June 14, 2012 - Issue 476 |
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The Black Family
as the Foundation
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Since
the early 1900’s, Black and white scholars have written much on the Black
family. When one examines the card catalogue of any library in The
capturing of African people, who were placed in chattel slavery in The family has been that unit that provides the basic foundation for any group of people to survive and develop Families constitute grandmothers, grandfathers, mothers, fathers, brothers, sisters, uncles, aunts and in-laws. Sometimes families extend beyond blood relatives to those persons we bring into our families for whatever reason. Families function in the context of their racial and ethnic identity. This identity is shaped by the historical and external forces of a given society. Although the problems of the Black family appear to be very complex on the one hand, on the other, the problem is very simple: First of all, African people who were captured and introduced into the western hemisphere as property and commodities were removed from their land and institutional arrangements of African life. Second, this process of white takeover of Black life, through
the most brutal form of oppression - the slave trade and the eventual
enslavement of African people on the plantations of It is the strategy of the white supremacy system to place so much pressure on us that we give up our fight for independence and freedom Even through our survival techniques have been superior, in the face of brutal psychological and physical violence against us, we are now at the crossroads. We face the challenge of preserving some of the traditions of the Black family, developed by our ancestors, who fought so hard against racism and white supremacy in this country. This must be done, in part, through the continuing African Centered Education Movement. As our renowned ancestor and deep thinker, Dr. Jacob H. Carruthers, explained, African Centered Education should focus on the following: 1.
Advocates
that restoring the historical truth about for African thinkers (including Africans in the Diaspora). 2. Holds that there is a distinct universal African World View which should be the foundation for all African intellectual development. 3. Involves the massive education or rather re-education of the African people of the world from an African perspective in the interest of African people and directed by African thinkers. This is a necessary pre-condition for the freedom of the African mind and subsequently African liberation. We must not abandon family life. It is the basis for our survival and development. It is the strategy of the white supremacy system to place so much pressure on us that we give up our fight for independence and freedom. When the family unit begins to wither away, we must rise to the occasion and fight to keep its basic elements alive in our communities. It
is the duty of all Black people to understand that we are faced with a
genocidal set of circumstances in The family is the support mechanism for all that we do and it is a sacred institution that we must preserve and protect on our own terms. 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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