What can I say that Harry Haywood hasn't already said? An extraordinary piece.
Haywood delivers a ruthless but disciplined criticism of the CPUSA, which started to sink in the 1950s with the rejection of the Black Question which Haywood so meticulously documents here and has never recovered, but has instead has doubled down on their reactionary views. Haywood, who first brought the Black Question to the Party in 1928, was expelled and his words and legacy erased from the Party, for his dedication to building The Black Belt and basing the struggle for Black Liberation in the Deep South. If you've ever read Robin D.G. Kelley's "Hammer & Hoe", you know that the CPUSA was initially skeptical of building Communism in the Deep South, as they viewed it as many liberals do today: hopelessly backward.
However, with the rise of the Sharecroppers Union and Black Communists like Harry Haywood and Hosea Hudson building it up, the Black Belt rose to heights that perhaps no socialist organization has yet to achieve in the united states. The CPUSA, entrenched with white chauvinism by this time, sabotaged the Deep South movement, liquidating their centers and passing down a false line of "true solidarity" meaning integration and allowing the NAACP to lead. Communists who fought this line, like Haywood, were swiftly expelled.
Harry Haywood was an incredible man whose legacy must be maintained and studied thoroughly.