Page 2--The Portland Observer-June 12, 1991 CIVIL RIGHTS JOURNAL ers By Benjam in F Chavis, Jr. Racism In U.S. Health Care W e have in the past applauded Dr. L ouis W. Sullivan, the U.S. Secretary o f H ealth and Human Services, for his courage and forthrightness in speaking the truth about the state o f health in the U nited States. At a recent meeting in M inneapolis o f health care profession­ als, ethicists and physicians, a review o f the tragic Tuskegee Project was undertaken to ascertain w hether or not the health care system in A merica is a racially ju st system. T o the chagrin of some and the support o f others, Dr. Sullivan con­ firm ed, “ There is clear, dem onstrable, undeniable evidence o f discrim ination and racism in our health care system. Each year since 1984, while the health status to the general population has increased, black health status has actu­ ally declined. The decline is not in one or two health categories; it is across the b oard.” O ver fifty years ago, hundreds of A frican Am erican men were deliber­ ately subjected to a federal study on the long term effects o f untreated syphilis in A labam a which was called the T us­ kegee Project. The subjects o f the study w ere not told that they had syphilis by the medical researchers. In other words, the federal governm ent sponsored ex­ perim entation on human beings which ultimately caused death and great suffer­ ing. O ne would think that this type of travesty in racial justice and human dig­ nity would not be possible today in the 1990's in the United States. Yet, given the current trend o f increased institution­ alized racism in the social fabric o f the nation, some medical authorities warn that, possibly, projects like the Tuskegee Project could be repeated and justified in an effort to secure needed m edical re­ search. According to Isabel W ilkerson of the NEW YORK TIMES, “ Now, as AIDS looms as a far deadlier threat than syphi­ lis to im poverished minority groups, and with no cure in sight, scientists are strug­ gling with the ethical questions raised by the Tuskegee experim ent and the w eak­ nesses o f current efforts, like informed consent and peer review , to protect pa­ tients from exploitation.’ ’ W ilkerson also stressed that the medical establishm ent in some quarters view this m atter with urgency. Some doctors are now advocat­ ing segregating by race organ transplants and blood transfusions. In other words, race is em erging once again as a m ajor factor in ethical as well as medical d e­ cision-making. G iven the fact o f the high infant mortality rate, low birth weight, lack o f prenatal care, and decreasing life expectancy o f African A mericans, in addition to the current cutting of medi­ cal and health care outreach programs to the African American com m unity, the situation is indeed critical. Fortu­ nately, Dr. Sullivan and others who are com m itted to addressing these problem s are not remaining silent. The delivery o f health care in this nation should not be determined by race or socio-econom ic factors. We must say no to all researchers who would try to justify the immorality of racist human experim entation. The health care system must be made more inclusive and more just in the provi­ sion o f m edical treatm ent as well as preventive m edical programs. A na­ tion that discrim inates and limits the standard o f health o f its own citizens because of race or any other factor is a nation whose national life is doomed. The Sad Ironies At a Summer’s Beginning O ne o f the things that one learns from years o f activism is that history has a way o f using current affairs to validate and guide the conduct o f those o f us in the human race. Therefore, despite the irony o f the matter, it was those guideposts o f history that I recog­ nized immediately as I headed to the prem iere o f Jungle Fever, ju st hours after being called by the Reverend W il­ liam Cooper and Mrs. Ernestine Ewell, who informed me that a 17-year-old young man named Alfred Ewell, a high school football player and honor stu­ dent, had attended a party on the first Saturday in June in the Atlantic Beach section o f Queens, New York. W hile there, he began socializing with a young w hite female. Mr. Ew ell, who is Black, was im m ediately confronted by a young white male who loudly protested the fact that he was socializing outside of his race. They argued for a while, and the matter was reportedly resolved. Hours later Ewell left the party, and was sit­ ting on the board walk on Atlantic beach when he was attacked by a white mob with bats, who beat him into a coma. He lies now at the point of death, even after receiving extensive brain surgery. It seemed ironic as I sat and watched Spike L ee’s film -w h ich also centered around an interracial affair that iso­ lated a Black man and a w hite woman from their families and com m unity-- that what is being dealt with cinem ati- cally by Lee is realistically being paid for by Ewell. The m atter o f interracial relations or m arriage is not the debate that I w ant to enter at this point. The matter o f justice is still unanswered, and until one can deal with the basic prem ise o f equal protection under the law and justice for all, any academic debate on interracial relations is fruit­ less and really leads to nowhere. W hether one agrees with Ewell socializing outside o f his race or not, no one has the right, based on skin color, to pulverize and brutally beat this young man to the point o f death. And it doesn’t explain why the police departm ent would wait two days before they told the family that the word “ nigger” was used at the party during the initial argum ent and at the subsequent beating, and that they knew all along who the main assailant was, which gave him several days to get a lawyer before he on his own surren­ dered. W hy didn’t the police do what they do in our com m unities-go in and kick the doors down and arrest him? This blatant double standard took place in the contest o f another strange iro n y -a fte r agreeing to work with Rev­ erend C ooper and others tow ards ju s­ tice for the Ew ells, I sat in the studios of CNN, debating the C ivil Rights Bill with two people from different parts of the country as I waited to leave to go visit young Ewell in the hospital. They are debating civil rights by claim ing the issue is no longer racism but quotas, while yet another young man lies in yet another hospital bed in yet another pool o f blood from yet another racial whipping with yet an­ other police precinct acting like they are paralyzed in trying to seek his as­ sailants. It seem s that history has a way o f using our children to nudge us to­ (USPS 959-680) OREGON’S OLDEST AFRICAN AMERICAN f UBLICATION Established in 1970 Alfred L. Henderson Joyce Washington Publisher Operations Manager Gary Ann Garnett Business Manager The PORTLAND OBSERVER is published weekly by Exie Publishing Company, 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. PO S TM A STER : Sand Addr««n Changes to: P o r tla n d O b a a rv a r, P.O. Box 3137, Portland, OR 97208. 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The Portland O bserver- Oregon's Oldest African-American Publication - Is a member of The National Newspaper Association -- Founded in 1885, and The National Adverts­ ing Representative Amalgamated Publishers, Inc., New York, NY. ward reality, because if we needed any validation that there is some Jungle Fever out here, or any reminder that there is an absence o f civil rights for some, then nature has used Alfred Ewell to bring that point home loud and clear. I stood over his bed with his w eep­ ing mother, looking at pictures o f him when he was healthy on his hospital bed wall, as he lay there with tubes plunged in all parts o f his b o d y -c o m a ­ tose, unable to m ove, unable to open his eyes and look at the mother who brought him into this world. I had not been in a hospital since my own hospi­ talization from a stabbing from another racist, and it was a strange mixture o f rage and helplessness that encompassed my own spirit as I looked down on Alfred Ewell. And the questions repeatedly came to mind: How long? How many more hospitals m ust I visit? How many more mothers must I com fort? To how many more children must I try and explain why they are the victims of our lack o f guts in forcing the nation to deal with the issue that DuBois raised at the beginning o f this century, and that is the issue o f race, the subject o f color. We cannot go into the 21 st century without it being resolved once and for all. Either w hite Europeans and A m eri­ cans m ust be civilized on the race question, or we must make those altera­ tions necessary within the global vil­ lage to isolate people of color from people o f barbaric natures and have nations unto ourselves. But it can no longer continue on this collision course, where our children become the casual­ ties o f a m isfit society, an unjust ju d i­ cial process and a failing societal ar­ rangement. Alfred Ewell is yet anothcrchapter in a sick book. Enough is enough. Too often we have said “ this is it.” But we really do n ’t mean that, because if we did, we would have stopped it a long time ago. There are those who operate only out of 10-90-day anger. There are others that lock themselves into aca­ demic and philosophical cop-outs. And there are others who stay on the battle­ field trying to fight the good fight, until racism dies an ugly death. As for me, despite the controversy, despite the editorials and TV com m en­ taries, despite being threatened and abused and m isused, even by a judicial system which now even its own ju d i­ cial panel has adm itted is racist, I ’ve decided to stay on the battlefield be­ cause the Alfred E w ell’s are real to me, so real that I look at a six-inch scar every morning when I brush my teeth to remind me that w e still have not solved the problem and history still has no conclusion to the question of race. g;:“:“.:;:;:::-’’ B y Professor McKinley Burt Parents Have To Think (And Act) Positive W ell, we got past that little intro­ spective excursion o f mine, so let’s get back to the ranch this week. W e can still head them off at the pass. W hen I was listing those many support m echa­ nisms that parents could use in devel­ oping interest in science, I om itted an important source. “ Edmund Scientific Co., 1991 Annual Reference Catalog for O ptics, Science and E ducation,” 101 E. G loucester Pike, Barrington, NJ 08007-1380. This FREE, 188-page publication lists hundreds o f science instruments and supplies for experim ents and learn­ ing by the older student (High School), or any w ho have dem onstrated a defi­ nite motivation and aptitude. Now, these instruments or kits are more expensive than the starter or introductory m ateri­ als you w ould obtain at O M SI, but this is the next best step for the com m itted student (and parent). W e are talking about a lot o f OPTICS: microscopes, lenses, prisms, collim ators, mirrors, cam eras, telescopes and supporting com ponents, as well as bio-medical equipm ent, chem ical kits, scales, m ag­ nets, and weather and solar monitors. Right in line with this escalation of the gam e should be a request for FREE catalog NO. 59047-X from “ Dover Publications Inc.,” 31 East 2nd Street, M ineola, NY 11501. This smaller, general publication lists quality paper­ backs from $ 1.00 to $9.95. W hile there is only a small SCIENCE SECTION, there is a provision for obtaining FREE with your first order, the giant * ‘Com ­ plete D over Catalog o f Books in ALL FIELD S” (You must list your requests for this time, ‘No. 59069-0’ on your order form). I’ve been ordering from this firm for thirty years, and find them the cheapest source o f good books in the country-science, tech­ nology, language, novels, music, m ystery, ethnic history, travel, etc. While these two sources are defi­ nitely ‘class acts’, please don’t ne­ glect your public library (I’m talking about ‘you’ as well as the child). I and a lot o f my peer group practi­ cally ‘lived there’ when we were k id s-a n d we were the ones who or­ ganized the neighborhood science clubs and ‘garage laboratories’-w h o made soap, perfumes, radios, soap­ box derby carts, chemical gardens, telescopes (and stink bombs). And even with the terrible discrim ination and racism , when you checked out the same peer group at the class reunions years later, you found the chem ists, doctors, biologists, engi­ neers and technicians (the hum ani­ ties as well). 1 know that it’s tough out there, but are you ready for this? ‘ ‘ Il’s been tougher!” It is ju st that now our ex­ pectations are higher as well they should be. However, our ‘stage de­ signer’ has become the all powerful, all knowing MEDIA, and 24 hours a day we are saturated with a defeatist litany from the prophets o f ethnic gloom and doom. The successful African American parents and their high-achieving children are usually ignored as yet a new ‘sociology-of- the-disadvantaged’ is developed to support the financial aspirations of hungry grantsmen and previously-failed educators. The many notable achieve­ ments and m ethodologies o f successful black and while educators and “ Schools o f E xcellence” in the innercities get little play amid the ‘shock’ headlines and gory scenes o f ghetto trauma. This means, o f course, that the soci­ ologists, psychologists, anthropologists and other behavioral scientists are determ ined to get their share o f the financial pie when the federal governm ent - as surely as it must - finally addresses the problem. Just last month one group announced that it was “ developing structured paradigm s” around their pet euphem ism or catch phrase,“ BEHAVIORAL PO V ERTY .” This ploy, of course, ensures that those blacks beyond the perim eter o f dollar- defined poverty, may, nevertheless, be psychologically defined as probably m or­ ally deficient and, therefore, ju st as dys­ functional. We see that there will remain only a small sector o f the pie for effective education. I say all o f that to say this. It is going to take all of the energy, com m itm ent and tutoring that parents and our com m unity organizations can m uster if our children are to make it in this technological (and treacherous) world. This is why so many o f my articles this year have been about ‘supplem ental’ activities and resources the parent (or surrogate) can bring to bear on the educational process. A nd in the schools themselves, the children should be directed and motivated to those special programs that have been proven to en­ hance their academ ic achievement: “ MESA, T A G ” and the like. D on’t flag in your efforts. News From Bob Packwood Republican Senator Bob Packwood received notification from the National Marine Fisheries Service (NM FS) that two species o f salmon would be pro­ posed to be listed as threatened under the Endangered Species Act (ESA). The fall Chinook salmon and the spring and sum ­ mer Chinook salmon o f the Snake River are those being listed. The spring and sum m er chinook are being considered as one unit, rather than two separate spe­ cies. These species o f salmon exist in the C olum bia River drainage. The coho salmon which lives in the low er Colum ­ bia River was not proposed to be listed. Public hearings on the listing pro­ posals have been scheduled in order to NMFS to receive broad public input to ensure that the adm inistrative and scien­ tific record is accurate. The final deci­ sion on whether or not to propose a list under the endangered Species Act must be made within 12 months. In light o f this, Senator Packwood stressed, “ It is vital that the different u se rs- the aluminum workers, farmers, sport fishermen, barge operators, dam o p e ra to rs- of the Columbia River keep working on a consensus for multiple uses o f the river while striving for a long range plan to restore the salmon runs.” Senator Packwood is a m em ber of the Commerce Com m ittee which has jurisdiction over fisheries issues. AMALGAMATED PUBLISHERS, INC. PORTIA Are • The • Proud • Sponsors • Of Reinvestments Community Its’ Time To “ Heal Our Land:” African Americans Must Build for a New Tomorrow Jonathan Bulter, the popular South African guitarist and vocalist, in pre­ scribing a cure for the pain and agony of the apartheid system, sings the compel­ ling lines, “ we must heal our land.” Since Africans arrived in America wc have faced the challenge of building community out of deverse peoples up­ rooted from our original cultures by slavery. The ever present reality of ra­ cism and brutal economic exploitation has always complicated the vital task of forg ing a common peoplcncss and com - munity as Africans in America. Wc have never quite been welcome here, but somehow, Africans in America have taken the basic strengths that wc brought with us from our ancestral homeland and struggled to survive and sustain ourselves as a people. Whether it was the Black church and the mutual aid and benevolent so­ cieties which grew out of the black church;” the “ African Free Schools” which we evolved to educated our own children when white society refused to do so; the organizations of resistance which we crated to fight against slavery, segregation and discrimination; or the Black press as an independent voice to articulate our own interest and needs; the magic of our music; or their enormous strength of the African family, African Americans have engaged in a perpetual ....... Omission W e deeply regret the omission of credit for the article responding to Cana­ dian Health Care System in our last is­ sue. That credit goes to Sharon Gary- Smith. struggle to survive and build/sustain com­ munity. Obviously the struggle to build community has been ongoing given the nature of the United States as a racist and exploitive society. The horrendous depth and magni­ tude of the crisis we now face makes it imperative that African Americans con­ sciously focus on the need to continue the vital process of community build­ ing. African Americans arc still largely unwanted, unwelcome and increasingly not needed in this country. Witness the recent increase in immigration quotas which will allow 400,000 skilled (mostly white) and wealthy people to come into the United States. The U.S. still prefers to bring in people from foreign lands instead of investing the resources required to up­ grade the “ skills” and “ wealth” of Africans in America. With the excep­ tion of a small number of acceptable or symbolic Blacks who arc included so that the masses can be excluded (inclu­ sion lor exclusion), this is still incon­ venience to be tolerated. Only our exer­ cise of POWER prcvenLs our total oblit­ eration in this country. Wc are still or own best hope for the survival and de­ velopment of African Americans. So we loo must heal our land, our people, our community. African Ameri­ cans must counter the abuse and neglect DEFAULTED STUDENT LOAN? You m»y be eligible to p«y hick ■ uvanlecd student loan (F IS L , GSL, tafford, SLS, or P U S loan), without penalty or collection charges. For more in form alioa call the guarantee agency that holds your loan, or call the U .S Department o f Education toll free at: 1X00) 3 3 3 -IN F O I "Reinvestments in the Community" is a weekly column appearing in API publications throughout the USA. * * 1 I * of the racist exploitive state in the U.S. with a passionate commitment to have concern, compassion and tender, love and care for our people. We cannot leave the children unattended, unedu­ cated and detached from family. We must overcome the recklessness and callousness of a wilding generation of young people by demonstrating with deeds of care and kindness that we are absolutely wild about them. They are our future. We cannot leave the flower of our nianhtxxl and womanhood to waste away in Amcrican’s’s prison warehouses. They are the victims.qf the violence that be­ gets violence, the crimes that beget crime. They arc our brothers and sisters, our family and wc must fight for their re­ lease and prepare a HOME for them when they return. Finally, we must heal our land, our community because we must prepare to fight. America must be put on notice that wc will not fall prey to her schemes of neglect and genocide. We will not die or go away. It is a decadent America which must die and out of its demise must rise a new nation. And it is we, who have suffered most, who must lead the resurrection of a new and humane society. Africans in America must heal our land, our community so that we might live to build a new tomoriow. «S' * 4 * •* ; A. Í XMMM "Qtu *<