r « iin m o n n w r a oeii width nisiory special supplement to: The Seattle M E D IU M , Tacoma True Citizen, The Seattle Facts, Showcase, The Portland Observer, Portland/Vancouver Skanner HISTORY MEANS 73 ■ JE — A PLACE IN THE SUN _____ By Karl Holtfield_____ ux sit. Let us begin our salute to Black History Month with this invocation (whatever our creed). Lux sit— let there be light. It seems that the light of learning is puncturing the eclipse which has overhung Blacks— excluding their past and present from M ankind’s story— History. This is benchmarked by several happenings— the rise of Black African nations as L independent countries, the Black Revolution in the United States and recent scientific acknowledgements that Africa has been the M other to Mankind. W ho can hate his cradle? The famous British sci­ entist, Dr. Louis Leakey, con­ tended that the ancestor of modem m an’s ancestor (homo habilis from whom homo sapiens is descended) originated in the northern gamelands of Tanzania. O f course that was over two mil­ lion years ago. Meantime, Mankind spread all over. Were we to consider only the past 2,000 years of history we would find that Blacks are judged only by the last 400 years starting when Europeans found economic advantage in Black slavery. But this is a story too well known to all. W hat is often not real­ ized is that no ethnic group has a monopoly on technol­ ogy. As the wheel of oppor­ tunity turns, we can see dif­ ferent views of the same peoples. Imagine the disdain of ancient Egyptians to learn of white savages painting them ­ selves blue in Europe's caves when Egypt used the chariot, the iron-tipped hoe and spears, wrote on papyrus reed and fostered mathematics. It could compare today to the amazement of those who see Pygmies in their rain forest habitat hunting ele­ phant with spears. As the world becomes smaller due to speed of travel and communications, cul­ tural difference diminishes. People of diverse inheritance and background tend to ad­ vance together, not always in tandem nor at the same pace, but at least the old ignorance comes under scrutiny. And like many viruses, it can’t endure the light, the light of learning. Lux sit. Let there be light. Emancipate our share of History as we take our place in the sun. TODAY YOU ARE MAKING HISTORY ill Black history re­ cord that the United States, with what- ■ ever faults and vir­ tues the extreme left and right have attributed to it, seems to have reached a decline in social and economic barriers for its native-born Afro- Saxons? Could it be that the suc­ cess of the civil rights move­ ment has curtailed the rise of present and future leaders? Perhaps it is mere token­ ism that Black elected officials have suddenly flowered all over the nation, that corpo­ rate America now has ac­ cepted a significant bngade of Black managers, that increas­ ingly Black athletes saturate the professional sports fields commanding superlative salaries. But what about the mil­ lions who still writhe under the lack of opportunity and W injustice of generations past? They have been called the Black underclass. Does the success of the few forecast hope for the many? Will American busi­ ness rake up the gauntlet of this current challenge of how to stem the worsened condi­ tions for the Black masses so as to stabilize the conditions for all Amencans irrespective of color? W e think there is cause for hope, especially when we view the rise of achievers like these. Terence erence said over two thousand years ago, “I bid .■ him look into the lives of men as though into a mirror, and from others to take an example for himself." T Prominent Roman citizen Terenrius Lucanus was so im­ pressed with his African slave, he gave the youth his name. Thus Publius Terenrius Afer, for African, was destined to become one of Rome’s greatest Latin stylists and writers. His works are known mainly for the purity of his o paraphrase the language and the exception­ famous ranging from ally flawless verse. He is still Black Terence to studied throughout the world .......... , ■ English Lord C hes­ twenty-two hundred years terton to others, if the lessons of later. history aren’t learned they are One from the Past T likely to be repeated. This is prob­ ably one significant reason why history is important to us. It has an application to our ever living present. It can affect our future. connniu'J n o r page