«M B « . Page 5 Portland Observer JULY 6.1989 RABBIS ENDORSE CIVIL RIGHTS RE­ VERSE CARAVAN PERSPECTIVES Public Schools as curriculum con­ sultant in 1983. On July 1,1978 Napoleon landed an army on the coast of Africa near Alexandria£gypt. This was a city which had once housed the greatest cultural and technical libraries and medical research centers in the world- and to which the G reeks came to study and cart off sciences and phi­ losophies that were promptly claimed as their own. So alien to Greek thought were these original African concepts, that back in their homeland, many of the thieves were driven out or con­ demned to death like Socrates. Add to this tribe of plagarists the names of Euclid, Hero, Eratosthenes (all AFri- can bom), Plato, Thales, Democri­ tus, Pythagoras, among others-and Aristotle who loved to quote the old Greek proverb, Something new is always com ingoutof Africa (Snow­ den, “ Blacks in Antiquity” , 1970). Napoleon's intent, then, was crys­ tal clear for though his army was rather small for its task o f driving out the British, it did include over 150 scholars, scientists and artists who were io study, report on and illustrate the whole range of life in this part of Africa-its geology, natural history, culture, technology, and people (sound familiar?). Many o f the bright young professionals in this party became some of the most renowned scien­ tists and mathematicians in Europe. And, no wonder, for they had access to a treasure trove whose develop­ ment began 6000 years earlier in Ethiopia, Nubia (today ’s S udan), and in Upper Egypt (Emil Ludwig, * * Na­ poleon” . 1926). by McKinley Burt Black Interaction In Europe IV There once was a little dark com- plexioned man bom on the Mediter­ ranean island of Corsica(1769); A place not that far from Sicily, also a land of intense rivalries and vendet­ tas. Thousands of years earlier this molten sea had been a stage for the expeditions and conquests of Afri­ can Pharaohs. The little man’s name was Napoleon Bonaparte-on the way to becoming a great general and Emperor of France, and Europe’s greatest importer of Africana. As we move from the African presence and triumphs in Russia and England and now to France, I have an opportunity to emphasize the central point of this “ Interaction” series by quoting Ralph Ellison. The noted Black author’s classic novel, “ The Invisible man” , was an award-win­ ning description of the genocidal exclusion of Blacks from even the consciousness of white America. In his collection of essays, “ Going to the Territory” , Mr. Ellison com­ ments: “ What, by the way, is one to make of a While youngster who, with a transistor radio screaming a Stevie Wonder tune in his ear, shouts racial epithets at Black youngsters trying to swim at a public beach-and this in the name of the ethnic sanc­ tity of what has been declared neigh­ borhood turf.” Over the past year I have clearly revealed the modus operandi of the American media, book publishers and educational establishment They have mandated that the world’s history is to be presented in the mode of the ethnic sanctity of a white neigh- borhood turf. The following is from material I furnished to the Portland General Bonaparte gathered his scholars and soldiers before the Great A frican P yram id and told them, “ Forty centuries of greatness look down upon you” . They must have believed him for the shiploads of documents and artifacts brought back to France not only became a major facetof the newly established Louvre Museum, but sparked a Second Ren­ THE AFRICAN- AMERICAN INSTI­ TUTE ELECTS NEW PRESIDENT The Board of Trustees of The African-American Institute (AAI) announces the election of Vivian Lowery Derryck as AAI’s new presi­ dent Ms. Derryck, recently the Execu­ tive Director of the Washington In­ ternational Center of Meridian House International in Washington, D.C., is a former Deputy Assistant Secretary in the U.S. Department of State and Alternate Representative to the U.N. Commission on the Status of Women. She has also served as Vice-Presi­ dent of the National Democratic Institute for International Affairs. Having worked for the U.S. Agency for International Development and various international private volun­ tary organizations, Ms. Derryck has more than 20 years o f experience in international economic and political development in Africa, Asia, the Caribbean and South America. Founded in 1953, AAI is the prin­ cipal not-for-profit, private Ameri­ can organization working to strengthen U.S.-African relations and assist in African development. Il is supported by contributions from individuals, corporations, and philanthropic foun­ dations; endowment income; and U.S. government contracts for specific training programs. Its headquarters are in New York, with a sub-office in Washington D.C., and program rep­ resentatives in 22 African countries. The Board of Trustees also an­ nounces the election of Maurice Tempclsman.Senior Partner of Leon Tcmpclsman & Son, as its new Chair­ man, and Roger Wilkins, as its new Vice-Chairman. Mr. Wilkins is a Clarence J. Robinson Professor of History and American Culture, George Mason University, and a Senior Fel­ low of the Institute for policy Stud­ ies. aissance in mathematics, asuo iomy and geodesy. Napoleon’s artists even reproduced the graffiti of European scientists who, like the ancient Greeks, had gone to Africa to study the mathe­ matics of the Pyramid upon which Two hundred and thirty six rabbis they emblazoned their names-Men and other synagogue leaders from to whom notable discoveries b ea r­ across the United States endorsed the ing their nam es had been falsely at­ "Reverse Freedom Caravan” com­ tributed. Most obviously plagarized: M ercator (map projections and ge­ memorating the 25th anniversary of the deaths of Michael Schwemer, ometry); Fibonacci (This series James Earl Chaney and Andrew proved to be the most powerful equa­ Goodman. These young men, a Black tions ever developed for physics, chemistry, genetics and nuclear re­ and two Jews, were murdered while actions). on a campaign to register Black vot­ On a more pedestrian note, but no ers during the summer of 1964. The less important, French reproductions Caravan left Philadelphia, Missis­ of 4000 year old African designs led sippi on June 21 for a three day to the proliferation throughout Eu­ journey, stopping in Washington, D.C. rope of the Em pire Style of dress on June 23 and ending in New York and furniture-stylish innovations City on June 24. created at a time when most Greeks A1 Vorspan, Senior Vice Presi­ wore animal skins or artless togas. At dent of the Union of American He­ the King T ut Exhibit it was evident brew Congregations, the nation’s that the ancient Africans (by 1600 largest Jewish organization, speak­ ing at a Caravan event in Statuary B.C.) had invented such m odern furniture techniques as the tongue Hall of the United States Capitol and groove jo in t, the dowel, rabbet said, “ In life they [Chaney, Goodman, and m iter, and the m oritse and and Schwemer] symbolized a Jew- tenon. See the illustrations in a book ish-Black partnership which became by Hollis S. Baker. “ Furniture in the a powerful engine for social ju stice. Ancient W orld” . 1965 (note the . . People have tried to bury this lathes). And today’s haute couture partnership and recite obituaries for presents and Em pire Style fashion it, but it still lives. Blacks and Jews share a vision of an open, decent and revival every other decade or so. compassionate America.” Napoleon lost the Egyptian cam­ The Jewish community was ac­ paign because his puny fleet could not match that of the British, but not tively involved in the Reverse Cara­ before his great Black calvary gen­ van. In addition to Vorspan’s speech eral, Thomas Alexander Dumas, had in Statuary Hall, Rabbi David Saper- won The Battle of the Pyram ids stein, director of the Religious Ac­ and prevailed at Cairo. This pro­ tion Center of Reform Judaism, spoke vided enough time for the scholars to at the culminating event of the Cara­ ship their African treasure to France; van, a service at New York City’s particularly there was time for the Cathedral of St. John the Divine on famed Chapollion to find the Rosetta June 24 and at a rally for voter regis­ Stone. This tablet led to the deci­ tration on the steps of the Capitol on phering of Egyptian Hieroglyphics, June 23. and opened the magnificent ancient African Vista to the world. Next week, more revelations of PORTLAND OBSERVER ethnic sanctity. “ The fiyes and Ears ot the C om m unity" 288-0033 Recent Supreme Court Decision Sends Minority Women Reeling ft Four recent United States Supreme groups within the society, to imple­ Court decisions “ dealt severe blows ment compensatory programs that to programs designed to assure the redress long-standing systemic so­ rights of women and racial/ethnic cial deprivation of racial and ethnic persons in this society,” according minorities.” A June 27 Supreme Court deci­ to a statement released June 28, here by the head of the board of Church sion giving states added authority to and Society of the United Methodist execute 16-and 17-yearold murder­ ers or those who are “ mildly” or Church. While two of the Supreme Court “ moderately” retarded, must be de­ decisions have rewritten the legal cried by “ people of faith,” the state­ rules for minority hiring in U.S. ment says. The Board of Church and government and industry, the other Society was also amicus curiae in two “ limit the scope of affirmative two of the cases that were before the action and chip away at basic civil court. A total of 30 youths, all younger rights for women and racial /ethnic than 18 when they committed mur­ persons,” said the Rev. Thom White ders, now await execution on the na­ Wolf Fassett, general secretary of tion’s death rows and the courts esti­ the church’s chief social action agency. mate that as many as one-fifth of the The most distressing ruling issued nearly 2,200 men and women on by the court this year came in Patter­ death row nationwide are retarded to son v. McLean Credit Union, a case some degree. “ To order execution of in which the board signed as amicus children and mentally retarded per­ curiae, Mr. Fassett said in the state­ sons, for whom we have a special re­ ment. In that case, the court unani­ sponsibility, is reprehensible,” the mously upheld a law used to chal­ statement continues. lenge discrimination in making pri­ The statement also condemns “ the vate contracts, but refused, by a 5-4 Supreme Court’s refusal to exclude vote, to extend the law to racial har­ children and retarded persons from assm ent application of the death penalty,” saying to do so wool .1T; “ t ji outrage According to Mr. Fassett, the that we must protest and work to court’s ruling narrows the 1866 land­ change.” mark civil rights ruling since it makes The United Methodist Church is it difficult to sue on the basis of racial opposed to the death penalty and harassment urges through its Social Principles The United Methodist Church in “ its elimination from all criminal its Social Principles statement as­ codes.” serts “ the obligation of society, and ■ ■ « ■ ■ ■ ■ Support Our Advertisers! 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