It
is a very important for African people in America to educate and reeducate ourselves about
our history and its relationship to the important ideas
that shape how we see the world.
We
are still challenged today to create an educational climate
that inspires African youth in America
to understand that the purpose of education is to develop
the skills and historical understanding of the past as it
relates to the present and future, in preparation for working
for self and the liberation of African people. This is the
challenge of the twenty-first-century, to defeat the one
hundred year tradition established by white educational
leaders who created curricula for Africans in America,
designed to prepare them to work for white folks.
Dr.
Carter G. Woodson, who founded in February of 1926, what
at the time was called “Negro History Week,” would indeed
be inspired by the ongoing discussion and debate over the
contributions of African people to the history of the world.
The movement led by Dr. Woodson helped lay the foundation
for the current African Centered Education Movement that
has become the catalyst for the intense study of Africa
and the history of African people throughout the world,
365 days a year.
We
should all read or reread Dr. Jacob H. Carruthers’ profound
book, Intellectual
Warfare. African American History Month is a very
important, continuing effort, for us, as African people
in America to educate and reeducate
ourselves about our history and its relationship to the
important ideas that shape how we see the world. We must
continue this effort beyond African American History Month
and carry it into the rest of the year.
For
over thirty-five-years, Dr. Carruthers played a leading
role as a scholar and intellectual activist in the development
of the African Centered Education Movement.
Dr.
Carruthers was a tenured professor in the College of Education’s Inner City Studies Education
undergraduate and graduate programs at Northeastern Illinois University
in Chicago, Illinois and retired as Professor Emeritus.
Along with Dr. Anderson Thompson, Dr. Carruthers helped
shape both the undergraduate and graduate curricula that
have become known throughout the country for providing a
theoretical and practical understanding of the impact of
the political, economic, social, and cultural forces on
people who live in the inner cities throughout the world.
Of
course, one of the largest groups to live in the inner cities
is African people.
Therefore,
a great deal of Dr. Carruthers’ writings and lectures concentrated
on the white supremacy intellectual assault on African people
and the world. Dr. Carruthers has been magnificent in exposing
the European intellectual tyranny and its impact on the
education of African people.
It
was through his association with the late, great Senegalese
scholar, Dr. Cheikh Anta Diop and the late, great scholar
/ teacher, Dr. John Henrik Clarke that helped propel the
genius of Dr. Carruthers’ insight into the “Deep Well” of
the African Worldview.
As
the founding President of the Association for the Study
of Classical African Civilizations (ASCAC), Dr. Carruthers
helped shape an organizational format for African Centered
scholars, teachers, students, and the overall African Community
to have a collective vehicle in which to pursue the building
of the African Centered Education Movement. His leadership,
in this regard, has been monumental and inspiring to hundreds
of scholars, teachers, and students throughout the African
World Community.
In
this connection, Dr. Carruthers’ book, Intellectual Warfare,
prepares us to function in the twenty-first-century
with a sharper understanding of our challenges as an African
people. The book is organized into five sections. Part I:
The Nature of the War; Part II: Defenders of Western Civilization;
Part III: Intellectual Civil War; Part IV: The Champions
of African Centered Thought; and Part V: Toward the Restoration
of African Civilizations.
In
the preface of Intellectual Warfare, Dr. Carruthers
explains, “These essays reflect the thought of the ‘Chicago group’ and the ‘African Community of Chicago.’ I was simply
a vehicle through whom ideas flowed. Even the mistakes are
our mistakes rather than mine alone. The conceptualization
of our work as Intellectual Warfare emerged out of
the actual battles in which we were engaged.”
In
the first chapter, Dr. Carruthers instructs us by pointing
out, “Thus, those who have been waging the long war to liberate
African history and culture have been fighting the following
two battles: (1) an international war against the European
intellectuals and (2) a civil war against the colonized
African spokespersons who are trained by Europeans to undermine
African independence. The war is truly, as Anderson Thompson
says, a battle for the African mind, or as Asa Hilliard
and the First World Alliance put it, a battle to free the
African mind.”
Those
who believe in the just cause of the long war to liberate
African history and culture must read and reread and study
Dr. Carruthers’ most insightful observations, wisdom, and
his “Deep Well” of understanding that is shared in Intellectual
Warfare.
BlackCommentator.com Columnist, Conrad W. Worrill,
PhD, is the National Chairman Emeritus of the National Black
United Front (NBUF).
Click here to contact Dr. Worrill.
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