The evidence is clear that African people throughout
the world are owed reparations for the damages inflicted on us through
the Trans Atlantic Slave Trade, which has now been officially declared
“A Crime Against Humanity!”
In our demands for reparations in the United States,
we must continue to pressure the government and those identifiable
corporations who participated in, and benefited from, our enslavement.
It is no question that “They Owe Us!”
In the process of building the Reparations Movement,
it is crucial to take note of an important aspect of our work that
Brother Chinweizu pointed out in a paper read at the second plenary
session of the First Pan African Conference on Reparations, held
in Abuja, Nigeria on April 27, 1993. Chinweizu observed that one
of the most important aspects of the Reparations Movement “is our
self-repair, the change it will bring about in our understanding
of our destiny, the change it will bring about in the world.”
Chinweizu
further observed in his paper, “So, reparations, like charity, must
begin with ourselves, with the making of the new Black person, with
the making of a new Black world.”
With this in mind, in our work in the Reparations
Movement, we must direct our attention to our external demands at
the same time we work on our internal repair. We must do both at
the same time.
It is especially obvious that at this time of the
year millions of African people get caught up in the European holiday
season by participating in helping the European economic order remain
strong by purchasing their products promoted in the name of the
holiday season. Let us reflect for a moment on this problem.
Since being captured from Africa and introduced into
the United States as property and commodity, over four hundred years
ago, African people in America have become subjects of one of the
world's greatest tragedies. This is the tragedy of being completely
taken over by the Euro-ethnic order of America, in almost every
area of our lives, at the detriment of our own self- interest. This
tragedy manifests itself today most vividly in the area of economic
development in the African in America Community.
If you observe the African Community in America throughout
the United States today, you will observe that we do not control
the economics of our own communities. We have allowed other ethnic
groups to become the major benefactor of the economics of our communities.
This problem has major impact on many of the problems we face, such
as: the African Family Crisis, African on African (Black on Black)
crime, drug and alcohol abuse, teenage pregnancy, HIV and AIDS,
cultural domination, educational genocide, and lack of real political
power, et. al.
All African people in America need to stop and think
for a minute and ask the question, why do we so easily and willingly
spend our money with other people and these same people do not spend
their money with us? In fact, the white community will not even
allow African in America businesses and enterprises, for the most
part, to open in their communities.
One of the most devastating outcomes of this capturing
process of African people in America is the fact that too often
we look to other people to solve problems for us instead of solving
them ourselves. It should be crystal clear that the problems we
face as a people will not fundamentally change until we decide to
make these changes and correct the habits that keep us in an oppressive
state. Continuing to spend our money with other people at the expense
of our own communities will continue to keep us in a state of begging
other people to do for us what we should do for ourselves.
In America, most ethnic groups tend to have control
of items they consume as part of their cultural heritage and characteristics.
For example, the Chinese dominate the rice industry and the Greeks
dominate the fruit and vegetable industry. African people eat greens
as a part of our regular cultural eating habits, but we do not control
greens. Just think, if we controlled the production, processing,
wholesaling, retailing, and distribution of greens in America, we
would considerably advance our own economic situation.
During this season of super propaganda and economic
rip-offs, let us recommit ourselves to at least become a part of
the MATAH Network,
which is the only African owned and controlled channel of distribution
featuring hundreds of Black manufactured products.
Let us stop the cycle of economic dependence and struggle
harder to build the Reparations Movement.
Conrad W. Worrill, PhD, is the National Chairman
of the National Black United Front (NBUF).
Worrill’s World appears weekly in BC. |