As we prepare for an important leadership meeting
of the National Black United Front (NBUF) in Kansas City, Missouri
on September 21-22, 2007, I am reminded of the ancestral spirit
of Ken Bridges. Ken was one of the great organizers in our efforts
to achieve economic independence. It was five years ago in Kansas
City that we learned of his tragic death. We are dedicating
this meeting to Ken’s contributions.
On Friday, October 11, 2002, the leaders of the
National Black United Front, from around the country, began
arriving in Kansas City, Missouri for our Fall Central Committee
Meeting. The meeting was scheduled to begin Friday evening with
a welcome reception and an all day meeting on Saturday, October
12th.
As the Chicago contingency pulled into the parking
lot of the W. E. B. DuBois Learning Center, I immediately observed
that many of the leaders of NBUF had arrived and were outside
the Center greeting and interacting with each other. It was
a beautiful day in Kansas City and it was good to see that so
many of the NBUF leadership had arrived early, in preparation
for this important meeting.
About an hour after our arrival at the W.E.B. DuBois
Learning Center, I received a call on my cell phone from Lloyd
Kelley, an activist from Chicago, and a MATAH organizer, informing
me that our Brother, Kenneth Bridges had been killed by a sniper
somewhere in Virginia, while pumping gas. Needless to say, I
found this hard to believe and accept. Immediately, I began
to call other MATAH organizers, specifically Gaston Armour,
the MATAH Regional Organizer for the Chicago and Midwest area.
Brother Gaston confirmed that our friend and fellow worker in
the Black Liberation Movement had become a victim of this serial
sniper.
Immediately, I asked everyone to assemble and I
made the announcement. Obviously, everyone was shocked. I asked
that we pour libations for Brother Ken and use his spirit to
begin our meeting early. We dedicated our NBUF Central Committee
Meeting to Ken Bridges, the Co-Founder of MATAH.
I had begun to work very closely with Brother Ken
as we prepared for the August 17, 2002 Millions For Reparations
Mass Rally in Washington, D.C. Brother Ken was very helpful
in making this rally a “grand success.”
I must admit, for a very long time I avoided meeting
with any of the representatives of MATAH who called NBUF Offices
seeking to explain the MATAH program. Personally, I had become
somewhat turned off, over the years, by people presenting a
variety of economic schemes allegedly aimed at helping solve
the economic problems of African people in America. I had become
burned out from listening to these proposals. So, I put up a
barrier over the last two years and avoided meeting with any
MATAH representatives. But apparently, the Creative Forces of
the Universe did not want this to continue.
Without all of the lengthy background, Gaston Armour
joined the NBUF Chicago Chapter and in our meeting, the evening
he joined, I discovered I knew his family, specifically his
aunt, with whom I’d worked over the years. It dawned on me that
Gaston was a member of the Armour family in Chicago who owned
a very popular Black-owned grocery store. The Armour family
has established a tradition in Chicago of being a family of
business people.
From that moment on, Brother Gaston began to lobby
me to become a part of MATAH. One of our members, Sister Iris
Dunmore, had been attending some of the local MATAH meetings
on our behalf and suggested that we should give the MATAH concept
a chance.
Finally, I broke down and agreed to meet with Brother
Ken at my home earlier this year. The meeting was only to be
for an hour, just to touch base, however, Ken and I hit it off
so well, we met in my living room for over four hours. It was
truly a meeting of the spirit of our ancestors and from that
day forward, Ken and I began talking every week. It was out
of that meeting that we made the linkage between the demand
for external reparations and its relationship to what we must
do to repair ourselves, which we began to call “internal reparations.”
It became clear to me that Ken Bridges was a deep
thinker and brilliant organizer who had committed his life to
the liberation of Black people by making his vision of MATAH
become a reality. MATAH, as Ken explained it to me, was a concept
given to him by God. Ken constantly made the point that
“MATAH is an economic movement of self-determination for Africans
in America and around the world.” Ken always reminded his audiences
that “MATAH emphasizes African cultural development and therefore
the products and services that the organization represents would
focus on the promotion of African culture.”
Ken helped NBUF understand that by becoming a Network
Business Center, we could help finance the work of NBUF. We
had begun working on identifying one-hundred NBUF members who
would be willing to purchase $30.00 of MATAH products each month
that would provide NBUF with a profit of $600.00 a month. A
simple but powerful formula, if executed.
Ken and his friend, and business partner, Al Willington,
had created a vision for products made by African people to
be purchased and distributed by African people around the world.
The key component of the MATAH concept, as Ken taught, is not
only should we purchase products from each other that we produce,
but we must also control the distribution of these products.
In the name of Kenneth Bridges, we should carry
the MATAH vision forward by remembering that “MATAH are those
people of African descent who know that practicing a race-first
philosophy is the key to obtaining true freedom for people of
African descent, and who refuse to be crushed.”
Let us always honor the spirit of our Brother,
Ken Bridges.
BlackCommentator.com
columnist
Conrad W. Worrill, PhD, is the National Chairman of the National
Black United Front (NBUF). Click
here to contact Dr. Worrill.