I was born in 1934 in the Republic of
Panama. I was raised there until the age of 21 when, in 1955, I
migrated to the Southside of Chicago. I have lived in this country,
as a student (De Paul University), professor, (Brooklyn, Medgar Evers
and Old Westbury Colleges), activist (Civil Rights movement, Reform and
Radical politics, Black Power advocate, founder Black Solidarity Day),
interviewed Malcolm and worked with Dr. King on the Poor People’s
march. And, from a more radical perspective, I cut cane in Cuba in 1969
in an attempt, with the Cuban people, to defeat the embargo.
From the above it is clear, ideologically speaking, that it is
here in the U.S.A where I became a MAN and learned “why the caged bird
sings.” And, as Langston Hughes had the mother say … “Life for me ain’t
been no crystal stair but son, I’se still a climbing.” At the age of
80 I am still “evolving.”
Permit
me to be equally clear; this is NOT about ME it is about US - the
people of America - and why WE, collectively, cannot continue to
permit the politics of racism and hate to lead us irrevocably down a
path of self destruction. This is an attempt to persuade us
to”emancipate ourselves from the mental slavery of yesterday AND today.
While it is true
that, as it was yesterday, there were those who had freed themselves
of the odious venom of hate - I remember Charles Sumner, Fr. Groppi,
Viola Liuzzo and Schwerner, Chaney and Goodman - so too there are,
today, those who have liberated themselves from its stench - those
white. Black, and latino men and women who marched in streets across
the nation seeking JUSTICE the senseless killing of young Black men.
Yet, too many remain who still sow the seeds that flower the fruits of
Charleston.
Equally
important, it must be understood that what I am suggesting is only a
short term approach designed to have our nation, as one, begin the
process of coming together to collectively defeat the demons that would
have us consume ourselves in a race war.
Can Charleston offer us a chance to change? I believe that Sam
Cooke had it right “A change is gonna come!” It is the task of those
who believe in a society where justice and equality prevails to make it
happen. Yes, we can!
To do this however, there are some “uncomfortable truths” that we must
face. As such, it is imperative that we viscerally accept the
historical fact, not MY “fact” - lessons we
learned but have had little, if any, interest in internalizing i.e.:
racism in America has been systemic; it is not and has never been
simply about the rejection of the hue of a people, but rather, it has
always been predicated on the retention and expansion of the riches and
resources the country received from the enslavement of Blacks, native
Americans, and the indentured servitude of poor whites. To this end,
the struggle to preserve hegemonic control has been led by those who
still savor - figuratively and literally - the power of yesterday’s
white America and rapaciously hunger for its return. We must recognize
that it is not fundamentally about expanding our collective
consciousness about race… the story and stories have been written.
White America, in my view, has chosen to delude itself into believing
that it can cast the first stone. It is psychologically too painful to
do otherwise; and Black America has permitted itself to be bamboozled
into the false notion that, with Obama’s victory for example, we now
live in a post racial society. My statement here is intended to be
descriptive and not pejorative.
I believe that were President Obama to address the nation in a
“fire side chat” – not a speech, accompanied by, the leaders of
Congress, showing and conceptually expressing the notion that it is
time for the nation, as a nation, to be spiritually joined in the quest
for a National Day Of Atonement , Reconciliation, and Rejuvenation; a
day wherein Black people and white people who share in the spirit and
nature of this evolving nation , would join together in the hills and
valleys of red and blue states. It was done in a nation whipped by
storms of greater strife—South Africa, then why not in the U.S.A. We
can reprise the real meaning of Dr. King’s dream, which for some has
become a nightmare, and in a full court press transform the dirge of
Charleston into a symphony of hope and national rebirth. In so doing
the nation will regain its sanity and its humanity.
Specifically, what can be done? State, municipal and county
governments can enact legislation eliminating all obstacles to the free
exercise of the vote; automatic voter registration; gun control
reform; be supportive of immigration reform, and the rights provided
in our constitution to ALL men and women regardless of race, color,
gender, or sexual orientation.
Yes, I am very aware of the idealistic nature of my suggestion.
However, let us not forget that without a vision the people perish. In
this case, the nation could perish consumed by irrationality bigotry
and hate. Let us not forget that It was a white woman who followed the
Charleston assassin, who like others before him, intended to ignite a
“race war”, who, believing that she was following divine direction
called the cops; remember also that it was a Black man Dr. Martin
Luther King Jr. who dreamt what few had dreamt--- Black and white
together singing “We shall overcome” to be later echoed by a white
Southern President, Lyndon Baines Johnson, who echoed those words as
he signed the Voting Rights Act. Let us also remember Emmett Till and
Trayvon Martin who, for many of us, lost their lives in a society where
hate not “Agape” – unconditional love, was the order of the day.
Grieving a is NOT enough to heal the nation. Let the church say Amen!
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