» < « « * » # « ♦ » • • • • * * • • ♦ • * « * , « « » « « » ♦ * % r4 *♦» ♦<**« 3age2, Portland Observer June 15, 1988 OREGON'S OLDEST AFRICAN AMERICAN PUBLICATION OPINION EDITORIAL by John E. Jacob PORTLRHb'OtfeERVER A lfre d L. Hendeison/Pubiisher Hope For Homeless Youth Leon Harris/Gen Manager PORTLAND OBSERVER is p u b lis h e d w eekly by Exie P u b lis h in g Com pany. Inc. 5011 N.E. 2 6 th Axe. P o rtla n d. O regon 97211 P.O. Box 3137 P o rtla n d, O regon 97208 Phone N um ber: (503) 288 0033 Nyewusi Askari News Editor/Staff Writer Gary Ann Garnett Assistant General Manager Joyce Washington Sales/Marketing Director Rosemarie Davis Arnold Pitre Sales Representative Sales Representative Danny Bell Ruby Reuben Sales Representative Sales Representative Mattie Ann Callier-Spears Steve Adams Graphic/Layout Designer Religion Editor Lonnie Wells Richard Medina Circulation Manager Photocomposition EDITORIAL / **! V Z’ )*«• •»>*• -, M t i*.?. ; V ’• ‘I- W ;. V '•■ • •■ •> .*• Ì • * •!r *,, II the primaries have ended and the vote is in. From every numer- _ ical extrapolation it would appear that Jesse Jackson will not be the standard bearer for the Democratic party in the 1988 presidential election. And still his organization is furiously at work garnering superdelegates for the inevitable confrontation in Atlanta next month. Dispite all of the apparent odds against his candidacy, Mr. Jackson can still convey a certain mystique among the voting public and within the political arena. In the perception of his detractors, every Black person has now become a political science pundit with regard to Jesse Jackson’s intentions. Again and again and again we are asked. “ What does Jesse Jackson really want?” The kindest thing that can be said about that question is that it is a curious euphemism. The meaning hidden between the lines is twofold. First, it is a mute admission that the Black populace has finally attained a level a maturity which is an irrevocable reference point to the decision mak­ ing process of the power structure. Secondly, it suggests an unspoken threat to the present power brokers who are loathe to relin­ quish or to share such prominence among the closet racist element that has felt comfortable to surface within the Democratic party dur- ,ng the last eight years. New strategies to recapture control cannot be developed until the freshman partners articulate their demands. The interrogator really is asking, “ What do Black people want now that they have attained more than a spectator position within the in­ ner circle of the club?” To ask such a question is to express a certain insouciance for what Black people have been demanding for more than two centuries. We are demanding our rightful piece of the ac­ tion. We want full participation in every aspect of this great nation whose limitless potential never could have been achieved without the sweat, tears and sacrificial lives extracted from millions of Black sersons over the span of three centuries. We no longer can depend upon the fickle opportunism of the American political circus. What one great reformer giveth in one generation another infamous revisionist taketh away from the next. Currently, preparation is in progress to celebrate the bicentennial of the U.S. Constitution. History has demonstrated the unfortunate observation that longevity does not confer perfection upon a princi­ ple that was initially defective, it only aggravates a deteriorating con­ dition. Rather, experience improves the insight of the user. Mr. Justice Thurgood Marshall previously indicated that the constitution had to be amended more than 20 times to correct the imperfections that have emerged over the years. After two hundred years it is now a tattered patchwork of confusion which even its writers would find dif­ ficult to understand. A constitutional convention is long overdue. Many foreign sovereignties and even some of the 50 states have found the need to re-write there own constitutions. It is a process that should be repeated every 100 years. By so doing we could benefit by the social, philosophical and technological advances that evolve within an ever changing society. ■,?.t 1 N.W. it is pushed under the car­ pet. The realtor who was inter­ viewed on T.V. wasn't very helpful to the clients who had asked her about crime in the N.E. area, be­ cause she hadn’t done her home­ work and apparently doesn't want to sell any houses. She apparent ly doesn't know that Portland's famous police department clump all crimes together. The police don't break down crimes by area or district. I would like to challenge all four stations to go around, especially to my neigh­ borhood, District 19, or any other N.E. neighborhoods, to actually find out how the people who live there feel about crime. Dear Editor, » . u- .'». -Í. ■t : J ' -•- Í». •'..Sí ‘ ,"«’ '“i r ¿¿u- -l. a? tf? & :> '£ s ♦s»„•« I am a concerned resident who lives on the N.E. side of town. I feel that all four local T V. stations have biased news reports regard­ ing the N.E. side of town. The straw that broke the camel's back with me was on KATU Channel 2, June 8, 1988, when the news me­ dia interviewed the couple that had their house broken into. I am sorry that their house was broken into, as I was this couple's neigh­ bor about eight years ago. At that particular time the neighborhood was very quiet and there ere no problems. But neighborhoods do change. The news media has been very biased in reporting N.E. crime. I Thank you, notice when things happen in Gwen Stokes S.E.,- S.W., Lake Oswego, and Resident of N.E. Portland PORTLAND OBSERVER is published weekly by Exie Publishing Company. Inc. 5011 N.E 26th Ave Portland. Oregon 97211 PO Box 3137 Portland. Oregon 97208 Phone Number: (503) 288 0033 .»> »i S» * D eadlines lor all s ubm itted m aterials A rticles Monday 5 p m Ads Tuesday 5 p m The P ortland O b » . . . « ! « .I c o n , . « l-e » l» n c e .« A m le s lo n . M anuscripts and photographs should be c le a r!, gl la b e led and w ill t a r e lu m e d II a ccom panied b , a aell a ddres s ed e n .e lo p e ü New spaper A , , Deletion - Subscriptions »15 00 per »ear in the T rl-C o tm l, area The P OR TLAND OBSERVFR - O regon , o ld e ,I A ir,ca n A m a r r e n P ublication - Founded ,n I M S A rr.e .lu . o " - p r e s e n t if.e A m a iq , m uled P ublishers Inc a M g e S d -** t-'. * I . a m em ber ol The N e t, one! The O regon N e w spaper P u b lis h e r, Association and The N a tio n . New Tor» . 1 V Mary Hatwood Futrell President, NBA oday in America — our land this crisis by passing legislation of plenty, our land of opportu­ that appropriated $5 million to help states fund the education of n ity — 700,000 children are home­ less. They live in temporary shel­ homeless youth. This initiative, the Homeless ters and welfare hotels. They "live” in old cars, abandoned Assistance Act, signaled a begin­ buildings, alleyways. Almost al­ ning— but only a beginning. Its provisions were — and remain — ways, they live in hopelessness. These children — already strug­ inadequate. If the $5 million pie gling for shelter and clothing — were divided equally, the share must now struggle for an educa­ allotted each homeless child would come to $7.14. tio n , fo r th e p ro m is e d Unfortunately, the Reagan Ad­ passageway out of povery and despair. But despair persists. For ministration evidently thinks that seven dollars is too much to thousands of America’s school districts have closed their doors spend to educate a homeless child. The Administration’s pro­ to homeless children. Why? Because many residency posed budget would totally elimi­ requirements bar children who nate this paltry appropriation. I find that unconscionable. And have no permanent address from attending public school. The re­ I am convinced it runs counter to the common sense and uncom­ sult: 43 percent of all homeless mon compassion of the American school-age children do not attend school. These children, in the people. They know that national security cannot rest on policies words of the National Coalition for the Homeless, are thereby that neglect already neglected denied ‘a much needed sense of children. They know, too, that place and continuity they lack in unleashing the full potential of every child is essential to the their fragmented lives.” My heart aches for these chil­ health of our democracy. Americans, I believe, will not dren— perhaps because I knew poverty as a child. But amidst abide the heartless treatment of poverty, I found solace. I had a homeless youth. That is why home. And I had a second w e — home — my school. Those bless­ each of us — must contact our ings sustained me. But increasing Congressional representatives numbers of children today must and demand that they reject the do without such sustenance. elimination of the education fun­ ding provision of the Homeless When these children are denied access to public education, they Assistance Act. If, instead, Con­ are denied the last source of hope gress increases that funding, we will all be richer. So, too, will our they may ever know. In 1987, Congress responded to nation. T control of events is accomplished (Include Em ploym ent O ppor­ tunities). So, those who simply castigate PART 1 of 2 the highly visible multi-national corporations bring to mind the warning of Plato, the ‘Greek’ phi­ losopher, "Existence as per­ ceived is but the shadows on the surface of a pool; Reality lies be­ neath the surface.” ‘Reality’ for Black Americans is America’s ed­ ucational and cultural establish­ ment which for the most part dances to a tune of historical oversight and plain fiction. It is how you are seen to fit into the overall schem e of thing s — yesterday and today, at home and abroad — which determines when or if you shall be employed and at what level, and which determines how or if you shall be educated, by Professor McKinley Burt or even where you shall live. The ‘Desegregation Program’ of the Portland Public Schools includes y articles of the past two a series of "Baseline Essays in weeks were a documented African History," that are design­ demonstration that TARZAN IS ed to rectify many of the histori­ ALIVE AND WELL — 'At home cal lies and omissions that have and abroad: I emphasized that we so cruelty affected the status of are fighting a system carefully African-Americans. fashioned over a span of cen­ Many American scholars were turies for the control of all Third also educated in Europe and World people and their lands. It know better than to continue to should be further understood that deny an ‘African Presence’ at in consequence of an internation­ every iqstance of the formation of al linkage of greed and racism, a the world’s civilization and cul­ temporary success in, say, the ture. A well-rounded — IDIOT war against drugs and gangs may would reach a contrary conclu­ do little to mitigate the problems sion, even without the evidence of minorities in America. Powered of artifacts ranging from ancient by a world system’ of cultural dominance, THE NEXT DEVASTA­ paintings and statues with their “ Negroid” features to the preserv TION IS WAITING IN THE WINGS. You will understand, then, that ed proclamations of Black Kings Blacks must get 'ahead of the and Queens, Popes, and Poets game,' and not simply react to the We have this situation in Eqypt, game of the day. One must be­ Ethiopia, Nubia, The Sudan and in Libya (here, Isaac Newton cre­ ware of how our MEDIA — from prime-time news to textbooks — dited the ancient African astro­ nomer ATLAS with the concept o ‘colors' our perceptions as it not only packages the events of the the sphere and its mathematics). And, then, we have the so- day but translates' and forwards called "M iddle East” where h is to ry w ith in the c u ltu ra l today's "PERSIAN GULF” was guidelines of Darwin's "favored races.” A few years ago Dr. Mar­ called by the ancients “ The Ethio­ pian Sea." Half of the oil mini shall McLuhan at the University of sters and tribesmen would be Montreal made this fact crystal clear. He wrote a best seller, the ‘lost in the crowd' in America’s inner-cities And, there is India Medium Is The Message, and where the GANGES river is nam from that moment on even a fool could understand how cultural ed fora great African general. RACISM: At Home And Abroad M X > f A • » < * z p M ** * •*,* * ? ' e’ve had an abundance of special commissions and task forces \ A f examining minority deprivation in America, and all come up wJUi the same c o n c lu s io n s -th a t we are nowhere near where we should be in terms of equality. Twenty years ago, the Kerner Commission issued its warni/ig that America was sliding into “ two societies — separate and unequal. r In 1988, we’ve had re-examinations of the Kerner Report’s con elusions that reinforce the warning and say that its grim prophecy ,js coming true. I1 Most recently, a blue-chip national commission headed by former Presidents Jimmy Carter and Gerald Ford and made up ct political, business and education leaders drawn from both parties aryJ all parts of the ideological spectrum issued a new warning. It said, “ America is moving backward, in its efforts to secure equity or minority citizens. )C That’s a conclusion amply justified by the facts, and it ought to be taken very seriously by America’s policymakers and by the el^p torate. Certainly the number one issue in the presidential campaign has to be how to stop the backward movement and start moving forward again. The report rightly suggests that continued gradualism is righting wrongs is unacceptable and that it's necessary to develop programs that produce results. If opponents of affirmative action don't like mandated goals affid timetables, they are challenged to come up with alternatives that pro­ duce equal or better results. For the only proper measure can be the ef­ fectiveness of such programs in moving minorities into the mainstream and in overcoming the barriers to equal participation. I was a member of the commission, but what I found io remarkable is that a truly bipartisan consensus was forged among the members. There was general agreement that the pace of progress was far too slow; that America was moving backward, and that it is essential to assure full participation of minorities in American life. But the challenge has been offered before — in countless com­ missions and task forces. What's needed now is the political will and leadership to implement programs to do the ¡ob. and to provide the leadership to build a national consensus behind the policies necessary to bring about positive change. (? Civil Rights Journal by Benjamin F. Chavis, Jr. he anti-apartheid movement continues to gain momentum throughtout the world. Here in the United States, however, there is a need to increase public awareness and support for the freedom and independence of Namibia from the genocidal clutches of the racist government of South Africa. While I was in southern Africa recently I talked to many Nami­ bians about the illegal armed occupation and exploitation of their na­ tion by South Africa. I also learned of eyewitness accounts of some of the most brutal acts of terrorism committed against the people of Namibia by the more than 100,000 soldiers of the South African Defense Force patroling inside Namibia. Namibia is a nation the size of California, Oregon and Washington combined. Its population is 1.6 million: 95% African a id 5% white. Namibia is located on the southwest coast of Africa, bordered by Angola to the north, Botswana to the east and South Africa to the south. Namibia is Africa's last colony and suffers from the continued imperialism of western nations, led by the United States, in unholy league with apartheid South Africa. Since 1969 the United Nations has condemned South Africa's illegal occupation of Namibia. In Namibia, just as in South Africa, Blacks live under a legalized system of racial segregation and oppression. They are denied all rights and have no voice or participation in the governing of their own nation. All rights and power are reserved for the white minority which is only 5% of the population. Namibia is an extremely wealthy nation with many natural resources, including valuable minerals. Yet the wealth of this nation has been stolen by South Africa and supporting western powers. All the Namibians I met overwhelming expressed their sup­ port for the Southwest African People's Organization (SWAPO) and recognized it as the liberation movement of Namibia. SWAPO's crucial role in Namibia's independence struggle has been universally recognized in the international community. P. W. Botha, the ruthless president of South Africa, announced in April that South Africa would take “ fitting and effective action” against SWAPO. In response, Kapuka Nauyala, SWAPO's representative in Zimbabwe, stated, "This is aimed at silencing SWAPO and othfcr democratic organizations in order to stifle the mounting opposition to Pretoria's continued illegal occupation of the territory." It is our responsibility to help prevent the silencing of SWAPO. What can we, in the United States, do to help our sisters add brothers in Namibia and in South Africa? It is urgent that we publicly support the Dellums-Cranston Comprehensive Sanctions Bill (HR 1560/S 556). This bill would require U.S. companies to leave South Africa, would ban all trade between the United States and South Africa and stop the flow of military and intelligence information be tween South Africa and the United States. <3 Additionally, June 16th is National Anti-Apartheid Action and Lobby Day, when hundreds of thousands of people will gather around the country to protest apartheid and express support for compreheh sive sanctions against South Africa. 'V While I was in Zimbabwe I read a copy of the ‘Namibian newspaper. A front-page article detailed a vicious atrocity that has become all too common in Namibia. It was the story of Rebecca,ra young, 16-year-old Namibian girl who was riding her bicycle home from the market outside of Oshakati. in Namibia. Earlier that day there had been an explosion in town which killed 23 Namibians. A truck-load of South African soldiers stopped Rebecca and inter rogated her. Then one of the soldiers shot Rebecca at point-blank range in the stomach Rebecca did nothing to provoke this attack. After shooting her, the group of white soldiers stripped hör naked and then drank beer and shot up into the air, while she was ly­ ing in the road, crying out for help. Four hours later a fellow Namibia#) passed by and attempted to respond to Rebecca's cry. The South African soldiers pointed their guns at the man and told hime to "keep moving” or they would kill him. Other witnesses confirmed th#t Rebecca laid there and cried for her life all night long As dawn bioke the next day. she cried out with her last breath. “ Into your hands. Oh God, I come ” T