger by the toe." I didn't even know what "nigger" meant, I'd just
    heard other kids saying this. And she stopped me and said, "You know,
    that's not very nice, that's not a nice word." And she explained to
    me further, the way you could to a four- or five-year-old, why that
    wasn't a good thing to say. That's one of those things that stayed
    with me. I'm not sure exactly what the influences on my mom were
    in that way. But I do remember that very dramatically. It's one of
    those things that even as a kid makes you stop in your tracks. She
    didn't come down on me in a heavy way, she just calmly explained to
    me that this was not a nice thing to say, and why it wasn't a good
    thing to say. That was very typical of my mother and it obviously
    made a lasting impression on me.

    One thing I learned from my mother is to look at people all-sidedly,
    to see their different qualities and not just dismiss them because
    of certain negative or superficial qualities. And I also learned from
    my -mother what kind of person to be yourself-to try to be giving and
    outgoing and compassionate and generous, and not narrow and petty. I
    think that's one of the main influences my mother had on me.

    >>From Chapter Two One Nation Under God -A '50s Boyhood I had a sort of
    typical American boyhood for the 1950s-a lot of sports, a lot of good
    times (and bad) with my sisters, and a lot of cutting up in school. But
    that doesn't mean it was idyllic or somehow cut off from the world:
    there was the pervasive gender conditioning and there were ways in
    which the big issues of the "grownup world"-segregation, McCarthyism
    and conformism-were expressing themselves even in my boyhood.

    We moved to Berkeley when I was three, and I have a few very sharp
    memories and some impressions from those days. I remember when I was
    told there was no Santa Claus, when I was five years old. We used to
    have Christmas presents on Christmas eve, and my father or one of my
    uncles would dress up as Santa Claus. After you get to be a little
    bit more of a thinking person, you realize that there's always someone
    missing every Christmas eve when you're passing out presents.

    So this Christmas eve, after "Santa" came and we passed around and
    opened up our presents, as I was going to bed my parents came into my
    room and told me, "I guess you've already figured this out, but you
    know there isn't really a Santa Claus." And I said, "yeah, I kind of
    figured that out." I remember that this led to some tension with some
    of the other kids in kindergarten because, of course, when you're a kid
    that age, you may not have that much awareness of or respect for how
    other kids' families are handling this. So you just start saying, "oh
    there's no Santa Claus," but some of the kids still believed there was.

    To give you a sense of the kind of little kid I was, one time I
    got the idea that instead of going to school it would be fun to
    go off and do something else, and another kid and I just completely
    disappeared and never showed up for school. My parents were panicking,
    and in particular my mom was trying to find me, and eventually they
    found us somewhere-we just thought it would be fun to go off and do
    something else that day. Another time, some teenager in the area was
    trying to get me to jump out of a second-story window, promising to
    catch me. I was just about ready to do it, but my mother came along
    and just caught it in the nick of time-she stopped me just as I was
    swinging my legs over the window sill. She was furious. I remember
    little things like that, crazy things that happen but you somehow
    survive-or usually people survive them.

    Sports Sports has been a big part of my life since I was very,
    very young. I think I started playing football and basketball and
    baseball when I was about five. True to his word when he had polio,
    my dad took me out and taught me how to play all these things. It was
    a very important part of his life: he loved sports, and he wanted me
    in particular to take this up-there was a whole thing about being the
    boy in the family at that time, frankly. It's not like my sisters were
    explicitly excluded from this, but this was more of a thing with me,
    being the boy.

    My dad started taking me to Cal football games and basketball games
    from the time I was about four or five years old. I remember every
    year there'd be a parade through downtown Berkeley before the start
    of the football season, and this was one of the highlights of my
    year. The parade made it almost tolerable to have to go back to
    school. Our elementary school was small, but we did have organized
    teams in baseball, basketball and football. We played other schools
    and had city champion-ships; we even had a young kids' team for first
    and second graders, and I played on that when I was six and seven.

    Whenever he could take off from work, my dad would always come to my
    games from the time I was really little. You'd always see him with
    his little eight-millimeter camera taking pictures on the sidelines.

    When I got a little older and I'd throw a pass that was a pretty long
    pass for a fifth or sixth grader, you'd see my dad pacing down the
    sidelines trying to measure how many yards long the pass was. He'd
    say, "33 yards, that was a 33 yard pass for a touchdown." So he gave
    me a lot of encouragement. My dad had this friend-I think he was
    a lawyer who worked with him as a government lawyer when we were
    back in D.C.-and my dad used to write to him all the time in these
    deliberately exaggerated terms, bragging about my sports exploits.

    He'd write about it as though it were professional teams playing,
    sort of in a self-consciously exaggerated way, and then his friend
    would write back.

    In her own way, my mom also shared in my enthusiasm for sports, but my
    dad in particular was just full of passion for it, and he had a lot of
    pride in whatever I was doing. But it wasn't that sort of disgusting
    thing where you put pressure on your kid and you have no appreciation
    for other kids. He wouldn't yell at me when things didn't go well,
    and when we lost the city elementary school championship game in
    football, my parents consoled me, they didn't act like I'd let them
    down. It was never that kind of thing.

    I just loved sports, and whenever I got a chance I tried to play-I
    didn't care if the other kids playing were a lot older than me. So,
    from a very early age, around five or so, I started hanging around
    kids who were older, playing sports-even young teenagers, or ten- or
    eleven-year-old guys. And, of course, one of the big things when you
    get into sports, in this kind of society, is that there's this whole
    macho element to it, and one part of that is you swear a lot. So,
    one day, we were just playing catch with the family, and I think I
    dropped a ball or something, and I said "Oh, shit." Now my parents came
    from the kind of a background where you didn't say things like that,
    especially in public. They didn't get too angry, but they told me that
    what I had said wasn't a very good thing to say and I shouldn't do
    that. So after a little while I looked up at them and said, "Well,
    okay then, but is it all right to say 'hubba hubba'?"-which was
    another thing I'd heard hanging around the older kids playing sports.

    So, as a young boy, I was just football, basketball, baseball all year
    around: from September until the end of November it was football;
    then from December until the spring it was basketball; then in the
    spring and through the summer it was baseball. My life was kind of
    seasonal in that way, and I loved all those sports in their turn,
    in their season.

    When I was six we moved into a new house and it was about equidistant
    between two schools that were in the Berkeley hills. One of them was
    called Cragmont and the other one was called Oxford. I remember my
    parents telling me: "You can go to either school you want. We'll let
    you choose." I said "Okay, but I want to look at them." So, my dad
    drove me around and we looked at both schools, and I picked Oxford
    because, when we drove by it, I could see the basketball courts on
    the playground.

    I was lucky enough to have a good coach when I was coming up. He was
    a student at Cal and took care of the playground in summer and on the
    weekends and after school. But he was also the coach of our teams. I
    remember him fairly fondly-he was a nice guy, not like a military
    drill sergeant. To give you the contrast between him and some of what
    you often see, we had an incident when I was in fourth grade where we
    were behind by a couple of points in a football game, and on the last
    play of the game, I threw a pass for a touchdown and we won the game.

    Or so we thought. Nobody had showed up to referee the game, so the
    coach of the other team was refereeing, and his own team was offsides
    on this play. He called offside on them, and then he came running up
    to the kid who was the captain of our team for that day, and said,
    "They were offside, you wanna take it? you wanna take it?" And the
    poor kid got confused, not knowing what "it" was. He was thinking
    this coach/ref was talking about the touchdown, so he said "Okay,
    we'll take it," and then this coach/ref insisted that "it" meant the
    offside penalty, so we were forced to run the play over again. We
    ran the play again, I threw the pass again, but this time it was
    incomplete and we lost the game. That coach/referee should not have
    put that kind of pressure on an eleven-year-old kid, he should not
    have tricked him in that way. There should not have been that kind
    of atmosphere, where winning was that important.

    Our coach was not like that-he was actually a fairly decent guy as I
    remember, and he didn't make us feel like we'd failed the universe,
    or him, if we didn't win a game, or even a championship game.

    But from the time I was nine or ten I was pretty regularly playing
    sports with teenage kids, and they inculcated in me the idea that
    you had to win, you had to win, you had to win-and that losing was a
    disgrace. They had had this drummed into them, and it's not so much
    that they sat me down and said, "this is the way it is," but it just
    kind of rubbed off on me, along with a lot of macho stuff and the
    bullshit that boys in general absorb in this kind of culture. It was
    generally very pronounced in the '50s, but especially boys who were
    deeply into sports got a heavy dose of this. Those are the kinds of
    things that more came from hanging around with older kids playing
    sports-that was kind of the negative side of it. There were a lot of
    positive things that came out of it because of the particular times
    and because of the opportunities that it presented to have a lot
    of experience with kids from completely different backgrounds and
    situations, particularly Black kids. That was very positive. At the
    same time, there was the negative side-the sort of macho, militaristic,
    win-at-any-cost kind of stuff. But I didn't get that from my own
    coach in grammar school, and I didn't get it from my parents.

    My Sisters Overall I got along well with both of my sisters. But, it
    was kind of a classical situation where my sisters had to do things
    like iron clothes-they even had to iron my clothes. When I got into
    high school I had friends who were from poorer backgrounds who ironed
    their own clothes. But my sisters had to do all the stuff like ironing
    the clothes, even my clothes-there were all those "domestic" things
    they had to do, while I didn't have to do much of that-and generally
    I didn't have to do as many "chores" as they did.

    I can even remember-at one time I had forgotten this, but my younger
    sister reminded me of it-that when I got to be driving age and got
    my license, my parents would let me use one of their two cars, and I
    would drive all over, but when Mary-Lou came along later and wanted
    to use the car, my attitude at that time was: "What do you need
    the car for? You're a girl, I need the car." So there was tension
    that resulted not just from being siblings, but also from the sort
    of gender socialization and male domination which I just grew up
    with-even though I loved my sister, I just assumed that driving the
    car is what a guy does. A girl gets a guy to drive her around in a car,
    girls don't drive cars. That's how I saw it then.

    But even earlier, there was tension just because I was always kind of a
    prankster. For example, my father would quite often at dinnertime say,
    "okay gang" and then start telling us about the latest case he was
    involved in as a lawyer. And so we got a lot of that training.

    All of us got it, but one of the ways in which I used it-because,
    again, I was always sort of a prankster-was, just for the nasty fun
    of it, I'd get Mary-Lou, who had her favorite toys, to sign contracts
    that would turn over these toys and the ownership of these toys to
    me. Not because I wanted them, but just to trick her. She would naively
    sign these contracts, trusting me, and then I would say, "okay now,
    give me this toy or that toy." She'd say, "no, that's my toy"; and
    I'd reply, "yeah, but you just signed it over to me." Then she'd go
    running, crying to my dad who would then come down and look at the
    contract and invalidate it as having been achieved under fraudulent
    circumstances! Now Mary-Lou and I were very close in a lot of ways,
    so I don't want to give a one-sided impression, but these were pranks
    I liked to play, and then my dad would have to come down and invalidate
    them. And all my hard-earned trickery would be undone.

    We used to play around the house together a lot. From the time I was
    about nine until into high school, I had this recurring "Sunday-night
    sickness." That is, when Sunday nights came around, I would not want
    to go to school the next day, so I would start calculatingly coughing
    about eight o'clock at night on Sunday; and after I went to bed, I'd
    wake myself up and have these "coughing spells" in the middle of the
    night. Then I'd wake up again at five or six in the morning and really
    start coughing, and after a little while my mother or my father would
    come and say, "Oh, you've been coughing all night," and I'd answer,
    "Yeah, I really don't feel well, I think I'm sick." Then there would
    be this little dialogue: "Well, do you think you're well enough to go
    to school?" "All you care about is whether I go to school or not-you
    don't care about whether I'm sick." So then I would get to stay home.

    When my younger sister got a little older, I'd try to get her to
    do the same thing, and sometimes she would, and we had all kinds of
    games. We had a rollaway bed on wheels, and I used to tie a rope to
    the rollaway bed and tie the other end to a door handle, and we could
    pull ourselves around, and get rides on it and things like that. Or
    we'd make a fort, using blankets, bed covers. I also remember when
    I was about six, I guess, the big star football player at Cal was a
    guy named Jackie Jensen, so my dad and I were always playing catch
    and talking about Jackie Jensen. I remember Mary-Lou, she was just
    three, picked up a football and ran around the backyard saying "me
    Jackie Jensen, me Jackie Jensen," because she was trying to get in
    on things too, she didn't want to be left out.

    My older sister Marjorie would be in charge of us when my parents
    would go out sometimes. So then there would be conflict between my
    older sister and the two others of us, and we'd get into a lot of
    fracases. But, while I'm talking about a lot of the conflicts we had,
    we were also really good friends. We would confide in each other a lot,
    the way kids do, and conspire against our parents, or complain about
    our parents, about what they wouldn't let us do, or what they made us
    do. I remember one time my parents went on a trip for a week and they
    left us in the charge of this college student who was a friend of the
    family's. He, of course, didn't know anything about how to raise kids
    anyway, and he particularly didn't know how to deal with us. And so we
    had all these grievances that had accumulated against this guy, who
    we thought was a tyrant. We would get together and conspire against
    him, and try to give him a hard time because we thought he was just
    absolutely unbearable. Of course, he was actually in an impossible
    position. But I remember we'd do a lot of conspiring together like
    that, or just getting together and talking about things, the way
    kids do.

    So I was actually very close to my sisters. There was the usual tension
    between siblings, and then there was the tension that came from the
    larger societal roles that expressed themselves within our family. But
    within all that, we were still very good friends and very close.

    Still, the gender conditioning went on from an early age and was
    pervasive. I would interact with girls in school-sometimes maybe we'd
    work on projects together-but as far as things you would do outside
    of school, at recess, or during your "own time," the girls pretty
    much played with the girls and the boys with the boys. There were
    the usual grammar school flirtations that went on, but friendships
    were not really developed that much across gender lines.

    With my sisters, it was again a contradictory thing-I really loved my
    sisters a lot, we were very close in a lot of ways, and I did some
    things with them. In some ways, I was the good big brother, and in
    some ways I was the jerk big brother-or little brother, depending on
    which sister it was. But they would go to dance rather than sports, or
    they were Girl Scouts, or Campfire Girls, when I was in the Cub Scouts
    (I didn't go on to join the Boy Scouts-because it took too much time
    away from sports!). We were in different worlds a lot. When we got
    older, when we started really getting interested in the opposite sex,
    we'd talk about that with each other and get advice. So it was kind
    of contradictory like that. Our worlds overlapped, especially in the
    family context, but they were also very different.

    And, again, this took place in a whole societal context. For instance,
    there were all kinds of ads on TV at that point and, in retrospect,
    you see that in addition to the products, they were selling ideology,
    too. You had Lorraine Day, for instance, who was a spokesperson for
    Amana, which is a religious group that financed themselves through
    making household appliances. Lorraine Day was like an institution
    herself. She'd demonstrate a refrigerator and show you what a great
    freezer compartment it had, and so on. The Lorraine Day thing was
    directed toward women as housewives, all the latest appliances that
    they needed to have.

    Although my mother was cast somewhat in the role of the classical
    wife and mother at that time, there was a lot more to her than that.

    She went back to teaching when we kids got a little older. She did a
    lot of substitute teaching, and sometimes her assignments turned into
    long term substitute teaching. A lot of the dinner table conversation
    was dominated by my father talking about his legal cases, but she
    would join in that and she would also talk about other things, and
    not just "waxy build-up on the floor."

    http://rwor.org/a/044/avakian-from-ike-to -mao-and-beyond.htm
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