Page 2 The Portland Observer May 16, 1990 E ditorial / N ational F orum Professor M c K in le y B u rt More Adventures In Learning: I’ve Been Working On The Railroad Racism And Hypertention There have been many studies that have concluded that hypertension of high blood pressure among African American is one of the greatest cause of death. Now a leading medical author­ ity on hypertension has authorized a medical textbook which scientifically establishes a linkage between one’s hypertension and reaction to racism. Dr. Elijah Saunders, a Cardiologist at the University of Maryland Medical School, recently authored H yperten­ sion in Blacks. Dr. Saunders con­ cluded that “ if there were no racism in America, hypertension would be less of a problem among Blacks. Hyperten­ sion is at near-epidemic proportions among Blacks and is chiefly respon­ sible for their high mortality rates from heart and kidney disease and stroke.” We have known for a long time that being a victim of systematic and insti­ tutional racism does limit one’s life ex­ pectancy. Yet we live in a society where certain things have to be proven scientifically or statistically before certain things are believed to be true. Thanks to the research and clinical ob­ servations of Dr. Saunders, now maybe governmental decision-makers and oth­ ers will understand better the deadly nature of racism in this society. Already, there is considerable aca­ demic debate about Dr. Saunders’ con­ clusions in Hypertension in Blacks. Fortunately, the results of a study pub­ lished last month in Health Psychology tend to corroborate Dr. Saunders’ find- by John E. Jacob It’s time Americans stopped con­ gratulating themselves about their af­ fluence and about the great opportuni­ ties available here as opposed to other nations, because for all our affluence and for all our accomplishments com­ pared with others, there is one aspect of American life that is nothing less than shameful. Child poverty in America is outra­ geously high-and it is on the rise. Almost one out of four American children under the age of six are grow­ ing up poor. Among African Americans, half of our young children are poor. That should be an incredible scan­ dal-one that ought to be shaking the Congress and the public. Instead, it’s just another statistic to be ignored. ings. Dr. Kathleen Lawler of the Uni­ versity of Tennessee and Ms. Cheryl Armstead of St. Louis University dem­ onstrated that ‘ ‘racism sets off a greater blood pressure rise than other kinds of anger’’ among African Americans. These researchers concluded that “ such a sharp rise indicates a hyperactive blood pressure, which, if continually provoked over several years can become a dan­ gerous combination with other risk factors for hypertension.” As a result of Dr. Saunders’ pioneer­ ing research and other studies, the fol­ lowing findings should be kept in mind: (1) People who tend to suppress their anger, regardless of race, have higher blood pressure than normal. (2) Ra­ cism is a particularly potent trigger of anger and of high blood pressure in Af­ rican Americans. The point here is that African Americans and others who are victims of racism have to be careful not only on how they challenge racism in their midst but also care must be taken not to internalize or suppress one’s re­ action or anger. It would be a big mis­ take for readers of Dr. Saunders’ book or the studies of the other researchers to respond by saying, “ Well, this means we should not react to racism; let’s just ignore it because if we react our blood pressure may increase.” One of the historical problems is that too many people welcome a chance to make an excuse or to justify their non­ involvement in the struggle for racial justice and human freedom. Again, we salute Dr. Saunders and the others for their work because it confirms what we have known from life experience to be true. The question is not should one react to racism, but how one should react. Frederick Douglass once said that the limits of our oppression would be determined by the extent of our toleration of the oppression. Thus, we should not suppress or internalize feel­ ings of anger in reaction to racial dis­ crimination and injustice. On the other hand, we should not allow ourselves to become so enraged with anger in reac­ tion to racism that it become detrimen­ tal to our health. We suggest that one’s participation in organizations and movements for social change and justice can be very therapeutic. In many communities, we find too many people “ worrying them­ selves to death” literally about their victimization due to racism. Racism can be and needs to be effectively chal­ lenged. The whole history of racial progress in this society is a consequence of continued struggle and sacrifice. Dr. Saunders, however, has given us all an important warning. Just in recent years, we know the tragic heart attacks ofa Harold Washington o f Chicago and of many others throughout the nation possibly could have been avoided. Thus Hypertension in Blacks reminds not only African Americans, but all Ameri­ cans concerning the need to work harder to rid this nation and this world of the disease of racism. The trouble is, childhood poverty cannot be ignored because it’s going to come back to haunt this country and all of its citizens. When you consider that poor chil­ dren statistically tend to perform worse at school; to suffer health problems that often lead to costly care; are less likely to become employed in later life, and are more likely to become dependent as adults-then you see this as a national crisis and a threat to America’s future, not something to be dismissed. But so far I haven’t seen anyone in Washington crusading for policies to end child poverty. There are plenty of talented, intelligent people fighting to cut capital gains taxes or crusading for other measures. But no key figure in the Administra­ tion or the Congress is making an issue of the fact that almost one of every four American children is poor. That’s a serious abdication of re­ sponsibility. Especially since the prob­ lem is even worse than it appears. According to Census data, not only are over 5 million children living in families with annual incomes below the poverty line-but another 2.7 mil­ lion arc in families just above that arti­ ficially low “ poverty line.” That means one of every three young children in America is poor or near poor. The poverty line itself is an un­ derstated, arbitrary figure. But, how­ ever one may define poverty, there can be no disagreement that those kids are growing up in hardship. Many of those children are in fe- The announcement by Zairian dicta­ tor Mobutu Sese Seko on April 24 that he would institute tentative democratic reforms in Zaire (formerly known as the Congo) was a stunning victory for the democracy movement in that cen­ tral African country and for the anti- Mobutu movement in the United States tht supports it. The Rainbow Lobby, an independent citizen’s lobby, has led the effort to expose to the American people and to Congress the brutality and cor­ ruption o f the Mobutu regime. At a press conference on April 27 at the Washington Press Club, the Lobby’s executive director Nancy Ross noted that this grassroots information cam­ paign, which “ countless community organizations, church people, student groups, courageous Zairian exiles and individual American of conscience” had joined, “ resulted in a public outcry against the complicity of our govern­ ment in sustaining, with US tax dollars, Mobutu’s reign of repression and pov­ erty. In response to this pressure, sig­ nificant members of Congress have un­ equivocally condemned this regime and called for an end to all US military aid. “ Mr. Mobutu, who came to power 25 years ago in a CI A -orc hestrated coup after assisting in the assassination of Patrice Lumumba, has,” stated Ms. Ross, "always owned his office not to any legitimate political process sanctioned by the Zairian people but by his special relationship to Washington. He has clearly been shaken by this turn in the (L'SPS 959-6X0) O R EG O N ’S OLDEST AFRICAN-AM ERICAN PUBLICATION Established In 1970 Joyce Washington Operations Manager Gary Ann Garnett Business Manager Leon Harris Editorial Manager PORTLAND OBSERVER is published weekly bv Exie Publishing Company, Inc. 4747 N.E. M .L.K ., Jr. Blvd. Portland, Oregon 97211 P.O. Box 3137 Portland, Oregon 97208 (503) 288-0033 (Office) * EAX #: (503) 288-0015 Deadlines for all submitted materials: Articles: Monday, 5 P.M. — Ads: Tuesday, 5 P.M. O B 97208. ' wlldinl u . t . . . B . i . t . . l . ilia u d . The PO RTLA ND OBSERVER weleomes freelance submissions. Manuscripts and pho­ tographs should be clearly labeled and will he returned if accompanied liy a self addrened envelope. All created designed display ads become the sole property of this newspaper and can not be used in other publications or personal usage, without the written comen! of the general manager, unless the client has purchased the composition of rochad. 1990 PO RTLA ND OIISEHV ER. A L L R IC H I S RESERVED. Rl P ltiU it ( T IO N IN W H O L E OR IN PAR I W IT H O U T P E R M IS SIO N IS '•R O tlllll I I I» S ebieriplio nt: $20.00 per year in Ih r Tri-C ounly aera; $2S.OII a ll other area* The PO RTLA ND OBSERVER -• O rison's Oldest African-American Public ation--is a member of The National Newspaper Association ■■ f ounded in IXN5, and I In National Advertising Representative Amalgamated Puldlshers, Inc., New York, NV ■ t r » > -ft y <-■< «• r by Profesor McKinley Burt The “ Wabash-Union Pacific-South­ ern Pacific-P. S. & S.,” these are rail­ roads I worked for in the late 1930s’ and early 1940s. They carried a lot more than paying passengers, freight and mail. Across America, these lines dispatched a complement of laborers and crafts­ men entrusted with the task of keeping the nation’s most vital arm of transpor­ tation funcitonal-from routine mainte­ nance of the tracks to restoring service after such disasters as wrecks, floods blizzards or avalanches. From week to week these perapatetic crews might move from an incredibly beautiful site in a forested wilderness to, say, a steaming hell-hole in the Nevada desert, from the Mississippi Delta to the Rocky Mountains. I entered the workforce at the end of my junior year in high school, to help support the family. It was a fascinating world of rough, itinerant workers, af­ fectionate camaraderie, oral history and folklore. I was part o f that special group of segregated maintenance work­ ers called “ gandy-dancers” -B lack semi-skilled laborers who were trans­ ported wherever their services were needed in special types of railway cars. These “ gandy cars” were like rolling hotels (though sparsely appointed), with sleepers, kitchens and shower cars. Also there were mobile tool and equipment facilities, including air compressors, generators and huge cranes. The num­ ber of men involved would range from 25 to 100. There is very little of this support activity today-except in dire emergency or to facilitate new con­ struction. Gone too are the huffing, puffing, coal-fired steam locomotives. The gandy was both a learning and teaheing experience, for as I have often mentioned in my articles, there was in these times a strong, hope-driven moti­ vation among Blacks to gain knowl­ edge and education-and it was equally sustained here among the most unlet­ tered or illiterate, as with the urban dwellers. I was constantly pressed into male-headed households. They are poor because one breadwinner isn’t enough to keep a family out of poverty and because women-especially minority w om en-earn less and are more often unemployed. But two out of every five of those poor youngsters are living in intact fami­ lies with two parents, and most of those children had at least one parent work­ ing full or part-time. So the disgrace of child poverty is service to read or write letters, procure mail order merchandise and books, con probation officers, execute money or­ ders, stall divorce preceeddings, and otherwise serve as an inhouse lawyer and professor. Overall, the principal inducements were escape from the pres­ sures of the city and relatives, from prosecution or bounty hunters (the rail­ road went to great lengths to protect their workers from nosy sherifs)-and in my particular case, a 16 year-old could earn the magnificent sum of 80 cents an hour ($36.80 for a 44 hour week), as opposed to the 12 or 15 dol­ lars a week he could earn at menial tasks in the ghetto. Except around payday, the long eve­ ning times were filled with job talk, story telling and ribald jokes--but also, the murmurs of serious conversation, the prognostication of political pundits, the lectures of grass roots historians and philosophers. Like an African Ameri­ can barbershop (in the middle of no­ where), the warm, edifying social and cultural intercourse went on into the night-and when the generators shut down, the kerosene lamps lit up and the pleasant cacaphony went on. Through it all the gandy entrepreneurs would hawk their wares and services, the bar­ ber, the mail order shoe salesman, the pawn broker, the card dealers and book­ makers, the loan shark and the pimp who could bring a girl from a nearby town. Alternating with an occasional (boring) factory job, I pursued the gandy until 1943 when I went to work here in Portland as a shipyard welder. It was at this university that I got my first firm grip on documentation for the actual, verifiable existence of the fabu­ lous Black innovators of African Ameri­ can folklore-leads that led to my re­ covery of patent numbers and dates, family letters and so forth. Those late- night, kerosene-lit sessions revealed a surprising wealth of research and knowl­ edge among both the literate and unlet­ tered; many of the former spending tied to America’s failure to create jobs at living wages for family breadwin­ ners. Even full-time, year-round work at the minimum wage would leave a family well below the poverty line. We need to move aggressively to combat child poverty, and we can’t separate it from adult poverty. One front of the war on child poverty should be to raise incomes of the poor through increased support programs and real world work and training programs Professor McKinley Burt time in libraries when working near cit­ ies. College dropouts or those who went to the cotton fields at the age of eight—it was all o f their input that fu­ eled the curiosity and motivation which led, years later, to my publication of the book, “ Black Inventors of America.” Other learning situations were part of the process. I taught people to read and write, but I received as much or more in return. I learned more about the industrial infrastructure of America than one could ever learn at school- even from a course in industrial engi­ neering. The gandys who came to these work gangs for one reason or another had worked in every field imaginable; oil refineries, cane fields, sugar refiner­ ies, cotton gins, Mississippi River barges, Idaho potato fields, Virginia coast mines, steel mills and iron foundaries, you name it. And then there were those who could quote classic poetry and litera­ ture for hours from memory. When I took my college entrance exams after the war I couldn’t believe how easy they were for me. The gandy had served me well. It was on the gandy that I first heard of my partial namesake, “ Frederick McKinley Jones.” His patented inven­ tion of the refrigerated box car and the refrigerated truck changed the mode of food preservation and transportation in America. California and Florida were enabled to become the world’s greatest producers and shippers of fruits and vegetables. Other areas were enabled to make their billions shipping beef. I had found the real America. that lead to jobs. A second front must be preventive- developmental, education and health programs that ensure poor children have equal access to life’s basic needs and to the tools with which to construct decent lives as they grow to adulthood. That goes beyond adding a few more dollars to Head Start’s budget-it means implementing long-term strategies that ensure that today’s poverty children grow up to be tomorrow’s middle class adults. The Rainbow Lobby Pledges Continued Support to Zairian Democracy Movement; Exposes Mobuto Attempt to Discredit Its Work PORTLAK i DOBSERVER Alfred L. Henderson Publisher r ::::::::::::::::: J tide of American opinion. Under pres­ sure from his US sponsors to moderate his tyranny, he has taken various demo­ cratic inititatives, such as his call in January for a ‘national consultation.’” Recognizing this call for popular dialogue as a sign of the regime’s weak­ ness, thousands of Zairians poured out their criticisms of Africa’s oldest dicta­ torship, boldly demanding the dicta­ tor’s resignation, the legalization of op­ position parties, and the separation of party and state. A document submitted by employees in the Zairian foreign ministry warned Mr. Mobutu that might meet the same fate as Nicolae Ceaus- escu. Representatives of the opposition party Union for Democracy and Social Progress have stated that they are not willing to go along with Mr. Mobutu’s plan for a three-party system in which the UDPS would oppose two parties carved out of his ruling Popular Move­ ment for the Revolution, currently the only legal party in the country, UDPS leader Etince Tshisckcdi wa Mulumba, who was released this week after two years of detention, has refused to ac­ cept Mr. Mobutu’s offer to appoint him prime minister, saying he was unwill­ ing to serve in any government as long as the Zairian dictator is in power. The UDPS has also cajoled for the disman­ tling of the regime’s notoriously brutal security apparatus. The Rainbow Lobby has expressed its full support for the UDPS’ demand for a multi-party de­ mocracy, and for its leaders ’ stipulation that the Zairian people, not the dictator, determine the number of parties. Amidst these developments, Ms. Ross reported, “ a pathetic attempt” to dis­ credit the work of the Rainbow Lobby has come to light. “ The Lobby, tiny by comparison with Mobutu’s six billion dollar fortune, amassed over 25 years ofkleptocracy, has nonetheless become the target of the dictator and his agents in the US,” she charged. Camille Bamba, a Zairian exile who fled his country after participating in anti-govemment demonstrations and one of the most outspoken critics of the Mobutu regime in the Zairian community in this coun­ try, had recently told Ms. Ross “ that he had accepted $1000 in cash from Mr. Mobutu’s lobbyist in Wasington acting in behalf of the Zairian ambassador in exchange for writing derogatory state­ ments about the Rainbow Lobby,” Mr. Bamba, who was present at the press conference with Ms. Ross and made a statement corroborating her account, has been working closely with the Lobby as a volunteer for the past year. Ms. Ross said that Mr. Bamba told her that the ambassador provided him with documents prepared by Zainan se­ curity forces which characterized the Rainbow Lobby, its personnel and its organizational allies in not only slan­ derous, but virulently anti-Semitic and homophobic terms. Mr. Bamba main­ tained that he stole mailing lists and other materials from the Rainbow Lobby office at the ambassador’s behest. Mr. Bamba said he eventually ended his re­ lationship with the ambassador when he realized that, as someone who had openly criticized the Mobutu regime, he would most likely be killed when he returned to Zaire despite the ambassa­ dor’s promises to the contrary. "T he Mobutu regime’s decision to engage in an intelligence operation against a US organization illustrates its desperation and political vulnerability,” said Ms. Ross. " I f the history of the past year teaches us anything, it is that even the most entrenched regimes must finally give in to the people’s demand for democracy, the Rainbow Lobby will continue to support the Zairian democ­ racy movement by pressuring Congress to condition all aid to Zaire on the com­ plete implementation of democratic re­ forms,” she pledged. “ To verify the progress of these reforms, the Rainbow Lobby is organizing a delegation of representatives from the democratic op­ position, together with Americans ac­ tive in the democracy movement, to travel to Zaire. We will be requesting Congress and the press to send repre­ sentatives to accompany this delega­ tion, and guarantee its safety.” Ms. Ross announced that on May 4 the Lobby is sponsoring simultaneous demonstrations in Boston, New York City, Washington and Los Angeles ‘ ‘to signal to the Zairian people the fullest solidarity o f the American people in their struggle for democracy.” t 5.Î * * * •* > •> ’ ■’ . i r r . > '. . . ' ' " m . • ft