Background
He was born in Brooklyn, New York and grew up in Harlem and Hunts Point.
He was born in Brooklyn, New York and grew up in Harlem and Hunts Point.
He was an influential activist, recognized by Stokely Carmichael as the "Dean of Harlem Nationalists" and by Dudley Thompson, an "Icon of the Pan African Movement." He died in Harlem at age 77. Brath founded the Patrice Lumumba Coalition with Irving Davis in 1975. The Patrice Lumumba Coalition supported the right to self-determination for Angolans, South Africans, and Namibians and other African liberation movements.
In 1976, the Coalition released a policy memo calling for the support of the Zimbabwe Liberation Army.
They garnered attention for a 1977 boycott of Ipi Tombi, a Broadway musical that purportedly misrepresented life under apartheid. Brath was the host of the radio show Afrikaleidoscope on WBAI in New New York and often organized events and panels in New York City to bring attention to African politics and current events.
Brath fought to eliminate the usage of the term "negro" and, in 1961, launched a "Black is Beautiful" campaign with a series of Afrocentric fashion shows featuring African American women who were known as the Grandassa models and sported large afros. In 2003, Brath cofounded the World African Diaspora Union to advocate for the unification of the African Diaspora politically, culturally, and economically with Africa.
WADU was officially launched in 2004.