Page 2—The Portland Observer - December 12, 1990 ft g ft 5 ft ...And Justice For All ■Ú.Í.S— By Professor McKinley Burt The «« Electronic Home" Concluded W ell, let’s see. As we come to the end of this series, 1 see we have covered a number of topics, all connected by a common thread-the “ electronic inter­ face” , easily operated by the relatively unskilled. We have suggested such * new users’ as the housewife, single parent and the neophyte business person. And it is a matter of important fact that many o f these users are not so “ new” any­ more. Before proceeding any further, 1 am getting the impression from the number of interested callers that it might be well to consider the possibility of organizing a ‘club’ of Northeast resi- dents-those who are already involved in "n “ at hom e” office, and those who . ould like to be. It would be very help­ ful to have a vehicle to cover the ex­ change of information on techniques, equipment, marketing, and the like. I am going to advance this idea to Mr. Cleo Frankin who begins a monthly column on the subject area right after the first of the year. As stated last week , this African American technician operates a computcr/communications service right here in our community. Certainly, that service profile lends it- self to serious consideration: Mainte­ nance, local area ‘networking’, repair/ installation, interfacing. Cooperative endeavor is going to be very essential to this community’s welfare in these times of economic decline. In anticipation of your growing in­ terest in this field, let me acquaint you with some ‘additional’ material relevant to developing your potential (remember that you can obtain back issues of the Observer by stopping by our offices at 4747 N.E. Martin Luther King Blvd.) For instance, call 1-800-832-0100 to obtain the following useful booklet from U.S. West Communications: “ Big Ideas For Small Business; a communications service guide” . It’s free! Major chapter headings suggest that this is going to be a very, very valuable tool in your activities-whether your thrust is business, education, hobbies, or other inclinations. These read, “ New ways to do today’s business-New ways to man­ age your time-New ways to invest in business growth-How to talk to a small business expert” . And there are some very special scenarios which may not have occurred to you: “ Have you dis­ covered the profits in FAX?” (I have); “ Do you need to reach new custom­ ers?” ; “ How efficiently are you han­ dling the calls you receive?” In closing this series, let me refer you to a ‘real world’ activity of mine which began in one room of an apart­ ment. It has expanded to ‘two’ rooms, but I am now reaching clients across the nation. My activity is about ‘marketing’ and it is a deliberate thrust to get around the racist barriers designed to prevent Vantage Point the dissemination of documented black history (see this weeks* frontpage article and the two preceding upon the same subject, “ More Attacks (and support): The Baseline Essays” ). It lakes a little time to reach this stage but you can do it. Just a little determination added. The following excerpt from another article will serve to illustrate. I am refer­ ring to that necessary ‘networking’ you should keep in mind. Here the visitors from the 1989 “ Black Educators* na­ tional convention have been taken on a tour of the Beaverton Computer Co. that assists until I can get two other pieces of equipment in that “ second room ". “ I took them down to the computer room and showed them how my “ busi­ ness partner in education” had assisted me in assembling a ‘ ‘market profile” for the education districts in every one of those twenty urban centers of black population I listed in my book, “ Black Inventors of America” . I had on com­ puter disk the name, address, phone/ FAX number of every elementary, middle and high school (and ancillary special programs) in each of these cities. “ Gradu­ ally, I am identifying correspondents in each area to provide change of status reports for the periodic batching through of updates.” They were impressed with what just one man could accomplish with a part­ ner from industry and asked me for fur­ ther ideas on developing this relation­ ship.” Well, there we have it, marketing is the name of the game whether your thrust is social, commercial or whatever. I hope this series has been useful. • by Ron Daniels Why African Americans Should Celebrate Kwanzaa From December 26 - January 1, many within the African American commu­ nity will celebrate Kwanzaa. Created by the brilliant theoretician and leader Dr. Maulana Karenga in the late sixties, Kwan­ zaa, which means first fruits, is patterned after the traditional harvest celebrations in traditional African society. Based on Karenga’s theory of Kawaida, the doc­ trine of tradition and reason, each of the seven days of Kwanzaa is centered around one of the principles of the Nguzo Saba - The Seven Principles of the Black value System: UMOJA - Unity; Kujichagulia - Self-Determination; UJIMA - Collec­ tive Work and Responsibility; U J AMA A - Cooperative Economics; NIA - Pur­ pose; KUUMBA - Creativity; and IMANI - Faith. Kwanzaa is an authentic African American inspired and created holiday. After more than two decades since its inception, Kwanzaa is celebrated by some­ one, somewhere in virtually every Afri­ can American community in this coun­ try. There are television reports about Kwanzaa and the most popular African American magazines such as Essence, Ebony and Jet now regularly run feature stories on Kwanzaa. This is indeed a positive success story arising out of the Black Liberation Movement of the 60’s & 70’s. Despite Kwanzaa’s apparent suc­ cess, however, the holiday is still only celebrated by a minority in the African American community. Most Black folks kind of know about it, but it is certainly not a holiday which is deeply ingrained in the consciousness and practice of the majority of African Americans yet. Some people mistakenly see Kwanzaa as “ Black Christmas’ ’ and others see it as a substitute for Christmas. In fact Kwan­ zaa is not Black Christmas and it is not a substitute for Christmas. Black people can celebrate Christmas and Kwanzaa. Kwanzaa, however, as an African American holiday is exclusively de­ voted to the celebration of ourselves as African people, our history and culture. It is centered around a set of principles - Unity, Self-Determination, Collective Work and Responsibility, Cooperative Economics, Purpose, Creative and Faith which African Americans need to learn, study and practice for our collective survival and development as a people. As Dr. Karenga has said so many times, “ culture is the key crisis in Black life” . African Americans, by and large, still lack knowledge of self and kind. We are still afflicted by an insidious self-hatred rooted inthelegacy o f slav- P O R TL Alfred L. Henderson Publisher Joyce Washington Operations Manager Gary Ann Garnett Business Manager Leon Harris Editorial Manager The PORTLAND OBSERVER is published w eekly by Exie Publishing C om pany, Inc. 4747 N.E. M.L.K., Jr. Blvd. Portland, Oregon 97211 P.O. Box 3137 Portland, O regon 97208 (503) 288-0033 (Office) FAX#: (503) 288-0015 Deadlines for all submitted materials: Articles: Monday, 5 p.m. - Ads: Tuesday, 5 p.m. POSTMASTER: S«nd Address Chang** to: Portland Obaarvar, P.O. Box 3137, Portland, OR 97208. Second-class postage paid at Portland, Oregon. The Portland Observer welcomes freelance submissions. Manuscripts and photo­ graphs should be clearly labled and will be returned if accompanied by a sell addressed envelope All created design display ads become the sole property o, this newspaper and can not be used in other publications or personal usage, without tho written consent of the general manager, unless the client has purchased the composition of such ad 1990 PORTLAND OBSERVER ALL RIGHTS RESERVED, REPRODUCTION IN WHOLE OR IN PART WITHOUT PERMISSION IS PROHIBITED Subscriptions: $20 00 per year in the Tri-Countyarea: $25 00 all other areas. The Portland Observer - Oregon's Oldest African-American Publication - Is a member of The National Newspaper Association - Founded in 1885, and The National Advertis­ ing Representative Amalgamated Publishers, Inc , New York, NY. f ery, Euro-centric “ mis-education” cul­ tural aggression and the persistence of racism and white domination as a con­ tinuing reality of American culture and life. Our lack of serious and unrelenting devotion to self and kind - the African American and pan-african family - is major impediment to our progress as a people. African American holidays, there­ fore, are imperative, for they allow us to focus on ourselves and our liberation for a change. Kwanzaa is designed to be just such an occasion. And though it has a serious purpose, Kwanzaa need not be dull and drab. Indeed, in keeping with our traditional and popular cultures, Kwanzaa should be colorful, festive and a source of comfort and enjoyment. Kwanzaa should provide both informa­ tion, inspiration and celebration. But most of all Kwanzaa should commit us to us! African Americans cannot build and sustain viable cultural, educational, economic and political in­ stitutions dedicated to our development and progress unless we first affirm our­ selves. We must embrace the proposi­ tion that as Africans in America, we must be the primary agents o f our own liberation. That’s why African Ameri­ cans should celebrate Kwanzaa. ERVER (USPS 959-680) OREGON'S OLDEST AFRICAN AMERICAN PUBLICATION Established in 1970 by Angelique Sanders POCTwWrttetRYBt The Portland Observer can be sent directly to your home for only $25.00 per year. Please fill out, enclose check or money ordr, and Mail to: Subscriptions Portland Observer PO Box 3137 Portland, Oregon 97208 Name address city, state rip code Thank You For Reading the Portland Observer Yes, Portland, There Is a Santa Claus simply to him at “ North Pole” , unstam­ place within two days: it was obvious in When asking people what ped, and signed “ Angelique” - n o re­ everyone in the community. On the bus, Christmas means to them, I found a turn address, phone number, or last name, there was a type of strain to not think of consensus of opinion that the holiday is and dropped off at a neighborhood mail- the incidents. Everyone continued with being “ ruined” for them through com­ their day-to-day mercial overexploita­ business, function­ tion. I agree that Christ­ ally, at least; people mas has been overex­ Dear Santa, I know that every year I’ve asked you for many things, but this year read, people talked, ploited in the market­ is different. This year, I looked around and found that I have everything I people gazed place: what 1 disagree need and want, and that in past years I’ve had them, to o -I just managed to thoughtlessly out the with is the thought that window; but in look past them for other things. that should wreck the The question arises, then: why am I writing to you? At first, I everyone’s eyes, holiday for them. True, there hung a sadness, most concede when I thought is was to question your existence. Then I realized, Santa is not a man in red with a beard: he is the one using environmentally-safe products and a repression...an in­ make that point, but recycling; he is the man who put a dollar in the Salvation Army kettle; he ner knowledge...the when you don’t have is the clerk down the street who always double-bags my groceries. Yes, knowledge that what any money for gifts (the happened to those Portland, there is a Santa Claus. He could be you. interviewees say), your I wanted to write to tell you, I hope that you have a beautiful Christ­ two brothers could friends look down on mas tree with many gifts; I hope many cards sit on your hearth; I hope that have happened to you. My thoughts are: Mrs. Claus baked you a fine Christmas ham. Then I thought, no, every year any of us. friends are there when people surround themselves with these things and laugh about what a great And we will you’re down and out; year it’s been. This year I decided, instead of measuring my friendships by not forget this. Every they are not oblivious the size of the gifts, I’ll cany my gifts and cards with me everywhere, in my time any of us hear to your difficulties, and heart. I also decided, instead of mu, . ing how much I’ve made with how the familiar sirens, a true friend would large a ham I’ve purchased, I thought I’d donate the money to a charity and police answering the rather see you make it call of death, we will through financial diffi­ have the best gift I could give myself: the knowledge that I’ve made an know: there goes culties without burden­ improvement. So Mrs. Claus: don’t forego the ham for bread and water, but love Christmas for the sharing time it is, and not for the amount of materi­ another brother or ing you with the thought alistic happiness it can represent sister, taken by the ofagift. Ifpeopleclose So, Santa, what I really want this year is not that new entertainment evil vestiges of to you subtly snub you system, and it isn’t a belter job or a bigger house. I just want to see that what hatred. when you can’t pour ***** I have is ample and to always appreciate it. money on them during Thanks, Santa. this season, consider I can’t, in the P.S. This year set my material gifts on the doorsteps of those who need them. finding friends who are spirit of Christmas, Merry Christmas. more understanding! end this week’s col­ Love, Christmas, to me, means umn on that note, so Angelique Sanders nothing more or less here’s an off-the- than pure, unadulterated wall item to leave love, and self-expression of such. you with a smile: from the latest “ North­ b o x [a s ld id n ’thaveam tii'box]. A few As a child, I didn’t believe in west Comic News’ ’, this was written by days later, I received a Christmas card Santa Claus (due to a family that didn’t responding to my letter...I no longer Lou Boyd: “ Y oucangetridofbedbugs celebrate). Upon leaving my home, I doubt the magic of Christmas. by putting cockroaches in your bed. realized that Santa exists-in the form of You can get of cockroaches by putting ***** love. (By the way, last year I got a lot toads in your bed. Life’s like that. Just harmlessly off my chest by actually send­ I did not have to read about move.” ing off a letter to Santa Claus, addressed Northeast’s two tragic murders that took The Essays! continued from front page ACT, CIVIL RIGHTS ACT, FAIR EMPLOYMENT ACT, SBA, MINOR­ ITY SET-ASIDE CONTRACTS. As for today’s Egyptian population, wc duly note that Hollywood selected a quite black African American to play the role of Anwar Sadat, chief of the Egyptian state. What kind of fools do these al­ leged academics suppose the American public to be? Again, from the reader’s column we have: “ There is plenty of evidence to support the claim that a systematic re­ writing of history to purge classical Greek civilization of all traces of Semitic and Egyptian influence began around 1800. Though it remains controversial, the case is well-documented in Martin Ber­ nal’s “ Black Athena” , published in 1987 by the Rutgers University Press. ...What gave 19th century schol­ ars the right to decide they knew better than the ancient Greek writers, almost all of whom agree on the seminal impor­ tance of Egyptian and Semitic influ­ ences on their own culture? ...Your presentation of this im­ portant subject seemed to me unsympa­ thetic to the current efforts to revise our historical view. It read as if the whole idea o f African history was not to be taken seriously. ...You seem to think that univer­ sity professors, whom you quote un­ critically in support of the Aryan view, are unbiased, objective sources of infor­ mation. It was, after all, the academic community that enthusiastically produces the Aryan historical model. There are few who are as practiced and sophisti­ cated in institutionalizing their biases as academic scholars.” “ Merry Christmas for the Children” A Holiday Celebration for African American foster Care and Adoptive Children One Church, One Child of Oregon, Pacific Power and KBMS-1480 will be sponsoring a community wide toy drive, December 17-21, 1990. The toys will be given to African- American children in foster care and adoptive homes during a special holiday celebration on December 22, 1990. Unwrapped toys forchildrcn.agcs 1 year to 12 years of age can be brought to One Church, One Child, 5806 N. Albina, Pacific Power, 3535 N £ . 15th and KBMS- 1480,510 SW 3rd. We invite you to share in the spirit of giving and to help strengthen African- American families. For more informa­ tion, call 285-7634 or 222-1491. My own research of the seminal African contribution continues. This includes the so-called Middle East “ Cradle of Civilization” . Never mind that the ancients reported differently, and that today’s Persian Gulf was accu­ rately and pointedly described by them and put on their maps as the “ Ethiopian Sea” . Over the years I had hundreds of Middle Eastern students in my Univer­ sity classes and many were far blacker and frizzled hair than most of the North­ east Community. This provided me with an excellent opportunity to get at the truths of this on the eastern shore of the Red Sea (Western Saudia A rabia- the Biblical land of Punt to which black queen Hatshepsut and the Pharaohs sent many expeditions). A former Saudi student whose master thesis I supervised for the busi­ ness department has recently opened up a whole new vista for historical docu­ mentation, sending back here several packages by air freight. His these was on the de vleopment of an auto and plane­ leasing firm owned by he and his father to include the Lear Jet Franchise. It was done and this clout meant being able to get the information from university and “ ARAMCO” historians I was unable to get on my own. These foreign students of mine have proven to be priceless re­ sources in many lands. In closing this series I will remark that these detractors of Black history can be defeated, but it takes a lot of work and commitment. And the truth has to be sold to a confused America. See my “ Perspectives” column on page two, where I advance the cause for using electronic technology for educational marketing as well as commerce. Implied Consent Suspensions Increase Nearly 2,700 drivers received no ticcs of license suspension in October under Oregon’s implied consent law. This figure represents a 9 percent in­ crease over 1989. The implied consent law allows police officers to request breath tests of any person arrested for driving under the influence of intoxicants (DUII). Drivers arrested for DUII who refuse to take or who fail the breath test receive a suspen­ sion notice and arc issued a citation for the criminal offense of DUII. Of the 2,687 implied consent notices issued in October, 516 were given to drivers who refused a breath test and 2,171 were to drivers who failed the breath test. t Community Sponsors Homeless Women and Children for Christmas Every year, concerned members of the community “ sponsor” residents of the West Women’s and Children’s Shel­ ter for Christmas. This year, the need is greater than ever for such giving. The West, has recently become a program of the Salvation Army’s Recov­ ery Road. Its previous parent agency, Burnside Community Council ceased operation earlier this year. The West is home to nearly 60 women and children. The program offers food, shelter, and many support services to its residents. In an attempt to provide a joyus Christmas for all, the West offers “ spon­ sorship” as a means of funneling the community’s generosity. Families are available for sponsorship, as well as single women who do not have children or do not have custody of their children. Resi­ dents write wish lists from which donors may choose items to give their spon- soree. To sponsor a family or single woman, please call the West at 224-7718. We depend on the generosity of the commu­ nity at Christmas time and throughout the year. Needy Kids Receive Christmas Cheer For the sixth year, Santa Claus will bring a little holiday joy to some 95 children and their families who are part of the Children’s Program of Mental Health Services West. The kids, many of whom are homeless or who live at the West Women’s Hotel, will be treated to a special meal and holiday party hosted by Portland General Electric Co. (PGE) employees on the Mezzanine Level of Two World Trade Center, 25 S.W. Salmon St., Portland, Dec. 19, from 3 p.m. to 6:00 p.m. (with photo opportunities be­ tween 3 p.m. and 3:30 p.m.). The festivities will include a visit by Santa Claus and Mrs. Claus, games, gifts, and holiday cheer. PGE employees have donated clothes for the families and have collected or bought childrens’ toys. Note: Due to the sensitive nature of many of these families’ situations, not all children and parents can be photo­ graphed. Those who can be safely photo­ graphed will be wearing a special button. PORTLAND OBSERVER 'The Eyes and Ears ol the Community Office: (503)288-0033 Fax#: (503)200-0015 1