I would agree with Amy, but I tend to think that the matter is more complicated than what she discribed in her answer.
Firstly, blacks (generally speaking, of course) have been hesitant to embrace psychoanalysis. Why? Well, I think many (perhaps most) recognize that psychoanalysis always seems to address matters of sex and gender while excluding race matters. From my point of view, and what I think is (or may be) the point of view of many others (including some blacks), it aligns itself more with white privilege than it does with racial equality. Psychoanalysis originated as being deeply imbedded in racism. And Freud, despite his brilliance, was a racist.
Just an example to illustrate--
In the ''Life and Work of Sigmund Freud'', Freud's biographer states that Freud (in 1924) referred to an American patient as "his *****". He (Freud's biographer) further explains that Freud identified with the lion in an 1886 cartoon-- "a cartoon in the Fliegende Blatter depicting a yawning lion muttering 'Twelve o'clock and no *****'''-- and that, likewise, Freud told others variations of this joke for several years.
By identifying himself with the lion in the 1886 cartoon, Freud established a link between the analyst/doctor-patient relationship and the master-slave relationship. This reveals a lack of balance in the functioning of all of the former. It also reveals his own anxiety. Being a Viennese Jew, Freud was a member of a group which was highly discriminated against. He felt rejected and, therefore, rejected society. My reasoning is that Freud's prejudice was a defense against his Jewish identity, an identity which made him uncomfortable and was perhaps one of the reasons why he didn't practice Judaism and rejected religious traditions.
I could say so much more-- But if no one is "making heads or tails" of what I've said so far then I doubt that I could say anything to change that.