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Battling
Siki
A Tale of Ring Fixes, Race, and Murder in the 1920s
Peter
Benson
First
biography of the controversial and misunderstood African boxer
Battling
Siki (1887–1925) was once one of the four or five most
recognizable black men in the world, and was written about
in detail by such figures as Ring Lardner and his son John,
Damon Runyon, and Westbrook Pegler. One can find his legacy
in the name of a popular rock group, one of Che Guevara’s
lieutenants, a character on Xena, Warrior Princess,
and the Battling Siki Hotel in the fighter’s homeland,
Senegal. Peter Benson’s biography of the first African
to win a world championshipin boxing delves into the complex
world of sports, race, colonialism, and the cult of personality
in the early twentieth century.
Born
Amadu Fall, Siki was taken from Senegal to France by an actress
and assumed the name Louis M’barick Fall. After an inauspicious
beginning as a boxer, he served in World War I with distinction
then returned to boxing and compiled a most impressive record
(forty-three wins in forty-six bouts). Then, on September
24, 1922, at Paris’s Buffalo Velodrome, before forty
thousand stunned spectators (including a young Ernest Hemingway,
who wrote about the fight), Battling Siki, employing his trademark
“windmill” punch, fought and defeated the reigning
world and European light heavyweight champion, Georges Carpentier.
The
colorful Siki spent a fortune partying and carousing, was
arrested for firing a pistol in the air, and was frequently
seen on the streets of Paris, dressed in flashy clothes, walking
his pet lion cubs on a leash. But he also provoked a scandal
by exposing the corruption of the fight game in France, spoke
out boldly against racisim, and was arrected for deliberately
defying the code of racial segregation in the American South.
Siki’s flamboyant image was largely created by newsmen.
In fact, the real Siki, while he did certainly like to party,
was also an intelligent and socially conscious person, who
detested the media’s image of him as a simple-minded
drunken savage.
Offers
rushed in for him to fight in the United States, maybe even
against Jack Dempsey. But in a move many have called one of
the strangest a fighter ever made, he fought Irishman Mike
McTigue in Dublin on St. Patrick’s Day—and lost.
After losing his European title he came to the United States
and fought without much success. He continued to drink and
get into street brawls. On the evening of December 15, 1925,
at the age of twenty-eight, he was shot and killed in Hell’s
Kitchen in what some claimed was a gangland execution.
Peter
Benson’s biography beautifully captures Battling Siki’s
amazing boxing career and sheds new light on the scandal surrounding
his marriages and public behavior, his alleged participation
in ring fixes, and the mystery surrounding his death.
“Provides
compelling information about a little known yet extremely
important fighter, and furnishes an insightful analysis of
the impact of racism on both whites and blacks in the early
twentieth century. . . . Benson’s research is as impressive
as his writing.”
—David
K. Wiggins, author of Sport and the Color Line
“Siki’s
story is quite a remarkable one, and Benson has done a fine
job of digging out that story. . . . [It] sheds considerable
light not only on boxing and American sport in the twentieth
century, but also on the issue of race, and those shifting
boundaries of nations and colonies.”
—Elliott
Gorn, author of The Manly Art: Bare-Knuckle Prize Fighting
in America
“Setting
the record straight for a fighter as misunderstood, misinterpreted,
and just plain mysterious as Battling Siki is a daunting task.
But Peter Benson does it—and much more. At times he
seems to put you into the skin of the age, permitting you
to see Siki as his friends and enemies saw him and to sense
the anger, frustration, and fear Siki engendered. As much
as Dempsey and Ruth, Siki was a man of the 1920s.”
—Randy
Roberts, author of Papa Jack: Jack Johnson and the Era
of White Hope
and Jack Dempsey, the Manassa Mauler
"The
contemporaneous reporting on Battling Siki's life was often
unreliable. But Peter Benson has done what he can to synthesize
the truth and fashion a valuable addition to the historical
record. 'Battling Siki' has all the elements of a Shakespearean
tragedy set in the Roaring Twenties."
—Thomas
Hauser, author of Muhammad Ali: His Life and Times and
The Black Lights
Peter
Benson is associate professor of English at
Fairleigh Dickinson University and the author of Black
Orpheus, Transition, and Modern Cultural Awakening
in Africa. He has been a Visiting Fulbright Professor
at the University of Dakar, University of Nairobi, and Kenyatta
University.
May
2006
6 x 9, 360 pages, 15 photographs, index
$19.95 paper
ISBN 978-1-55728-888-2 | 1-55728-888-7
$32.50 (s) Cloth
ISBN 978-1-55728-816-5 | 1-55728-816-X
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