
Paul Leroy Robeson
Singer, actor, lawyer, athlete, and civil rights activist
of 100 · stable trend · Visibly decent and improving
Standing
64/100
Raw Score
56/85
Confidence
82%
Evidence
Strong
About
Paul Robeson's public record is unusually strong in social courage, sacrifice, and service to oppressed people. The main drag on the profile is not lack of care for others but his long refusal to publicly confront Stalinist repression even when serious contrary evidence was available.
The observable pattern is morally serious and people-facing: anti-lynching advocacy, labor solidarity, anti-colonial work, and willingness to lose status and income rather than soften his public commitments. The record stays below exemplary because his public loyalty to the Soviet project repeatedly overrode clearer moral speech about real abuses.
Five Pillars
Pillar scores (0–100%)
Robeson scores strongest in social care and resilience because the public record repeatedly shows him spending status, income, and personal safety for other people. The profile remains mixed rather than exemplary because his refusal to speak clearly about Stalinist abuses stands as a serious integrity limitation, and public evidence for routine worship discipline is modest.
Goodness over time
Starts at 100 at birth, natural decay after accountability age, timeline events adjust the trajectory.
17 Criteria Scores
Individual item scores (0–5) with evidence notes
Core Worldview
Christian upbringing and dignity language support a cautious positive score, but direct personal creed statements are not abundant in the public record reviewed.
He repeatedly framed politics and culture in moral-accountability terms rather than pure self-interest.
His lifelong dignity language suggests a moral order beyond immediate power and convenience.
Family ministry and Christian formation are clear, though later public life foregrounded politics more than explicit doctrine.
Public evidence shows moral inheritance from a preacher father more clearly than repeated prophetic exemplarity language from Robeson himself.
Contribution to Others
The record is much richer on public solidarity than on family-specific provision.
He clearly inspired and defended younger Black generations, but direct youth-targeted material care is less documented than broader advocacy.
Repeated labor, anti-lynching, and anti-colonial advocacy show durable care for people under structural hardship.
His solidarity extended across borders to colonized and excluded people well beyond his immediate circle.
He regularly responded to organized appeals from movements and persecuted groups, though not every action was direct casework.
This is the clearest recurring strength: he repeatedly fought systems that constrained Black Americans and colonized peoples.
Personal Discipline
Christian background and spiritual repertoire are visible, but the public record is thin on routine devotional practice.
His life shows sacrificial public generosity, but direct evidence of disciplined personal giving habits is limited.
Reliability
He kept costly commitments to justice, but his refusal to speak plainly about Stalinist abuses limits the trustworthiness side of the record.
Stability Under Pressure
He accepted major income collapse rather than publicly buying relief through capitulation.
The record shows strong perseverance through illness, blacklisting, humiliation, and social isolation.
Mob violence, HUAC pressure, and passport punishment did not end his public nerve.
Timeline
Key events and documented turning points
Delivered 'The New Idealism' as Rutgers valedictorian
Robeson graduated at the top of his Rutgers class and used his farewell address to call Black and white Americans to moral brotherhood and a better civic order.
→ Established a visible lifelong pattern of linking talent, dignity, and public responsibility.
mediumBroke ground with his record Broadway run in Othello
Robeson's 1943 Broadway performance in Othello set a long-running Shakespeare record and widened his cultural platform at a time when Black actors were routinely excluded from leading dramatic roles.
→ Turned artistic excellence into durable public leverage rather than private celebrity alone.
highPressed President Truman for federal anti-lynching action
As head of the American Crusade Against Lynching, Robeson helped force the White House to confront anti-Black terror and the federal government's failure to stop it.
→ Made his fame answerable to vulnerable people rather than keeping it separate from public risk.
highKept public loyalty to the Soviet project despite evidence of Stalinist repression
Robeson's public refusal to openly criticize Stalinist antisemitic purges and wider Soviet repression became the clearest sustained integrity concern in an otherwise sacrificial public life.
→ Left a real credibility blemish that continues to complicate the record.
mediumReturned to perform after the Peekskill mob attacks
After anti-communist and racist mobs attacked concertgoers and supporters at Peekskill, Robeson did not disappear from public view and returned to perform under threat.
→ Strengthened the evidence that his public commitments held under fear and violent pressure.
highLost his passport and much of his livelihood for his politics
The State Department revoked Robeson's passport in 1950, cutting him off from international work for eight years and causing heavy financial loss, but he did not publicly abandon his core causes.
→ Shows both the cost of his commitments and the stubbornness with which he kept them.
highPresented 'We Charge Genocide' to the United Nations
Robeson helped present a petition accusing the United States of anti-Black genocide, internationalizing the claims of people suffering segregation, police abuse, and lynching.
→ Extended his advocacy beyond symbolic protest into formal international accusation on behalf of the oppressed.
highDefied HUAC and framed the hearing as punishment for fighting racial inequality
When subpoenaed by HUAC, Robeson resisted the committee's premises and said he was being punished for fighting for the rights of Black Americans rather than for any crime.
→ Added strong evidence that he kept public nerve when punishment and humiliation were already well advanced.
highPressure Tests
Behavior under crisis or scrutiny
Peekskill mob violence
1949Concertgoers and supporters were attacked by anti-communist and racist mobs in Peekskill, New York.
Response: Robeson returned to perform rather than disappearing from public life after the attacks.
positiveStalinist repression and public moral clarity test
1949Evidence of Soviet antisemitic repression sharpened the moral costs of Robeson's public alignment with the Soviet project.
Response: He did not publicly name the wrong with enough clarity, which weakens the integrity side of the profile.
mixedPassport revocation and income collapse
1950The U.S. government stripped his passport, cutting off travel and much of his earning power for eight years.
Response: He continued public advocacy and refused to purchase relief by disavowing core commitments on demand.
positiveProgression
crisis years
Cold War repression exposed his courage but also the limits of his judgment about the Soviet Union.
mixedcurrent stage
The mature historical record is strongly respectful of his sacrifice and public service while still carrying a live argument about the moral cost of his Soviet apologetics.
stableearly years
Family faith, racial hardship, and elite academic success gave Robeson an unusually strong language of dignity and obligation early on.
upgrowth years
Extraordinary artistic success widened his platform and he increasingly used it for labor, anti-fascist, and anti-racist causes.
upBehavioral Patterns
Positive
- • Used cross-industry fame to amplify the struggles of Black Americans, workers, and anti-colonial movements.
- • Stayed publicly steady under mob violence, blacklisting, and financial punishment.
- • Linked artistic work to moral language about dignity, brotherhood, and justice over several decades.
Concerns
- • His public loyalty to the Soviet project repeatedly outran his willingness to condemn real repression.
- • Private worship discipline and family-centered care are less observable than his political and artistic commitments.
Evidence Quality
9
Strong
2
Medium
0
Weak
Overall: strong
This profile evaluates observable public behavior and evidence, not the state of a person's soul.