The
issue of the purpose of education for Black people should be reviewed
over and over again given our continued struggle to control our
educational destiny.
The
current public school crisis in America
demands that the African Community in America aggressively play an assertive role in
the movement to make changes in one of the most important institutions
in this country - the Public School System. However, in participating in this movement, it is imperative that we re-examine the definition of education and
its relationship to power and specifically, Black Power.
Education
is the process of instilling the values of a society, group, nation,
race, or ethnic group. It is the method by which people are taught
the relationship to their families, communities, nation, race, and
the world. Further, education defines the function of society and
strives to help one become an active participant in the growth and
development of a given society, nation, race, and ethnic group.
It is in this context that we understand that education is an important
process in helping a people acquire power for the perpetuation of
their interests.
In
this case, the education we should pursue is the kind of education
that will enable African people in America
to organize to achieve Black Power.
It
should be obvious by now that most African children in America
who attend the public schools of America are not receiving an education. At best
it can be called training. That is, learning the basic skills of
reading, writing, and arithmetic. In many instances, this kind of
training is occurring on a very minimal basis with African in America children.
It
is important that we consult one of our great educators, Carter
G. Woodson, in helping to sum up this awesome problem of education
that keeps Africans in America in a constant state
of mental captivity. Brother Woodson stated in his great book, published
in 1933, The
Mis-Education of The Negro
, that, “The same educational process which inspires and stimulates
the oppressor with the thought that he is everything and has accomplished
everything worthwhile, depresses and crushes at the same time the
spark of genius in the Negro by making him feel that his race does
not amount to much and never will measure up to the standards of
others.” Woodson made it clear that Africans in America being educated in
this manner is a hopeless liability to the race. This is still at
the heart of our educational problem today.
Therefore,
our task becomes one of the continued struggles to re-conceptualize
the mission of education for our people. This
re-conceptualization must be based on the premise that Woodson set
forth when he said, “The race will free itself from exploiters just
as soon as it decides to do so. No one else can accomplish this
task for the race. It must plan and do for itself.” We will never
acquire real power if this does not happen.
Essentially,
our mission should be that of establishing our own educational agenda
that is based on creating a new educational ethos. The present ethos
instills in African children in America
the idea that if you go to school and get an education you will
get a job. We should know by now that there is not necessarily a
correlation between going to school and getting a job. It definitely
has nothing to do with the upliftment of our race.
The
task of re-conceptualizing a new educational ethos is to understand
that the mission of our education should be to make a whole people
again as the Reparations Movement is demanding. Making us whole
again is a process that defines education in the context of our
own political, economic, cultural, and spiritual needs.
This
new educational ethos must rest on the idea that the group interests
of our race are more important than those of any individual. Dr.
Anderson Thompson calls this the “African Principle.” In other words,
the only way we will become liberated and independent is through
group thinking and group action C not as individuals. We must work
to achieve the greatest good for the greatest number.
Succinctly
stated, our purpose for becoming educated should be one of helping
to build a movement to liberate us from the oppression of white
supremacy and racism so that we can build a new social, political,
cultural, economic, and spiritual order for ourselves as we struggle
to link up with African people around the world.
This
kind of education must facilitate the re-stimulation of the extended
African in American family foundation as we struggle to become an
economically self-sufficient people who produce, process, distribute,
wholesale and retail like everyone else in the world.
Finally,
this new educational ethos must instill in us the spirit of producing,
the spirit of building, and the spirit of controlling what we create.
Anything short of this will merely mimic the education of our oppressors
and we will continue to be their subjects, to do and be whatever
they choose.
BlackCommentator.com Columnist, Conrad W. Worrill, PhD, is the National
Chairman of the National Black United Front (NBUF). Click here
to contact Dr. Worrill. |