Page 2 Portland Observer JULY 20, 1989 “E D IT Ö R IA L /Ö P IN IO N TO BE EQUAL COURT DAMAGED RIGHTS byjohn E. Jacob That noise you may have heard at the beginning o f July was probably the collectiveive sigh o f re lie f that the Supreme C o u rt’s term ended. A t least the Justices w on ’t be able to do any more damage to the flim sy fabric o fc iv il rights u ntil the fall term starts. N ot that they did n ’t do enough damage already. The term just ended was the most disastrous in memory. Just look at some o f the more devastating rulings it came up w ith: The C ourt rolled back local gov­ ernment setaside programs designed to encourage minority businesses and to compensate fo r past discrim ina­ tion. It allowed w hite male employees to sue to overturn court-approved a f­ firm ative action programs that rem­ edy historic discrim ination against blacks. But in another case, it refused that same rig ht to women employees seeking to challenge discrim inatory seniority programs. It lowered an employers’ burden o f p ro of to the weakest possible stan­ dard in cases alleging promotion dis­ crim ination. It made it far more d iffic u lt fo r employees to win discrimination cases by lim itin g use o f statistics that show disparities in jobs held by white men and those held by women and m i­ norities. It overturned use o f an 1866 c iv il rights law in cases charging racial harassment and discrim ination, fo rc­ ing victim s to use o th e r, more d if f i­ c u lt standards. It weakened the rights o f accused persons by d ilu tin g the so-called M i­ randa rules,letting stand a conviction where the accused was denied legal representation at the tim e o f arrest. It approved the death penalty fo r minors and retarded persons, over­ turning long-held precepts that such a penalty represents “ cruel and un­ usual punishm ent And it narrowed privacy rights and the rig ht o f women to make their own reproductive decisions by up­ holding a M issouri law restricting the right o f abortion. This latter case, Webster v. Re­ productive Services, is the prelude to forthcoming cases in w hich the Court appears lik e ly to reverse the 1973 Roe v. Wade decision that estab­ lished the constitutional rig ht to abortion. The decision w ill unleash a bitter, d ivisive battle in state legislatures as the anti-abortion movement w ill fight to push state laws to the other lim it o f what is constitutionally permissible. And it ’ s going to poison A m e ri­ can politics fo r years to come as the m ilita nt anti-abortionists w ill make allegiance to their position the only electoral test fo r politicians seeking office. W e may ju s t w ind up an e f­ fective ban on abortions and w ith government deciding whether a woman w ill bear a child. Whatever one’ s personal attitude toward abortion, since 1973 there have been strict constitutional lim its that preserve both a wom an’ s rig h t to control her own body and the state’ s legitimate interest in preserving life. The C ourt is now launching our society into a bitter battle over a social issue that had been settled in a satisfactory manner fo r a ll but a ■ , Along the Color Line "Do the Right Thing’* Dr. Manning Marble Spike Lee’s latest film , “ Do the Right T h in g ," has provoked the greatest political debate and contro­ versy since the polemics surround­ ing the film version o f Alice W alker’s ‘ ‘The C olo r purple. ” As in the previ­ ous controversy, critics and defend­ ers alike have focused less on the relative merits and weaknesses o f the film as a w ork o f art, and have fo ­ cused instead on the m ovie as a cu l­ tural litm us test on race relations and the question o f p olitical powerless­ ness w ith in African-Am erican com ­ munities. What’s required at this point is to separate an analysis o f Lee’s film from the charges in d counter­ charges engendered by the m ovie, in order to shed ligh t upon the broader p olitical and social significance o f the issues raised by the debate. “ D o the R ight T h in g ” was w rit­ ten, produced and directed by Spike Lee, a 32 year old A frican Am erican film m aker, who has previously done tw o movies on Black-oriented top­ ics. Lee’ s m otivation fo r developing the film was sparked by the death o f M ichael Stewart, a g ra ffiti artist who was k ille d by transit authority o ffi­ cers in New Y o rk for allegedly re­ sisting arrest. The events o f Howard Beach, New Y ork, in which Black men were assaulted and one k ille d by a gang o f w hite racists, further crys- talized Lee ’ s concerns about the state o f race relations in Am erica’ s largest m in ority o f zealots. The immediate effect o f the Webster decision w ill be to sharply lim it poor people’ s a b ility to term i­ city. The essential storyline o f the film nate unwanted pregnancies, since it allows public facilities to refuse treat­ is as fo llo w s: Based in a Black and ment. M eanwhile, the affluent can Hispanic neighborhood in New Y ork’s get abortions at w ill in private estab­ Bedford Stuyvesant area, the events lishments. take place during one hot day during A ll, in a ll, this Supreme Court the summer on one c ity block. Lee term has been a disaster fo r human presents a series o f characterizations rights advocates, and we must look o f Black low income people, undere­ to the President, Congress, and state ducated and jobless, but w ith a real legislatures to remedy the damage sense o f d ignity and humanity. The characters include tw o Black elders, done to rights by the C ourt.” excellently portrayed by Ossie Davis and Ruby Dee; Bugging Out (Gian­ carlo Esposito), the local neighbor­ hood’s activist who is upset by the lack o f Black-ownership in the com ­ m unity; Radio Raheem (B ill Nunn), a huge young man w ith an equally large ghettoblaster; Sm iley (Roger Sm ith), a young man w ith a speech W hitney Houston sings “ I believe the children are our future. Treat them defect who nevertheless represents w ell and let them show the w ay” .The future o f African-Am ericans is in the most p o litic a lly advanced char­ jeopardy because B L A C K Y O U T H A R E A N E N D A N G E R E D SPECIES. acter in the entire film by his advo­ W e ll like everything else in the African-Am erican com m unity, it de­ cacy o f the ideas o f M alcolm X and pends on your vantage point. I f you are among the more fortunate w ith in our M artin Luther K ing, Jr.; and M ookie, com m unity, the top 20% whose incomes increased dram atically in the last played by Lee him self, an unmarried decade, then perhaps your young sons and daughters are not at risk. But the father who works at an Italian A m e ri­ sons and daughters o f a vast number o f A frican-Am ericans are in serious can-owned pizzeria in the heart o f crisis. This is particularly true o f those who struggle to survive amongst the the Black com m unity. abandoned ghetto class; those who are locked out, le ft out, neglected and The central antagonism develops locked up. when Bugging Out complains to the Because some African-Am ericans are now doing quite w ell, Am erica, owner o f the pizzeria that there should and indeed even some African-Am ericans suffer from an illusion o f prog­ be photographs o f prominent A f r i­ ress. In reality there is an explosive tim e bomb ticking away in the depths can Am erican artists, athletes and o f the Black comm unity,and at the bottom o f A m erica’ s economic pyramid. political leaders in the shop almost African-A m erican youth, particularly Black males are being destroyed by exclusively patronized by Blacks and in fe rio r education, staggering unemployment, drugs, violence, aimlessness Hispanics. When the owner refuses, and frustration.Am erica doesn’ t seem to care. And jud gin g by the lack o f bugging Out organizes a small b oy­ urgency in our actions the African-A m erican com m unity is complacent, cott w hich leads to a confrontation. unconcerned or too busy enjoying the “ good life ” to pay attention to the Radio Raheem’ s ghettoblaseter is wholesale destruction o f Black youth in our midst. smashed by Sal, the owner, and a Despite progress in race relations over the last 25 years, racism remains fig h t ensues. The police are called a m ajor contributing factor in the devastating crisis confronting A frica n- and in typical fashion respond by Am erican youth. In 1986 unemployment among young Black males stood choking Radio Raheem to death. at 74% as compared w ith 52% fo r young w hite males. In fact the last tw o M ookie leads the outraged residents decades have failed to produce significant gains in terms o f Black youth to attack and destroy the pizzeria. employment. In the m id -fifties Black and w hite teenage em ploym ent rates L e t’ s focus first on the main ele­ were about the same, 52%. By 1989 however. Black teen employm ent had ments or themes w hich Lee is at­ declined drastically to 27%. W hite teen em ploym ent remained at about the tempting to explore here. Metaphors same level. abound in the movie. U nintention- In an alarm ing development, there is a large and increasing segment o f CIVIL RIGHTS JOURNAL THE CRISIS OF BLACK YOUTH a lly, by projecting Sm iley as a stut­ terer w ho sells photos o f M alcolm and M artin, the film seems to say to us that the legitim ate voices o f resis­ tance and activism in our com m uni­ ties are frequently held down or deni­ grated. There’ s a dialectical tension underscoring the whole film from beginning to end between a hope fo r interracial peace and nonviolent change vs. the need fo r group so li­ darity, empowerment and an advo­ cacy o f armed self defense against racist brutality. This is reason fo r Lee’ s uses o f Public Enem y’ s “ Fight the Pow er” and the National Black Anthem , “ L if t Every Voice and S ing ” , at the opening o f the film , and the quotations from M alcolm and M artin at the conclusion. Politics and power are at the heart o f the film . W e are shown black men and women w ho are out o f w ork or marginally employed, living in neigh­ borhoods w hich are controlled eco- nom ically by nonblacks. The police treat A frica n Americans w ith con- tempt, functioning like an occupying army in enemy territory. One is struck by contemporary parallels to Pales­ tine or perhaps the bantustans o f South A frica. To ensure the property, busi­ nesses and lives o f white occupiers, the police make selective examples o f nonwhites through the utilization o f extreme coercion. Thus Radio Raheem’ s execution is not acciden­ tal, but typical o f a larger question o f white political combination and Black oppression. “ D o the R ight T h in g ” also pres­ ents the contradictions o f Black-white relations by exam ining the personal am biguity between the w hite store- owner Sal (Danny A ie llo ), his two sons and M ookie. The film graphi­ cally depicts the extreme racism o f one son w ho defines Blacks as ani­ mals, yet Sal is proud o f his estab­ lishm ent and his cordial relationship w ith most patrons. M ookie initiates the looting o f the store after Radio Raheem’s death, yet the morning after Sal is prepared to pay his form er employees tw ice what he is owed. The reason that the film strikes a responsive chord here is because race relations are complex, not sim plis­ tic. W hites w ho are profoundly racist frequently can hate an entire group o f people yet make exceptions in their relations w ith individuals. Sal’ s failure isn’ t personal, its p olitical. Bugging O ut doesn’ t want to marry Sal’ s daughter, or to force him to sell the pizzeria. He o nly wants M a l­ c o lm ’ s and M a rtin ’s pictures on the pizzeria’ s w all as sym bolic o f recog­ nizing the heritage and humanity o f the patrons. Sal’ s refusal is funda­ m entally the refusal o f w hite racism to recognize that human rights go beyond property rights. A number o f confused critics. Black and w hite, have attacked Lee fo r m aking a film which supposedly advocates violence. Journalist Juan W illia m s complains that the m ovie lacks “ v is io n ” and promotes racial confrontation, i f W illiam s, etal. really lived in the innercity they’d under­ stand that Lee’ s film actually under­ states, i f a n y th in g , the race and class tensions in contemporary Am erica. “ D o the R ight T h in g ” provides a com plex and dynamic examination o f Am erican racism. Black youth who are passing into adulthood w itho ut any jo b experience whatsoever. They are a part o f an expanding economic underclass. W ithout a jo b it is d iffic u lt to develop a sense o f pride and self-esteem in the middle o f an affluent, acquisitive, m aterialistic society. W ithout a legitim ate job its easy to turn to the illic it street economy o f drugs, crim e, vice, violence and death. An angry dispossessed class o f A frican-Am erican youth are now lashing out against society. They are the victim s o f genocidal governmental policies which invest in star wars, exotic bombers, spacecraft, and a variety o f missiles w hile neglecting to invest in education, housing, health care, and jobs fo r our young people. They are the victim s o f Reagan’ s “ voo-doo economics” which worked magic fo r the wealthy and created devastation and misery for the masses o f African-Am ericans imprisoned in Am erica’ s urban ghettos. The most tragic casualty o f this blatant neglect, however, has been the deterioration o f V A L U E S , the weakening o f Black fam ilies, and the shredding o f the fabric o f the African-A m erican com m unity. Black youth are self-destructing in the face o f Am erica’ s genocide and we as A frican- Americans seem incapable o f caring enough to rescue, nurture, and develop our future. O ur youth are rampaging out o f control, on their own. Those who H A V E w ithin the African-Am erican com m unity are either embarrassed by our youth, disdainful o f them or blame them for the problem. The H A V E NOTS w ithin our com m unity are im m obilized by the sheer struggle to survive, or terrorized into inaction. Am erica has a huge time bomb on its hand. The National A frican- American com m unity has a monumental crisis which it must squarely face or risk an uncertain future. The crisis facing Black youth must be solved or W E RE H E A D E D FOR SE LF-D ESTR U C TIO N . P O R TLA N D -OBSERVER OREGON’S OLDEST AFRICAN-AMERICAN PUBLICATION Established in 1970 A lfre d L. Hendereon/Pubiisher Leon Harrla/Qeneral Manager Gary Ann Garnett Joyce Washington Business Manager Sales/Marketing Director PORTLAND OBSERVER « published weekly by Exie Publishing Company. Inc 525 N.E Klllingsworth St. Portland. Oregon 97211 P.O. Box3137 Portland, Oregon 97208 (503) 288-0033 (Office) Deadlines for all submitted materials: Articles Monday, 5 p m.; Ads Tuesday, 5 p.m. The PORTLAND OBSERVER welcome« freelance submission* Manuscrpts and photograph* should be dearly 'abe ed and «nit be returned if accompanied by a *eif addressed envelope All created designed display ad* become the sole property of the r ewspaper and can not be used in other publication* or personal usage, without the written consent of the general manager, unless the client ha* purchased the composition of such ad. 1989 PORTLAND OBSERVER ALL RIGHTS RESERVED REPRODUCTION IN WHOLE OR IN PART WITHOUT PERMISSION IS PROHIBITED. Subscription* $20 00 per year in the Tri-County area The PORTLANO OBSERVER Oregon * oldest African American Publication -is a member of The National Newspaper Association - Founded in 1885. The Oregon Newspaper Publishers Association, and The National Advertising Representative Amalgamated Publishers. Inc.. New York I SSL & ï r i t î i ? i. INSTITUTIONS FOR BLACK EMPOWERMENT: THE BLACK UNITED FUND W e as Black people tend to pay fo r what we want and beg fo r what we need. As African-Am ericans we have yet to learn the wisdom o f har­ nessing our own resources to de­ velop our own communities. W hile it is true that we have vast numbers o f our people (perhaps 30%) who live in poverty, co lle ctively we do have resources. Considered as an A frican nation in Am erica, A fric a n -A m e ri­ cans have a gross annual income o f more than 250 b illio n dollars a year. In that context we w ould be consid­ ered one o f the most prosperous de­ veloping nations in the w orld. T o re­ iterate, the problem is that African- Americans have not internalized the concept o f using our dollars fo r our own developm ent This is not a new found revela­ tion. Throughout our history there have been a stream o f African- Am eri­ can leaders who have sought to teach the value o f self-help, self-support, and self-development. M artin R. De­ laney, Bishop Henry M . Turner, Booker T. Washington, Madame C.J. Walker, W E .B . Dubois, Marcus Gar­ vey, M ary M cC loud Bethune, The Honorable E lijah Muhammad, M a l­ colm X and M artin Luther K in g are but a few o f our distinguished leaders who have appealed to us to take seriously the need to invest our re­ sources in our own self-development. Though one can argue w ith some m erit that African-Am ericans have gotten somewhat better at self-sup­ port since the sixties, our com m it­ ment to self-help s till falls far short o f what is required to make us a strong, viable and effective national com m unity. O ur m ajor c iv il-rig h ts organizations and institutions o f higher learning from the N .A .A .C J*. and Urban League to the U nited Negro College Fund are p rin c ip a lly sup­ ported by labor, corporations, or individual white donors. M ost o f our com m unity based organizations and agencies would not survive w ithout white good w ill and philanthropy. The shaping o f a pattern o f institu ­ tions fo r black empowerment w ill require massive support in terms o f dollars from Black people. I f we seek to achieve power to enhance the de­ velopment o f our com m unities then we must kic k the habit o f paying fo r what we want and begging fo r what we need. Every African-Am erican commu­ nity in the United States should have a United African-A m erican Appeal, a United Black Fund, or a Black United Fund. In every com m unity public and private sectors are strate­ gies which can greatly expand the impact o f resources raised w ith in A f ­ rican-American community is o ff and rolling. Fortunately due to the pioneering w ork o f people like Jim Joseph, the late W alter Bremond, and C alvin Rolark, there are Black U nited Funds or United Black Funds in a number there should be an institution which o f cities including New Y o rk C ity, functions fo r the African-Am erican D etroit, Washington D.C., Houston, com m unity in the same manner that Atlanta and Los Angeles. However the United W ay functions fo r the none o f these funds enjoy the w ide­ com m unity in the same manner that spread and massive support that is the United W ay functions fo r the required fo r them to have m ajor com m unity in general. A frican- impact. Indeed some o f them require Americans need to provide the p ri­ grants from w hite foundations or the mary funding bases fo r our c iv il- United W ay fo r their very survival. rights organizations, c iv ic associa­ In the final analysis institution fo r tions, cultural, educational, economic Black empowerment cannot be b u ilt and p o litic a l development projects and maintained unless we as A f r i­ and programs. can-Am erican are com m itted to A Black United Fund is sim ply a support these institutions w ith our broad based com m unity e ffo rt to own d ollars.lt is s till true that “ he harness some o f the b illion s o f d ol­ who pays the piper picks the tune” . lars that flo w though our com m uni­ O ur institutions cannot play the kind ties every year to support our own in ­ o f liberating tunes we need unless we stitutions and our own com m unity ante-up. The vital importance o f self- development. Individual donations, help fo r self-development is a key fund-raising projects, corporate and cultural value and ideological tenet institutional contributions a id pay- [i which we must continue to drive into ro ll check-off are among the means the hearts and minds o f our people. which can be used to provide a pool “ No one else w ill save us, but us” . o f capital fo r the Black United Fund. United Funds are an indispensable Long term investments, developing institution fo r Black empowerment. endowments and leveraging existing We as African-Am ericans must pay resources to receive grants in the the price fo r our own liberation. BLACK/JAPANESE RECONCILI­ ATION - A MOVE TOWARD SOLIDARITY by Mark Goss T okyo, Japan on Saturday June 24, 1989, The W o rld R ally o f Black A ctivists (W R B A ) convened its preparatory meeting. The W R B A is the brainchild o f M r. Ryosuke M A R S U U R A , a prominent Japanese human rights activist. “ Insensitive, Reckless and irresponsible” statements were made by two top Japanese politicians regarding African-Americans. Matsuura and other responsible Japanese feel that the statements were an insult not only to A frica n Am ericans, but to the entire Black W orld. M r. A . Akbar M uham mad/epresentative o f the Nation o f Islam , d e liv ­ ered the keynote address, said that, Nakasone, Watanage and an unnamed Japanese manufacturer who recreated a ‘ sambo’ d oll, must have received their inform ation from their contact w ith W hite Am erica. I don’ t honestly believe that they hired a Black consulting firm , or sent Japanese researchers to the Black comm unities in Am erica to ju s tify their reckless and unfounded statements.” M r. Seiho T A J IR I, a Japanese business man liv in g in Am erica, attended the conference. He has worked fo r twenty years w ith various A frican- Am erican organizations in attempt to strengthen business relationships between Japan and Black Am erica. T a jiri revealed to those in attendance that there is a tendency fo r some American Tour Agents to discourage Japanese visits to Black Communities. The honorable Rossie Douglas, M P from the Island o f D om inica in the Caribbean, urged the Japanese to review the method by which monetary aid is given to T hird W orld Nations. T raditionally, aid is given through form er C olonial Masters. Keba B. Cisse, Ambassador from Senegal and Faustin P. Maganga, Student and Q R B A C oordinator from Tanzania stress that it is im portant that Japan develops a “ proper” relationship w ith A frica. Japan is an Island nation o f nearly 150 m illio n people and w ill need vital resources from A frica going into the next century. Spartacus R., musician and D irector o f the C ultural Awareness Program in London spoke on the need for proper recognition o f A fric a and her cultural, philosophical and scientific contributions to w orld c iviliza tio n . M r. Matsuura plans to build an international organization based on mutal respect, human d ig nity and w orld peace. Plans are now underway fo r five regional plenary sessions fo r the W R B A . The first meeting w ill be held in the Caribbean - September 1989; United Suites - October 1989; Europe - December 1989; East and West A frica - January 1990. These meetings w ill be concluded w ith a W orld R ally o f Black A ctivists to be held in B ra zil in 1990. A t the conclusion o f the Conference, The Tokyo Declaration o f the W R B A fo r W orld Peace and Human D ign ity was read and accepted by conference attenders and w ill be sent to Black Newspapers and organiza- lions around the world.