How many times have you heard someone of African
ancestry say that “Black people are our own worst enemy”?
If you have lived among African people in this country for
any length of time, I am sure you have heard this remark made
many times.
Unfortunately, the system of white supremacy
developed in the western world, has caused far too many African
people in America
to believe that the problem we face as a people is “us.” We
must remind ourselves, time and time again, that African people
in America were captured from Africa and brought to
America
against our will. As the “1974 Black Capital” article asserted,
“Our introduction to the West was in the form of a commodity
raped from Africa to be used as labor, capital, chattel, and currency to build
a nation for someone else.” In
the article, it explained that “...our history tells us that
we were below slaves and less than human. We were things who
were traded for horses, our women used as breeders and our
children raised like chickens.”
Finally, the “Black Capital” article pointed out that during the
slavery process - “The level of our existence was based upon the skill and the will
of those who owned us. They had the right to deem that which
was best for their property. Therefore, the profit motive
and the skill of the slave master determined how this Black
wealth would bring the highest return on his investment.”
This
formula is still at work today. Just examine the role of African
people in the entertainment and athletic industry. White people
own and control these industries and use African people to
“bring the highest return off their investment.”
If African people are going to ever have a
serious mental breakthrough in terms of how we analyze our
condition in America, we will
have to resolve the question “are we our own worst enemy,”
or has the system of white supremacy created a set of conditions
that continue to keep us in an oppressed state?
We must accept responsibility for answering
this question as well as accepting responsibility for solving
all the problems we face as a people. But in accepting responsibility
for addressing the problems we face as an African people in
America, we must have a framework out of which
to properly conceptualize our problems.
In
1852, the great African thinker in America, Dr. Martin
R. Delany, wrote one of the most important books that accurately
described our condition at that moment in history that is
still applicable to our condition today. The title of the
book is The
Condition, Elevation, Emigration, and Destiny of the Colored
People of the United States.
Delany wrote, “Unfortunately for us a body,
we have been taught that we must have some person to think
for us, instead of thinking for ourselves. So accustomed are
we to submission and this kind of training, that it is with
difficulty, even among the most intelligent of the colored
people, an audience may be elicited for any purpose whatever,
if the expounder is to be colored...”
Further Delany wrote, “and the introduction
of a subject is treated with indifference, if not contempt,
when the originator is a colored person. Indeed, the most
ordinary white person, is almost revered while the most qualified
colored person is totally neglected, nothing from them is
appreciated.”
In resolving the question of whether “we are
our own worst enemy,” we should reflect that for over three
hundred years white people openly discussed African people
as a problem (1600 - 1900). Today
they still discuss us as a problem but the language is coded
differently.
As Dr. Anderson Thompson has written on the
discussions that white people have had on what they have historically
called “the Negro Problem,” “There is a duality in the story
of western white man and his culture,
which, paradoxically,
is thrown into sharp relief wherever the Black man appears
(or is dropped) on the scene.” Dr. Thompson says,
“Whenever or wherever the white man exists in proximity to
the Blacks the Negro Question appears.”
The idea of the “Negro Question” is discussed further when Dr.
Thompson writes, “The Negro Question
in Western society has been a perennial subject of endless
international debates, actions, decisions, wars, riots, lynchings - all of which flow out a recurring western
dialogue: a conversation (for Europeans only) which for a
long time took place between white men over what should be
done with, about or to the Blacks
they found in their captured territories.”
Concluding
on this point, Dr. Thompson informs us “The International Negro Question,
or Nigger Question has, for the most part, been an integral past
of European Civilization. Wherever in the world there
existed. Europeans in proximity to the African,
inevitably the question arose as to how (not why,
I nor whether) the Black man should be exploited or should
be eliminated.”
We are not our own worst enemy - even though some African people in this
country behave in manners that are not in our best interest.
What we must continue to do is to understand this negative
African behavior and assume responsibility for changing it.
The enemy and problem is white supremacy and its continued
impact on us.
BlackCommentator.com Columnist, Conrad W. Worrill, PhD, is the National
Chairman of the National Black United Front (NBUF). Click here
to contact Dr. Worrill.