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About Portland observer. (Portland, Or.) 1970-current | View Entire Issue (March 21, 1990)
March 21,1990 • Portland Observer • Page J NATIONAL FORUM Civil Rights Journal The New Color Line: Part Two of a Two Part Series In the United States, people of color are frequently classified as “ m inorities." But dynamics of the new color line are rapidly changing the demographic position of nonwhites, which will create new political realities. African-Americans are currently the largest single group of people of color. In the 1990 Census, Blacks should exceed 30 million people. Two-thirds of this popula tion is located in only ten states: New York, 2.4 million people (as of 1980); California, 1.8 million; Texas, 1.7 million; Illinois, 1.7 million, followed by Georgia, Florida, North Carolina, Louisiana, Michigan and Ohio. Significantly, the most recent growth trends indicate, that Black Americans by increas ing numbers are returning to the South, especially metropolitan areas such as At lanta, Houston, New Orleans, Charlotte and Birmingham. As of 1988,56 percent of all African-Americans resided in the South, a gain of nearly 3 million over the 52 percent who lived in the region in 1980. Most of the Black who are moving into the South are younger, in their twenties and thirties; many are white collar profession als and skilled workers. The strongest areas for Black economic growth are also in the Sunbelt, the Southern states, California and the southwest. Hispanics represent the fastest-grow ing population within the new color line. In 1980, the Census counted nearly 15 million Cuban-Americans, Mexican-Americans, Puerto Ricans, and other citizens of His panic descent. By 1990, the Census should count at least 21 million Hispanics. Before the year 2010, less than twenty years, His panics will surpass African-Americans as the largest single minority group. Like Black- Americans, the Latino population is heav ily concentrated in certain cities and states. Three-fourths of the total Latino popula tion is located in only five states. California had 4.5 million Hispanics as of 1980, fol lowed by Texas with 3 million; New York, 1.7 million; Florida, 900,000; and Illinois, 650,000 Latinos. Like African-Americans, Hispanics have developed a series of politi cal formations which advocate civil rights and empowerment. The League of United Latin American Citizens, established in 1928,and theG .I.Forum ,founded in 1948, parallel the N.A.A.C.P. and Urban League as mainstream, liberal organizations. La Raza Unida Party and other local activist formations represent more nationalist-ori ented and radical viewpoints. Asian-Americans represent the most ethnically diverse of the four major groups of people of color. Like Blacks and Hispan ics, Asian-Americans have experienced racism and legal discrimination. During World War II, thousands of Japanese- Americans were forced into internment camps and their property was seized. By 1980, there 5w ere 3.3 million Asian-Americans in ing wage deductions made by an increas the U.S. The major groups included the ingly nonwhite labor force. Keep in mind Chinese-Americans, numbering about that the average Black man now dies about 800,000; Filipinos, 800,000; Japanese- one year before age sixty five, and thus Americans, 720,000; and Korean-Ameri- before he collects Social Security. cars, 380,000. In the 1990s and well into the next Native Americans have historically century, it will be imperative for Black experienced the greatest form of oppres politicians, community leaders and activ sion--genocide. They have a unique status ists to grasp the significance of these demo among all other people of color, in that the graphic shifts and the rise of the new color Indian tribes represent unique legal enti line. We must forge a long-term, strategic ties, with the power to levy taxes and to alliance with the vast majority of these regulate the usage o f lands. The Indian groups of people of color, particularly those population is also heavily concentrated populations such as Mexican-Americans geographically, with more than half of the and Puerto Ricans which already stand at total located in six states: California, with the edge of achieving numerical majorities more than 200,000 Indians in 1980; fol in a number of cities and even states. By a lowed in population by Oklahoma, Ari strategic alliance, I do not mean a casual zona, New Mexico, North Carolina and coalition rooted in convenience and narrow Washington state. self-interests. What is required is a coher What is the significance of these demo ent understanding of our collective com graphic patterns of people of color across mon interests, economically, socially, the U.S.? Before the end of the 1990s, one educationally, and politically. We all bene third of the entire American labor force will fit when we increase the number of non consist of Blacks, Hispanics, and other white elected officials, government em people o f color. By 2000, the majority of ployees and administrators, who can in turn California’s population will be nonwhite. reallocate resources to our communities. By 2020, the majorities of many state We all benefit when we increase the num populations, especially in the Sunbelt, will ber of nonwhite elected officials, govern consist of people of color. Between 2050 ment employees and administrators, who and 2070, the majority of the entire U.S. • can in turn reallocate resources to our population will be nonwhite. The color line communities, we all benefit when we rein will be transformed. The majority will become force the economic base inside the cities, am inority; the minorities will be the major creating opportunities for minority-owned ity. businesses, cooperatives, and other enter The economic significance of this new prises. we can all benefit when affirmative color line and its demographic transforma action programs are effectively enforced tion by the middle o f the twenty first cen within the public sector. We need to seize tury is fundamental. upon those areas of commonality and agree For example, when Social Security was ment, which speak to the practical, day-to- established, the ratio of productive workers day necessities of non white working people, who contributed to the pension system and develop a progressive agenda which compared to recipients was seventeen to places the interests of people ahead of one. By the end of this decade, the ratio private profit. We must mobilize around declines to 3 to 1. By 2030, the ratio will be the color line, reaching to all nonwhites and 2 to 1. Increasingly, there will be a retired, to those progressive, anti-racist whites who leisure class over age 65 which will be share our vision of democracy, to create a almost totally white, subsidized by grow new American society. by Benjamin F. Chavis, Jr. American Apartheid in Alabama 2 Racist apartheid should not be toler ¡lied in South Africa nor in Alabama. We have just recently returned from commemo rating the twenty-fifth anniversary o f the Selma to Montgomery Voting Rights March. Twenty-five years ago, Hosea Williams and John Lewis along with many others were brutally beaten by local and state police officers because they dared to march over the Edmund Pettus Bridge in Selma, Alabama toward Montgomery, the state capitol. The issue then was voting rights for African-Americans who had been system atically excluded from the electoral proc ess in a geographical area that is predomi nantly African-American. Days later, Martin Luther King, Jr., led the successful march to Montgomery. When we arrived in Selma a week ago, we were dismayed to find that while some progress toward the fulfillment of political empowerment for the African-American community has been made, the reality is that another form of apartheid has been instituted. In the local schools, a racial tracking system has been in place for over two decades which has excluded thousands of African-American students from having the chance to receive a quality education. $% African-American students are dispro portionately lodged into the lowest aca demic level 3 ,” while white students are disproportionately lodged into the highest academic “ level 1.” This tracking begins as early as the first and second grades. The method which the schools have admini stered prevented African-American chil dren from changing their assigned aca demic level. We interviewed many A fri can-American high school seniors who stated that they were forced to stay in “ level 3” the entire twelve years of their education in the Selma school system. As a result, these students were not permitted to take basic algebra or mathematics classes because these subjects are reserved for “ level 1” students. In a school system that is 80 percent African-American, it is a crime against humanity for these students to be tracked away from minimum academic competence. Generations of African American youth from Selma have been denied entrance into col lege not because they lack intelligence or ability but directly because of the deliber ate racial discrimination they have suffered in the school system. + Nation of Islam Leader Stirs Nation’s Capitol That is why when Selma’s first Afri can-American school superintendent. Dr. Norward Roussell, attempted to change the tracking system, he was fired by the school board. Incidentally, the school board, in a city that is predominantly African-Ameri can is comprised of six whites and five African-Americans. The school board is appointed by the predominantly white city council which is controlled by long-time Mayor Joe Smitherman. M ayor Smither- man was the mayor of Selma twenty-five years ago when “ Bloody Sunday" occurred across the Edmund Pettus Bridge. The school board has determined that six members constitute a quorum and therefore the white members of the school board effectively maintain the racial tracking system. A renowned psychologist, Dr. Bobby Wright, once said that to systematically destroy or to prevent the development of a person's mind is to commit a form of genocide which he termed “ mentacide.” Twenty-five years ago the issue was the right to vote without racial discrimination and intimidation. Today the issue in Selma, Alabama is the right to education without racial tracking, discrimination and intimi dation. The children of Selma are paying a heavy price. Please do not see this as just a local issue. We are now receiving calls daily from many different communities throughout the country attesting that a similar racial tracking is occurring in their schools. Let the word go out that we shall challenge this form of American apartheid. Yes, a mind is a terrible thing to waste, and we cannot allow the minds of children in Selma or anywhere else to be tracked and de stroyed. WASHINGTON--The Nation’s capi Mrs. Frances Murphy, publisher and tol had never seen anything like it before. In editor of the Washington Afro-American, just two days. Minister Louis Farrakhan, hosted a press conference with members of leader of the Nation of Islam, blew into this the Black press on Feb. 28. city like a quiet hurricane, met with the publishers, senior editors and reporters of the two major newspapers as well as the Black press, and left the city - from the White House to the halls of Congress to the Articles and Essays by Ron Daniels college campuses and basketball courts of the Black community - buzzing over his v isit Just the opposite of the month of March, Minister Farrakhan was in like a lamb and out like a lion, with the words of his visits treated in both papers with deference usu ally reserved for presidents and prime ministers. Greeted by Amaud de Borchgrave, Frantz Fanon, the Algerian revolution The point o f this series of articles on Editor-in-Chief of the Washington Times ary, pointed out in his book THE Pan-Africanism has been to argue that the at their plant on W ashington's northeast WRETCHED OF THE EARTH, that there need for African people to act based on the is no such thing as common or single Afri side on Feb. 27, Minister Farrakhan was ideal of Pan-Africanism remains crucial to taken to Mr. Borchgrave's private office, can national culture which binds all Afri our growth and development. Changing where he met briefly with Wesley Pruden, cans together. Beyond the variety of Black world conditions dictate that now more managing editor, and Josette Shiner, dep skin color, Africans ’ ’ are, in fact, as diverse than ever it is o f the utmost priority that we uty managing editor, before going to “ the as “ Europeans.” Though traditional Afri as African people get our collective act Green Room” where 13 other Washington can communalism may have produced some together. The ever-present reality of ra Times staffers were poised for the luncheon generalized characteristics which might be cism, and Euro-American world domina session. defined as the “ African personality,” that tion and supremacy demand that African The Washington Times, published by personality manifests itself in a multiplic people struggle to devise and implement a ity of specific and identifiable cultures, the Unification Church of Rev. Sun My ung strategy for political and economic em language groups, ethnic groups and nations Moon, has carved a niche for itself in the powerment and development. The founda Washington market since its inception nearly across the African continent and the world. tions of such a strategy should be based on eight years ago. the positive common threads of racial iden After a brief opening statement, the tity, our common African ancestry, the Hence the idea of Pan-Africanism Muslim leader fielded a wide range of virtues and values o f the African personal confronts the reality of cultural, language, questions during a lively exchange. Nota ity and the continuing reality of our subju etJinic and national differences and distinc bly absent from both the Times and the Post gation and domination by Europe and tions. Skin color alone has not been suffi sessions were religious editors. America. cient to bridge these distinctions. Indeed, A front-page news article in the Feb. In practical terms Pan-Africanism must these distinctions have often been the source 28, Washington Times,"Leader urges Black translate into determined efforts to forge of ethnic and national tensions, rivalries, exodus, ’ gave details of the visit accompa regional agreements for economic coop conflicts and wars among African people. nied by extensive direct quotations from eration in West Africa, East Africa and the These differences and distinctions there priated donations to the NYM from major the lengthy interview on page eight. invigoration of the Southern African De fore, constitute barriers to unity which cannot corporations including CBS, Coca Cola, On the following morning, Washing velopm ent Coordination Conference be underestimated by those of us who be Polygram, Warner Communications, from ton Post publisher Donald Graham, son of (S ADCC). The Cambean nations must also lieve in the Pan-African ideal. Donald Trump (the big time New York City rise above their differences to create a owner Katherine Graham, met Minister real estate developer) and from boxing Farrakhan at the entrance to the Post build Carribean common market. Africans in Historically a series of circumstance.s promoter Don King. Mr. Maddox plans to ing and escorted the delegation to the meeting America can play a decisive role in the however, combined to render the power of subpoena all these bigwigs to testify for the effective implementation of Pan-African room at the Washington Post Building, the Pan-African idea very compelling. The defense. ism. However, it is imperative that African- around the comer from the White House, European conquest of Africa, the initiation He has already subpoenaed New York where 17 Post staffers had gathered for a Americans internalize an Afro-centric of the trans-Atlantic slave trade and the City Mayor David Dinkins—the lawyer who breakfast meeting. worldview and ideology. It is vitally impor elaboration of systems of racism, discrimi was hired by the young Reverend Al in Post staffers-including noted colum tant that African-Americans come to under nation, segregation and subordinate status 1971 to incorporate the National Youth nists William Raspberry, Dorothy Gilliam, proceeded with absolutely no regard for stand that our SELF DEVELOPMENT Movement. David has tried to get the sub David Broder and Richard Cohen, as well African cultural, language, ethnic or na nationally and internationally is the key of poena quashed. “ It is said that a lawyer as assistant Managing Editor Milton Cole tional distinctions. All Black people were the race. paid to represent a young man would not be m an-again probed the calm Muslim m in subject to economic exploitation and po Africans in America must marshal the eager to come forward and defend his client ister. The media alleged that Minister Far litical domination irrespective to these dif resources to provide technical assistance when he is being charged with irregulari rakhan had threatened Coleman’s life dur ferences. In fact cultural aggression or and material support for a range of educa ties,” says Mr. Maddox. “ In 1971 Rever ing the 1984 campaign of Rev. Jesse Jackson imperialism, the effort to de-Africanize all tional social and economic projects in Africa end Sharpton paid Mr. Dinkins $4,000 to when Coleman turned over to a fellow Africans, was an integral component of and the Carribean. We must also foster incorporate the National Youth Movement. reporter off-the-record statements of Rev. Europe’s strategy of domination and ex Black investment in Africa and the Car Mr. Dinkins' income was $20,000 that year, Jackson. ploitation. ribean. Within the political arena, African- Reverend Sharpton was his biggest fish!” Minister Farrakhan took the opportu Americans must provide massive and sus But now David has other fish to fry; the Given this fact of cultural aggression/ nity to greet Coleman, and to chastise Post tained political support for appropriate forms last thing in the world this dyed-in-the- imperialism, it is quite understandable that staffers who advised Coleman not to meet of U.S. aid and technical assistance for wool Democrat wants is to be forced, under the concept of Pan-Africanism first emerged with Minister Farrakhan during the contro Africa and the Carribean. We must be at oath, to tell the truth about Reverend Al. among the alienated Africans in the dis- versy, even after the Minister used an ABC least as conscientious as the Irish are about The case itself is a farce, and everyone aspora. Delaney, Blyden, Sylvester W il Nightline television appearance todiscount Ireland, the Polish about Poland and Jews involved knows it. It is the latest move in liams, Dubois and Garvey yearned for a charges that he had called for Coleman's about Israel. The U.S. government will the political establishment's effort to si psychological, cultural and in some cases death. respond to the Pan-African world in direct lence an outspoken Black leader who is physical, return to mother Africa. The a At times intense, the exchanges were proportion to the quality and intensity of deeply loved and respected in the Black quest to rediscover Africa, to affirm the the first face-to-face opportunity for some the political demands of Africans in Amer community because he has courageously greatness of African history and the vitality of the best-known and most widely re ica. and steadfastly refused to keep silent about of the "African personality,” plus the fierce spected journalists in Washington to hear Finally, the focus on the essential injustice. We are going to see to it that this desire to resist white European world su for themselves the views and proposals of a questions of economic survival and devel case backfires; they are about to find out premacy and domination became the driv man the Black community increasingly is opment can serve as a basis for meaningful that we will defend our own! ing elements of the Pan African ideal. These hailing as their "leader.” discussions regarding the larger goal of were the elements which the early fathers greater political consolidation and unity in of Pan-Africanism hoped would serve as CREED OF THE BLACK PRESS the Pan African world. Dubois correctly The Black Press believes that America can best lead the world away from social and the overarching framework tor African defined the “ color lin e" as the "problem national antagonisms when It accords to every person, regardless of race, color, or cooperation, unity and action; framework of the twentieth century.” Making Pan- creed, full human and legal rights. Hating no person, fearing no person, the Rlack which could unify Africans despite differ Press strives to help every person In the firm belief that all are hu rt as long as anyone Africism work as a strategy to overcome ences of culture, language, ethnicity and Is held back. that problem will be the challenge for Afri national origin. cans in the twenty-first century. V antage P oint Beyond Romanticism: The Problems and Prospects of Pan-Africanism T his W ay F or B lack E mpowerment /»i Dr. I cuora ! uliini IVe Will Defend Our Own! ,1a lane™ There is a very valuable lesson to be learned from the election results in Nicara gua. It is that revolutionary struggles in the so-called Third World, regardless of how much popular support they may have, can not really succeed unless and until there is fundamental social change here. Why? For the plain and simple reason that white cor porate America w on't allow i t That is why black-led independent politics is so significant. Those o f us who are committed to this new brand of progres sive politics are shaping the social motion boiling up in the streets of America into a multi-racial, working class-wide movement that is already causing the profoundly cor rupt and anti democratic political estab lishment to panic. A case in point: the kangaroo court proceedings that have been mounted against Reverend A1 Sharpton for the “ crim e” o f having stood up to defend Taw ana B ra wley, a 15 -year old B lack child no one else would listen to when she said she had been gang-raped. Reverend Sharpton is a dearly loved hero in the working class Black communi ties of New York who--for that very rea- son--has been under sustained attack from the state's judicial and political establish ment. On March 19 he will be tried in New York City on charges of stealing $250,000 in charitable funds donated to the National Youth Movement, an organization which he founded when he himself was only 16. A related trial for tax evasion is scheduled to begin in the capital city of Albany, New York on May 1. “ This case has been brought against Reverend Sharpton because the Tawana Brawley matter was never resolved and the attorney general and the governor of this state [Mario Cuomo), who has Presidential ambitions, were publicly em barrassed," charges Reverend Sharpton's attorney Al- -------------------------------------------------------- "This case has been brought against Rev. Sharpton because the Tawana Brawley matter was never resolved and the attorney general and the gover nor o f this state, who has Presidential ambitions, were publicly embarrassed." ton Maddox, who also stood up with the Brawley family and thereby incurred the wrath of those same powers that be who hate Reverend Al; they are Crying to get Mr. Maddox disbarred. In the wake of the Brawley case, G ov ernor Cuomo and Attorney General Abrams and their underlings, aided and abetted by the white corporate media, did everything they could to destroy Al Sharpton .. .just as they and their kind have tried to destroy Minister Louis Farrakhan, another inde pendent Black leader who is a hero to the black masses. The powers that be haven’t succeeded in burying Louis Farrakhan. They didn’t bury Reverend Sharpton. And when 16 year old Yusuf Hawkins was beaten to death by a mob of white hooligans in the lily-white Bensonhurst section of Brooklyn last August, it was Minister Farrakhan who delivered the service at his funeral; and it was Reverend Al who sat with the Hawkins family while the “ responsible” (meaning mealy-mouthed) Black leaders were kept outside with the rest of the politicians . . . where they belonged. Reverend Sharpton is eager for the fraud trial to get underway--he promises it will be the biggest trial of the decade! The government, charging Reverend Sharpton with 67 counts of fraud, alleges that this militant defender of Black youth misappro s « i ■