In part I of this article, I sought to familiarize
readers with general information about what I call the African World
Family (AWF). In this article, however, the purpose is to provide
steps that could possibly strengthen that family. It goes without
saying that some of those ideas stem greatly from the thoughts,
words, and deeds of some of the African (Black) world’s greatest
messengers--the Honorable Marcus Garvey, the leader of the largest
Black mass/global movement in modern times, and his wife Amy Jacque
Garvey, along with world-renown historian and Alabama native John
Henrik Clarke, among others.
As stated in the previous article, to strengthen the
AWF, the African World Family must rightfully re-take what supremacists
(white and yellow, etc. and their cronies) have wrongfully taken
from it. That primarily includes:
1) a strong sense of family unity despite any geographical
or political, linguistic or religious, economic or educational
and/or skin color (light-skinned or dark-skinned, etc.), among
other, differences that typically have been used to divide them
in the past
2) a sharp meticulous mind that works first and
foremost to help and uplift, not harm and degrade, all the world’s
(1) billion plus African (Black) people as a whole
3) a formidably strong spirit that more often than
not resists the tantalizing temptation to “sell out” or betray
African people past or present
4) what the African American scholar-activist John
Henrik Clarke calls “a piece of geography called Africa.”
Truly, there can only be a strong sense of family
unity when there is a strong sense or clear definition of characteristics
and duties of and for family members, individually and collectively. African
(Black) Fathers must not only provide for and protect their families,
they must be living, breathing, daily examples to their sons as
to what a real man is and to their daughters as to what to look
for in a man—someone who is respectful, responsible, and dependable. For
their part, African (Black) Mothers must not only give birth to
and raise the children, along with the African Father (at or away
from home), they must also pass on the culture of her African ancestors
to the children by songs, poems, books, and music, etc. Furthermore,
African Mothers also must be living, breathing, daily examples to
their daughters to convey to them what a real woman is and to send
a crystal clear and tornado-strong message to her sons as to what
to look for in a woman—someone who is respectful, responsible, and
dependable.
When the African parents do their part, more often
than not, the African children will follow their lead. They
will be respectful, responsible, and dependable and will pass those,
all-important values on to their children. Moreover, that could
very well result in a cease fire in the so-called war between the
sexes in the African World Family. All they both have, for
better or worse, is each other. Or, as Dr. Clarke, once put
it, “There is no honorable place for the black man outside of the
black woman and for the black woman outside of the black man.” It
is do-or-die-time for them to settle their often petty and yellow-and-white-supremacist-enemy-created
differences regarding income and economics, education and other
overall opportunities. Together, as they did as the world’s
first and oldest people and those from whom all other people came,
they can create all those things for their own good and that of
generations to come.
If African people’s assuming such duties as those
cannot fully cause a cease fire in the so-called battle between
the sexes, then maybe, at least, it can bring about a much-needed,
no-holds-barred, open discussion or dialogue between them but in
private, meaning to the exclusion of their common foes (white and
yellow supremacists) so that the two of them, African (Black) man
and African (Black) woman can develop a better understanding of
each other. If done honestly and correctly, then, hopefully,
they will realize that they are both in the same rotten, rocking-and-reeling,
racist boat of white and yellow supremacy that pits them deviously
against each other but views both as enemies for elimination both
literally and figuratively.
Standing somewhat in the shadows is an extremely important
part of the African World Family. It is none other than the
Elders. Their role is most pertinent. Generally, they
possess long life and enduring wisdom and knowledge. As such,
they have seen and heard and know and can share a lot of those things
and their experiences as a whole. As such, they are invaluable
when it comes to helping younger adults and children avoid the pitfalls
into which they may fall and/or from which they may have already
fallen and may still be suffering.
Yet, the African (Black) Elders must be just as quick
to listen and to console as they are to speak and to scold. They
must be respected not simply because of their age but, more importantly,
because of their lifestyle—the way that they treat others. In
short, they must earn respect from others and must give respect
to others.
The African World Family is on the road to recovery
when it does those things written above. But it has to go one
step further. It must develop what Dr. John Henrik Clarke calls
“the essential selfishness of survival.” That means that all
of the African World Family’s (1) billion plus members are obligated
to look out for each other (“[their] kith and kin”, as Clarke puts
it) “first and foremost” (before anyone outside of the AWF). Remember:
white and yellow supremacist have followed a strongly similar philosophy
for centuries to the detriment (mass physical, mental, and spiritual
destruction) of the world’s African people.
Piggyback-riding that idea is a need for the African
World Family to develop a system of rewards and punishments for
its members. Using an African-base, this would mean that the
actions of any and all members of the African World Family would
be judged on whether it exalted or endangered the whole community. If
it endangered it, then the community (AWF) has a right to punish
that person as it sees fit. If it does not but exalts the community,
then the community has a right to reward that person as it sees
fit. That was the way of the traditional African court
system, as described by such scholars as Clarke and Dr. Chancellor
Williams, among others.
I used African traditions to formulate what I call
“The Three E Plan: Exaltation, Encouragement, and Expulsion”. Simply
put:
1) people in the African World Family who consistently
do constructive or positive things, big or small, in the community
should be Exalted (rewarded)
2) those who try to do consistently constructive
things, but who have a harder time at it should be Encouraged
3)those who consistently, defiantly, and even violently
refuse to do anything but that which is destructive in and to
the community must be Expelled from the community to fend for
themselves among those white and yellow supremacists for whom
they are consciously or subconsciously work to enslave, exploit,
and/or exterminate any and all members of the African World Family.
The above paragraph is greatly important. Why
is it so? It is so because for far too long the African World Family
has put up with those persons and ideas that we should have put
out—those that are destructive to the well-being of our people as
a whole. It is now time for us to cut our losses and cut
the bad seeds loose.
Those losses are further cut when the African World
Family regains its sharp, meticulous mind. It does this by
studying and researching, writing and reciting, and preserving and
promoting our history world-wide. It does so by imitating the
good of its ancestors and learning from but not imitating the bad. By
so doing, it rightfully places scholarship above sportsmanship and
academics above athletics.
Such a much-needed shift in thinking would help bring
to a screeching halt the physical and mental prostitution of African
(Black) girls/women who are taught that their success should be
based solely on their beauty and not their brains. Such a shift
would also help to end the physical and mental pimping of African
(Black) boys/men who are taught that their success depends on their
muscles and not their minds. The shift would bring about long-sought
after mental and spiritual maturation for both sexes.
Spiritual maturation is something that the entire
African World Family needs and cannot do without. I dare say
that a change in spirit or mind, sometimes seen as one and the same
in some circles, is of much greater importance than a change in
name, clothes, or religion for African (Black) people. In fact,
even though Africans (Blacks) were the first to develop the idea
of religion and all the world’s major religions (Judaism, Christianity,
and Islam, just to name a few) have strong African roots or origins,
what the African World Family truly needs more than anything else
is more spirituality and less religiosity.
Spirituality shows someone that he or she is a brother
or a sister. Religiosity just says it. Spirituality says,
“If I have, you have, and if you have I have”. Religiosity
just talks about the haves and the have-nots. “Religion,” religiosity’s
base word, means “to bind”. “Spirit” or “spiritual”, spirituality’s
base word, means “life”. Yet, whether members of the African
World Family belong to a religion or not, each of them should make
sure that the religions that affect and shape their lives, both
directly and indirectly, are more spiritual than religious and work
more in favor of and less against the African World Family as a
whole.
Furthermore, members of the African World Family should
become more familiar with each other. Each should keep an open
mind and an open line of communication with as many of its (1) billion
plus members as possible. That can be done either through:
1) actual personal contact
2) or the international mail
3) international phone system
4) the internet (for general information about members
of what the Afro-Trinidadian scholar Dr. Tony Martin calls “scattered
Africa” or, of course, the AWF, and where and under what conditions
do they live)
5) email
Collectively, such activities would enable AWF members
to learn and understand more about the positives and the negatives
of each other’s geo-political, socio-economic, religious and educational
plight, among other things, and how we can increase the positive
aspects and decrease, if not totally eliminate, the negative ones. In
short, collectively, we would be able to come up with and implement
both short- and long-range plans to improve the plight of African
people worldwide.
That goes double for the Africans in Americas who
were born outside of Africa and the Africans born in Africa who
now emigrate in great numbers to the United States. They both
must understand that they are brothers and sisters, though long-lost
ones, by centuries in many cases, with the same mother—Africa—and
that any differences that exist are much smaller than the similarities. Furthermore,
virtually all of the many advantages (economic and educational opportunities
and even citizenship and voting, among other things) of the
United States that African-born and other non-American-born (Caribbean
and Afro-Latino brothers and sisters) Africans (Blacks) take full
advantage of in this “the home of the brave and land of the
free” were fully paid. They were paid by the oceans of blood, sweat,
and tears that their long-lost brothers and sisters, who were shipped
to and enslaved in this land, shed long ago. And they continue to
be paid for daily when Blacks are denied the right to take advantage
of them or are brutalized (physically, mentally, spiritually and/or
financially) if they do. In short, let’s stop allowing others
to pit us against each other and, instead, do what we must and should
do and what they don’t want us to do—work with and not against each
other.
Globally, Africans (Blacks) must understand and obey
the age-old philosophy of “Lead, follow, or get out the way.” In
other words, if there are those who are members of the African World
Family by proxy but would rather not be, do not hinder those who
rightfully choose to be. Such “wanna-bes” (wanna-be non-Africans/Blacks)
should agree on that if nothing else. Yet, they are typically
the first ones to grab all the fruits of someone else’s (the true
and hard-working, salt-of-the-earth, everyday members of the African
World Family) hard labor—economic, educational, and political opportunities,
among others.
To the nay-sayers who are truly honest with themselves,
the big picture of the African World Family does not look like the
simply small parts that the blind men individually examining an
elephant saw. In reality, the African World Family has the
potential to become a powerful, African bull elephant. That is the
geographical shape of Africa—an elephant’s face.
Yet, when the African World Family fully reclaims
all of the above, including, of course, Africa, the world’s richest
continent, then and only then will it be just like that giant, bull
elephant. It will walk majestically throughout this jungle
world, trampling all unjust opposition and building friendships
that sustain the bridges of the body, the soul, and the mind.
Truly, this mammoth, bull elephant known as the African
World Family, with its thunderous earth-quaking footsteps, will
shake the world right-side up. Then, like a Miles Davis or
Dizzy Gillispie trumpet, its ebony trunk will blare to the world
the pleasant and much-needed and –sought after change.
Read Part
1
BC Columnist HAWK (J. D. Jackson) is a priest,
poet, journalist, historian, and African-centered lecturer and a
middle school teacher and part-time university history instructor.
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here to contact HAWK. |