
The Black Alliance for Peace
Recapture and redevelop the historic anti-war, anti-imperialist, and pro-peace positions of the radical black movement.

Contribute
Become a financial contributor.
Financial Contributions
Projects
Support the following initiatives from The Black Alliance for Peace.
Events
The Black Alliance for Peace is hosting the following events.
Top financial contributors
Organizations
$238,300 USD since May 2022
$50,000 USD since Dec 2022
$10,000 USD since Jan 2023
$7,500 USD since Jun 2022
$7,500 USD since Dec 2022
$6,000 USD since Jan 2023
$6,000 USD since Feb 2023
$4,000 USD since Jul 2022
$600 USD since Sep 2022
$100 USD since Jul 2022
Individuals
$3,510 USD since Nov 2022
$1,000 USD since Jan 2023
$1,000 USD since Jan 2023
$700 USD since Aug 2022
$500 USD since May 2022
$500 USD since Jun 2022
$500 USD since Jan 2023
$500 USD since Jan 2023
$500 USD since Jan 2023
$500 USD since Mar 2023
The Black Alliance for Peace is all of us
Our contributors 291
Thank you for supporting The Black Alliance for Peace.
Sadé Swift
Ajamu Baraka
Margaret Kimb...
BAP Solidarit...
Latin America...
$238,300 USD
Tides
$50,000 USD
Arc of Justice
$10,000 USD
The James R. ...
$7,500 USD
Crown Family ...
$7,500 USD
Progress Unit...
$6,000 USD
Community Mov...
$6,000 USD
Los Angeles M...
$4,000 USD

Budget
Transparent and open finances.
$166,347.99 USD
$347,720.48 USD
$181,372.49 USD
$383,765.03 USD
Expenses
Expenses paid
227
Amount disbursed
$87,518.61
Tags | # of Expenses | Amount (USD) |
---|---|---|
consultant | 57 | $39,610.00 |
travel | 59 | $20,006.40 |
ccm22 | 25 | $6,433.74 |
printing | 16 | $5,993.24 |
no tag | 19 | $3,831.34 |
recurring bills | 22 | $3,298.99 |
int/tran | 15 | $2,907.50 |
merch | 2 | $1,907.61 |
comms | 6 | $1,580.00 |
mm22 | 4 | $1,549.79 |
membership requests | 2 | $400.00 |
Contributions
Contributions received
288
Amount collected
$28,827.02
Tiers | # of Contributions | Amount (USD) |
---|---|---|
one-time | 225 | $24,158.02 |
recurring | 63 | $4,669.00 |

About
Background & Rationalization
With the growing maturation of the radical Black movement in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, the formal institutionalization of racial apartheid in 1896 with Plessy v. Ferguson, the beginnings of the Pan African movement, the Russian revolution, and agitation and organizing in Black urban colonies like Harlem (that offered a precarious refuge for the first wave of escapees from the fascist totalitarian South), saw the creation of a solidarity movement among Black people in opposition to U.S. and European colonial violence.
In general, suspiciousness and skepticism—if not outright opposition—to U.S. militarism characterized much of the Black community’s views regarding U.S. foreign war policy until the ascendancy of the first Black president, Barack Obama.