Dancing with the Panthers Part Two (Campbell and Rice, c2000)
UUMUAC (You Me Act): The Unitarian Universalist Multiracial ... by Barbara Jean Walsh
Episode notes
Reverend Dr. Finley C. Campbell opens this segment by describing how the Indiana chapter of the Black Panther Party confronted the distorted public image that dominated local perceptions—an image of armed, threatening Black men shaped largely by media caricature. To counter this, the Panthers worked closely with Black student unions, insisting that these groups not isolate themselves on campus but instead engage openly with white students. Their goal was to humanize the movement, dismantle fear, and demonstrate that the Panthers were not anti‑white extremists but community‑oriented organizers. Campbell recounts taking Panthers into small Indiana towns and churches during his congressional run, where face‑to‑face encounters helped shift attitudes and reveal the Party’s actual commitments.
Campbell and Dr. Jon Rice then address the proliferat ...