As
we enter a New Kwanzaa Season, we must remind ourselves of the
continued challenges that we face. The fundamental issue that
Africans in America must face is centered around the continued
assault by the systems of racism and white supremacy that keeps us in
bondage, servitude, and often times, confusion. What is at stake is
our survival as a race of people. We must come to grips with the
following challenges as we enter a New Kwanzaa Season.
Family
Development: There is no question that the African in American
family is in major disarray and is in need of major repair. Without
strong African in America families, raising and nurturing our
children, the future will remain bleak. Families are the
foundation for the survival and development of a people.
African men and women need to close ranks and reestablish the
tradition of strong Black families in America.
Economic
Development: Many Africans in America, women and men, continue to
remind us that we earn in excess of 600 billion dollars a year in
this country. The tragedy of this economic potential in the African
Community in America is that the overwhelming majority of this income
we earn, we spend with other people and not with our own. Other
people still continue to dominate and maximize profits from our
communities for their own advancement. When are we going to stop this
awful practice of allowing other people to benefit from the dollars
we earn?
Political
Development: We have often said that politics is the science of
who gets what, when, where, and how. And in this regard, we should
recognize that the white power structure and its Black allies are
doing everything possible to rupture our continuing movement for
Black political empowerment. In electoral politics the lessons are
clear. Personality clashes and individual personal conflicts have no
place in the world of politics! The only thing that matters is what
is best for African people in America. If we don't remain unified
politically, we will not benefit from our efforts to increase Black
political power in Chicago or in any other cities in which we live.
Cultural
Development: Why should other people profit from our artistic and
creative endeavors? It is clear that we are a creative people with a
unique culture of our own. However, in this area the writers, poets,
musicians, dancers, singers, actors, etc. must strive to control what
we create and the entire African Community should aggressively
support their efforts.
International
Affairs: We must work harder to support the struggle of our
brothers and sisters in Africa, the Caribbean, and South America in
their continued liberation struggle for land and independence.
Historical
Discontinuity: It appears the more we are oppressed under the
system of racism and white supremacy, the more we forget our history.
One generation from the next has difficulty remembering our great
struggles, battles, and movements.
Harold
Cruse points out in his book, The Crisis of the Negro Intellectual, “The farther the Negro [Black person] gets
from his [her] historical antecedents in time, the more tenuous
become his conceptual ties, the emptier his [her] social conceptions,
the more superficial his visions.”
It
must be clear, at this point in history that African people need to
determine for ourselves solutions to the many serious problems we
face. We should realize going into this New Kwanzaa Season that no
one will do for us what we really need to do for ourselves.
It
is time we begin providing for ourselves in all areas of life. No
longer should we listen and adhere to how other people define us and
our struggle. Accomplishing the objective of elevating our struggle
to a higher level will require that we become more skilled in
organizing our communities toward our liberation and freedom.
As
an old African proverb points out, “Those who are dead have not
gone forever. They are in the woman’s womb. They are in the
child who whimpers.”
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