Page 2—T he Portland O bserver-February 6, 1991 « '"W *- 'x * * * ^ * . ^ The Colors of War BY A. LEE HENDERSON our newspapers, as I am now doing, to rally the dem ocratic opposition. Even The heroes of this war will be the among Republicans like myself! people, those who selflessly gave of The luxury of exercising one’s con­ them selves to comfort and support the stitutional right to critique the powers fam ilies and service personnel drawn that differentiate us from our Arab nation into the Presi­ adversaries. d ent's The end o f a bayonet o f firing signal to stop squad speaks the language that silences Saddam H us­ any opposition. And it does, most e f­ se in ’s ruthless fectively. W e are free from that cal­ aggnxssoi_beiGre umny. it got worse. But we must exercise our free­ The military doms, even in wartime, to explore the heroes of this war things that provoke us. Indeed, some Dr. A. Lee Henderson w ill, u n fo rtu ­ are so provoked against the govern­ nately, also be those who have put their ment that they have used them selves as lives on the line...and suffered the con­ a peace protest to the governm ent and sequences, from loss of life to loss of this administration. buddies. The tactical need for w ar is not at Every one in service, to me, is a issue any longer. hero...sung or unsung. W e’re in iL We have already learned that A fri­ W e’re pledged, all o f us, to side can A m ericans as a group are the ma- with reasonable thought and fervent jortiy heroes, since each and every one prayers for the resolution o f conflict on o f them signifies a disparity that ren­ both sides. ders their group the largest, proportion­ Meanwhile...the minority of Blacks ately, o f any other group o f people in in this country are already waging the service! war for all o f us at home, and we ought I doubt that this will be accorded to remind A m ericans everyw here that the salute it properly deserves form the they should be grateful! President of the United States and those, Circulating the facts on this situ­ including General Colin Powell, chair­ ation can re-aw aken the civil rights man of the C hief of Staff, whose busi­ seeds that have fallen dormant. ness it is to orchestrate the Persian gulf Now is the time to stop sleepwalk­ war. ing the path o f promises. Now is the G eneral Pow ell's designation as time to dig in and re-claim the path by C h ief o f Staff has afforded him the re-seeding it with new, well-expressed visible luxury o f standing out as an demands. We have all earned the right A m erican o f great stature...an African to do that, and we had better maximize A m erican who has achieved what few our political advantages while they stand Blacks would have believed possible out loud and clear in military statistics during W orld W ar II in any branch o f that support the United States and Presi­ service. dent Bush, too! Blacks were then considered ex­ We want something back. pendable, along with other good sol­ We deserve it, fairly, but like any diers, but certainly not worthy to be disenfranchised and at times ‘ ’dysfunc­ m ajor office-candidate material, much tional” group o f serverly m isunder­ less a General functioning as Chief o f stood and mistreated minority peoples, Staff at the highest Pentagon level! we have not been as effective in a Yet there are still things in this positive way as we want to be. nation that are covered over in a cam ou­ Yet our own position against tyr­ flage that passes for haste to get on with anny is sounding out loud and clear, as first-things-first on a wartime priority mine is, as a mandate o f support o f our basis. The winning o f the war is first women and men in service. Down home issues are conven­ There is evidence that Blacks in iently tabled, unless we speak out through the United States are bearing too great President George Bush a burden in our current Persian G ulf crisis. Defense Department o f the United States statistics showed that the Kuwait border numbers of one hundred four thousand (104,000) Black women and men, account for nearly twenty-five percent of the American troops in the Persian Gulf. The total o f thiry percent o f all Army troops provided by Blacks compares with Blacks making up only twelve percent of the nation’s civilian population! Some anti-war groups are trying to discourage Blacks from joining the military since their community will be forced to pay disproportionately for a war that many Blacks fail to find pur­ poseful. The eloquence of Bertha Bailey, a Black high school teacher in McKin­ ney, Texas, speaks for many of us, however. She has a grandson serving in the heat of the gulf area war, and unlike the Muslims in the U.S.A. opposed to the war, Bertha was not afraid to ex­ press her own simple patriotism and heartfelt feelings when she said: “ Sometimes, some things can’t get cor­ rected without someone getting hurt. We don’t need a fight within a fight. Why worry about who is over-repre­ sented when they’re all at danger point?” Yet the voices of Rev. Jesse Jackson joined those o f Dr. Benjamin L. Hooks, president of the national Association of the Advancement o f Colored People decrying surplus numbers of Blacks in the voluntary service, drawn into the gulf hostilities, as evidence of their readily available. According to W illiam J. Hicks, M .D., ‘‘If there was ever a time when we (Blacks) should be considered spe­ cial donors, this is the time. Blacks need to gain a greater aw areness of our blood and blood donating services. There are some misconceptions about giving blood, but through information sharing and education this problem can be elimi­ nated.” If you are at least 17, weigh a minimum o f 110 pounds and are in good health, give a special gift-give life. To schedule a donation appoint­ m ent, call Trudy Sullivan, 284-0011, ex.292 ERYER PORTI (USPS 959-680) OREGON’S OLDEST AFRICAN AMERICAN PUBLICATION Established in 1970 Alfred L. Henderson Publisher Joyce Washington Operations Manager Gary Ann Garnett Business Manager Leon Harris Editorial Manager The PORTLAND OBSERVER is published weekly by Exie Publishing Com pany, Inc. 4747 N.E. M.L.K., Jr. Blvd. Portland, Oregon 97211 P.O. Box 3137 Port’and, Oregon 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: Send Address Chsngss to: Portland Observer, P.O. Box 3137, Portland, OR 97208. Second-dass postage paid at Portland, Oregon The Portland Observer welcomes freelance submissions. Manuscripts and photo­ graphs should be clearly tabled and will be returned If accompanied by a sett addressed envelope All created design display ads become the sole property of this newspaper and can not be used in other publications or personal usage, without tho written consent of the general manager, unless the dient 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-Countyawa: $25.00 all other areas The Portland O b s e rv e r-Oregon's Oldest African-American Publication - is a member of The National Newspaper Assodation - Founded in 1885, and The National Advertis­ ing Representative Amalgamated Publishers, Inc., New York, NY. must guarantee them a future worth coming home to, and we must press these h o m efront issues loudly...firm ly...positively...and in concert with each other. Henry A. Kissinger defined the philosophical paramenters o f the cur­ rent war when he said, “ In several thousand years o f recorded history, the Middle East has produced more con­ flicts than any other region. As the source o f three great religions, it has always inspired great passsion...An Arab- Israeli negotiation will not end all the turmoil, because many Middle East problems are quite independent of that conflict. Fundamentalism in Iran has next to nothing to do with the Palestin­ ian issue, though Teheran has exploited i t And Saddam Hussein would have tried to dominate his neighbors even if the Palestinian problem did not exist. But w hat the Arab-Israeli conflict has done is to make it difficult for the voices o f moderation in the Arab world to cooperate with their supporters in the W est. Victory in the gulf will create a historic opportunity to alter that par­ ticular equadon-and it should be seized.* Another historic opportunity awaits our President on the homefronL He is a man who can clearly per­ ceive that a domestic agenda of conse­ quence awaits him , and his recent “ uni­ fication’ ’ speech to the nation reflected some crystal clear vision. Yet, it is up to us to write to him and com m unicate our expectations... now, not later when the press of new priorities intervene! I would hope someday to be in­ vited to sit down with President Bush and share my own thoughts on practical avenues to solutions to the morass of problems that will continue to mount if left untended during this crisis. President Bush invites com m uni­ cation from those who care. Id o . You do. L et’s speak out supportively, but in the spirit o f constructive criticism, let’s “ prioritize” home business side by side with the war. May we encourage you to read these w ords of our President to inspire you. The leader who gave this speech - « 3 K M I to a troubled nation on the evening of Tuesday, January 29, 1991, reveals himself as a human being whose “ points of light” rest in us, his people. Let us share our own thoughts with President Bush and urge him to create and correct those fundamental issues in which you have a personal stake. Express your­ self, even as he, in the following words has expressed himself, simply, to you: Excerpt from President Bush’s Speech to the Nation: “ Halfway around the world we are engaged in a great struggle in the skies and on the seas and sands. We know why w e’re there. We are Americans, p a rt o f so m e th in g la rg e r than ourselves...The strength o f a democ­ racy is not in bureaucracy, it is in the people and their communities. In eve­ rything we do Je t us unleash the poten­ tial of our most precious resource: our citizens, our citizens themselves. We must return to families, communities, countries, cities, states, and institutions o f every kind the power to chart their own destiny and the freedom and op- porunity provided by strong economic growth. And that’s what America is all about “ I know tonight, in some regions of our country, people are in genuine economic distress. And I hear them. Good health care is everyone’s rig h t “ Let (the future generations) know that together, we affirmed America and the world as a community of conscience. ‘ ‘The winds o f change are with us now. The forces o f freedom are together, united. And we move toward the next century, more confident than ever that we have the will at home and abroad to do what must be done-the hard work of peace.” That peace making process can turn the colors o f war into a rainbow of hope providing each and every one of us self-empowers our com m unication. In your own words, speak o u t S elf-co n fid en ce co m es w ith pracitee. Democracy demands such prac­ tice. Use it or lose it! *” A Postwar A genda” by Henry A. Kissinger, Newsweek, January 28, 1991. 1 Pride Felt When Giving Blood Different groups o f people have different blood types. Nearly 20 per­ cent of all African A m ericans have type B blood, com pared to about 11 percent o f white Americans. As an A f­ rican A m erican, you can make a spe­ cial contribution to the African A m eri­ can com m unity and to all Americans by donating blood regularly. The blood you give will result in changing the shortage o f Type B blood . The African American community does not give in proportion to its numbers of black patients needing transfusions. If this shortage persists, patients...Black and white...will be in jeopardy becasue the blood types they need might not be economic, not necessarily their patri­ otic need! Hooks said, ‘ ‘This nation ought to be ashamed that the best and brightest o f our youth don’t volunteer because they love it so well, but because this nation can’t provide them jo b s.” Right now their loyalty to this na­ tion is being played out in life-and- death confrontations. President Bush, may I ask you, on their behalf to initiate a tribute to all women and men o f color a civil rights bill that unequivocally restores to them the so-called ‘ ‘ inalienable” rights enti­ tling them to justice in the job arena... to freedom from any and all discrim ina­ tion, and to a widening o f economic opportunities? President Bush, may I ask you, on their behalf to initiate the best legal tribute that they could have more in­ centives to look forward to in a just homecoming from hostilities? Peace without equal opportunity is peace in chains. Emerging Blacks prove themselves, time and again, in industry and com ­ merce. W e point with pride to those who have achieved distinction, and we promote with perseverance the rights of those still discriminated against by the privileged systems o f employment practices which are a disgrace to our nation. In view o f President Bush’s ag­ gressively righteous actions against Saddam Hussein, w e wish to see the backdrop screen of his civil rights posi­ tion re-clarified. Can we expect less from the leader of our nation who has moved with chal­ lenge and might to correct the abuses of an international tyrant. The abuses of national inequities deserve swift and certain redress. To sustain the momentum of the war, we ask you to write to President Bush, along with us, to accomplish this objective. Instead o f ‘ ‘Throwing out the baby with the dirty bathw ater,” we must take command o f our visions to rouse the nation at w ar into a nation com m it­ ted to fulfilling its civil rights duties to our service personnel all around the world! Our nation and its President ÍS B M ® R ccb o k Candlelight Prayer For Peace Diane Enright urged the people of Portland to help create a world of peace Sunday, January 27. A cross-scetion of faiths and congregations from the Church of Scientology attended the candlelight service with Portlanders joining together to sing and pray for world peace. The interdenominational service was organized by the Church of Scien­ tology o f Portland to give support to friends and family o f servicemen and women in the Persian Gulf and to broadly promote a message o f peace. Reverend Diane Enright o f the Church of Scientology added that, “ Our prayers and hopes are a united and powerful force. These are the seeds from which world peace can grow .” Peace Group Announces New Offices The Coalition Against U.S. Mili­ tary Intervention in the Middle East has moved to a new office space at 1841 NW 23 Avenue, Portland, 97210. The new phone number is (503) 226-6411, Soon the office will have several phone lines in operation making com m unica­ tions much easier. Before this week the Coalition had been sharing office space with the Portland Central America Solidarity Committee (PCASC). Please feel free to call for any updates on activities or if you need information. On Friday, February 1, 1991, at 5:00 p.m., there will be a gathering in Pioneer Courthouse Square to express opposition to the continued use o f force in the Middle East. Area veterans have organized Northwest Veterans For Peace. They are presenting the forum this week to express their support for the men and women soldiers in the Gulf, and their opposition to the governm ent’s policy. PORTLA^JÖBSERVER Are • The • Proud • Sponsors • Of Reinvestments Community Glory: Black History and Struggle The history of Black America has always been, fundamentally, a struggle to be free. Enslavement and racial oppression were more than physical restrictions and the use o f coercion against a people. Domination could only be achieved when the mind and spirit, as well as the body, was controlled and broken. More Ilian a century ago, the slaves came to understand that their free­ dom could only be achieved if assumed an active role in the struggle to liberate them­ selves, mentally and physically. Freedom handed down from above to the oppressed, is not freedom at all. Freedom is only real when the oppressed themselves, through their own initiative and inner strength, shatter the chains o f bondage. This is the central message o f “ Glory,” a historical drama depicting the ordeals of a Black regiment which fought during the height o f die Civil War. The Film is based partially on the actual letters o f Union Army colonel Robert Gould Shaw (played by Matthew Broderick), who trained and led the Massachusetts 54th Regiment in a devastating assault on Fort Wagner. South Carolina, in July, 1863. The son o f wealthy abolitionists, Shaw was convinced that African-American troops, if properly trained and equipped, could exceed the perform­ ance o f white Northern troops. As the film unfolds, there is a synthesis o f sorts be­ tween this abolitionist-inspired belief in the equality o f Blacks and whites, with the African-American desire to strike a per­ sonal and collective blow against the evils o f slavery. The wisest decision o f “ Glory” direc­ tor Edward Zwick was to focus the heart of the film not on Broderick’s character, but instead on four fictional Black men, who are used to represent the divergent person­ alities within the 54th Regiment. Denzel Washington portrays a Nat Tumer/Mal- colm X styled character, a Black man whose back has been bloodied many times by the /\ I slaveholder's lash, who fights in order to settle scores. Morgan Freeman plays the regimental sergeant, a former gravedigger who fights because o f his willingness “ to die for freedom.'* Jihmi Kennedy portrays a rural and illiterate ex-slave, but a crack shot and screen newcomer Andre Braughlcr does an excellent job as a New England educated, middle class Black man, who finds his roots and identity by bonding with his fellow Black soldiers. The device per­ mits a largely tyhitc audience to sec both the diversity and humanity among the African- American soldiers, who have volunteered into the Union Army in order to liberate their brethren in the South, as well as them­ selves. Through the ordeal o f conflict, in battle against white slaveholder officers, the Black soldiers become active partici­ pants in the struggle for freedom. This is not to suggest that “ Glory” holds up to historical examination. As American films go, it is generally very good, particularly the detailed accuracy o f the battle sequences. However, it is short o f the'mark within the framework o f Black social history. “ Glory” provides many examples o f while racism within the ranks o f Northern troops and officers, who refused to accept the idea o f Black men carrying guns. But this racism within the military was simply a reflection o f bigotry within the entire Northern society and political establish­ ment as a whole. Lincoln didn’t free the slaves with the Emancipation Proclama­ tion as a humanitarian gesture, but solely as a military decision to disrupt the South's labor supply. The war was widely unpopu­ lar among white Northern workers, and they targeted their grievances by making Blacks scapegoats. On July 13,1863, only days before the galant and bloody assault by Black troops on Fort Wagner, the white working class in New York City rioted against the city ’s Black population. Hun- dreds o f people, mostly women and chil­ dren, were killed; thousands more were left homeless. For Black abolitionist Henry Highland Gamet, who was nearly killed in the race riot, these were “ dark and terrible days.” y One o f “ Glory's” most moving se­ quences which depicts Black troops reject­ ing discriminatory wages beneath those of white soldiers is also historically accurate, but insufficient. The Enlistment Act o f July, 1862, had set the pay scale for white privates at $13 per month vs. $7 per month for Black privates. The 54lh Massachusetts Regiment refused any pay for more than a year, and the policy o f discriminatory wages was finally reversed in 1864. However, many other Black troops protested the pol­ icy as well. In the third South Carolina all- Black regiment, sergeant William Walker mobilized his fellow soldiers, stacking their rifles and refused to fight under Jim Crow wages. Predictably, Walker was court martialled and shot. ., Finally, “ Glory” gives the audience -the false sense that Black troops were an exception to the rule in Civil War combat. Actually, a total o f 180,000 Blacks fought in the Union Army by the end o f the war. More than 38,000 died, a 40 percent higher casualty rate than for white Northern troops. Blacks fought in over two hundred fifty separate engagements, beginning as early as the fall o f 1862. There were also scores o f Black officers, including abolitionists Major Martin R. Delany and Captain P.B.S. Pinchback. Ex-slaves, both women and men, worked as spies behind Confederate army lines. African-Americans, civilians and soldiers alike, were not passive witnesses in the struggle for freedom. Despite these weaknesses, “ Glory“ makes a substantial contribution to our awareness o f the role of African-Americans in the conflict to abol­ ish human bondage. "Reinvestments in the Community" is a weekly column appearing in API publications throughout the USA.