■ i . . . „_- L « '■ ■’ -- ' * MMWPMWNNRIWWM i Page 2—The Portland Observer-July 24, 1991 HIS OPINION How Do You Spell Relief:Portland BY ULLYSSES TUCKER, JR. Washington, D.C. is my place o f b irth , D.C. General Hospital to be ex­ act. The same hospital that has the highest infant m ortality rate in the city, the most welfare recipients seeking m edical or emergency services and some o f the horror stories are phe­ nomenal. For examples, patients hav­ ing the wrong lim b removed by acci­ dent or dying from blood clots as a result o f an ankle injury are common. N ot to mention doctors or young in ­ terns administering the wrong m edi­ cine to patients or stories o f covert ster­ iliza tion o f black women, poor black women. M ost D O A ’ s (Dead On A rri­ val) also end up at D.C. general be­ cause most o f the individuals dying in the streets do not have health insur­ ance. People like drug dealers, gang members, drug addicts, or other disin- franchised residents falling victim to random violence or senseless killings. I f yo u ’re a black male in Washington, D.C. between the age o f 16-24, you have a one in five chances o f being k ille d on the streets, or incarcerated, or identified at the city morgue housed near the the hospital. Funeral homes do big business in Washington, D.C. too. There are many elements that I love and enjoy about Washington, D.C. The rich history, museums, Georgetown, grandma B o lton ’s fried chicken/maca- roni and cheese, grandma Tucker’ s pound cakes/sweet potato pies (ask Ray Leary about them), hanging out w ith Uncle Dave, and other friends like “ Eddie B o y” from Roosevelt High or Wes when he flies up from M iam i for a haircut. I love the monuments, Fre­ drick Douglass Home, the Museum o f A frican A rt, fish sandwiches from Kecy’ s on 8th & H Street, N.E., and walking along the Potomac River while watching the plane land or take o ff from National A irport. M ostly, I love Quincy Street and the oldtim ers on my block like the Fenwicks, B rin k le y ’ s, Carter’ s, B urris's, other Tucker’ s, Sutter’s.who unfortunately feel trapped in their homes, sometimes, sim ply because o f the rampant crim e and potential for stray bullets. Kissing their cheeks and shaking their hands remind them o f what the neighborhood use to be like. People are terrified now. The other Washington is far d if­ ferent than the one I grew up in. I t ’ s as different as black and white. P o liti­ cians, lawyers, big time C EO ’s, busi­ nessmen, defense contractors, and as­ sociation heads live large in W ashing­ ton, D.C. Business is booming in down­ town, tourism is on the upswing, the subway is expanding, and big busi­ nesses are relocating to the nation’ s capital. D.C. m ight have the reputa­ tion as the “ M urder C apital” around the U.S. A., but the money and jobs are still flo w in g in white-corporate com ­ m unity. U nfortunately, the only thing flow ing in my neighborhood is drugs and violence. Washington, D.C. is a harsh reminder o f how I do not have to love and a painful h u m ility p ill that le t’ s me know how far I ’ ve come in the last fifteen years. I t ’ s even more pain­ ful to have four younger brothers who are homeless by choice, lost in the “ T w ilig h tZ o n e ” because o f a bad trip on PCP, locked up for cocaine d is tri­ bution, or lastly, one losing a battle w ith his liver and w ith alcoholism. Then, there are my two sisters who are caught up in the cycle o f welfare de­ pendency, poverty, and both consis­ tently struggle to make ends meet. Each o f us, like everyone in D.C., are the sum total o f the choices we’ ve made. No one can help anyone who does not want to help themself. Boarding the plane back to Portland brought me great inner-peace and solitude. Could I live back in D.C. and be happy? Whether people, especially black people, realize it or not— Oregonians have a great deal to be thankful for and a w onderful town to live in. A progres­ sive bottle b ill that prevents broken bottles and cans from ending up on the streets, and excellent recycling mental­ ity, fine city services, beautiful parks fresh air, mountains,low unemployment, No Pot Holes, affordable housing, and a much low er crim e rate. A t last the homicide count in Washington, D.C. stood at 348 (as o f this w ritin g ) and 17 died during my b rie f stay there, includ­ ing a mother o f three, d riving her three children home. She was caught in a cross fire between riv a l gang members. It was a sad situation indeed. Last I heard, Portland’ s homicide count stood at 36 fo r the year. Washingtons Police C hief Fulwood would love such a low homicide count. Pordand, though not perfect in every regard, is s till a good place to be and the quality o f life is out­ standing. I t ’ s’ s amazing to hear how people complain about Oregon or at least until they travel to someplace else. Mount Hood never looked so good! Yeah, Washington, D.C. is my birth­ place, but Portland, Oregon is my home. It a in ’ t where you’re from , i t ’ s where you’ re at... LETTERS TO THE EDITOR African-American Genocide To the Editor: I am w ritin g this letter w ith great concern fo r m y African-Am erican Brothers and Sisters as w ell as myself, who are in the Northwest comer o f the United States o f Am erica. We are truly faced w ith the real life problem o f genocide. Whereas the State o f Wash­ ington has a population o f 12% A fr i­ can-Am erican, yet the State o f Wash­ ington has a 44% prison population o f African-Am erican people. Again, the State o f Oregon has less than 2% o f its population that is African-Am erican, but the State o f Oregon has a popula­ tion o f at least 17.5% w ithin its prison system that are African-Am erican. I wonder why? On June 30, 1991, Ms. Tess W a l­ ton, hosted a program on K B O O Radio (Proverbial Perspective) concerning the racial injustice that is extracting most o f the African-Am erican men and women from the com m unity and plac- ing them in correctional facilities throughout die state, to help maintain W hite-Am erican communides eco­ nom ically. However, this is only one problem we are faced w ith. There is the case o f abuse in the juvenile system that is heaped upon our African-Am eri­ can youth; there is the case o f “ M is education” o f our youth and the ever present denial o f our true culture and history being taught in the public school system; there is the case o f the over­ whelming amount o f drugs that flo w through our comm unity, yet we don’t have the means to bring it into the country; there is the case o f young gang members being imported into the Northwest corner to reek havoc in cer­ tain areas o f the African-Am erican communides, which in turn brings down property value, to make room for out o f state investors to come in and buy up cheap property. These are some o f the very ingredients that are used to take ERVER PORTL (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 The PORTLAND OBSERVER is published weekly by Exie Publishing Corapony, 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 over a com m unity. Look at Seattle, W ashington, i f you w ill. T he city layed down a twenty year plan that moved all small African-American businesses out and moved in the Vietnamese. The same plan is being used in Portland, Oregon. A ll the property that African- Am erican people own in the area be­ tween the Jantzen Beach shopping mall, the airport, and the Convendon Center must be owned by W hite-Am erica just like Emmanuel Hospital ran all the A f­ rican-Am erican people away from that area. So it is really no wonder why it is. No matter how high up we get in d i­ vidually, they s till use us up as we are really nothing as a whole. Maybe one day we can get the sellout-type people o ff the front lines so we can really come together as one people and put a stop to what those people do to us and start doing fo r ourselves fo r real. John Dudley Lefiridge I I I Urban League Supports Police Precinct Move To Northeast Portland A t the June 26 meeting o f the Urban League o f Portland’ s Board o f D irec­ tors, a motion was passed to support the relocation o f the North Portland main Precinct to the vacant Fred Meyer site in Northeast Portland i f three condi­ tions were met: 1) that the comm unity policing concept would be promoted in the area, 2) that partnerships between the police and the com m unity would be encouraged, and 3) that there would continue to be a strong police presence in North Portland which may include a satellite office. According to Darryl T ukufu, President and C hief Executive O ffice r o f the Urban League, “ the board’ s vote to support the move ind i­ cates their acknowledgement and con­ cern fo r com m unity policing, raising the quality o f life for residents o f both North and Northeast Portland, and the im portanceofbettcrpolice/com m unity relationships in the C ity o f Portland. Deadlines for all submitted materials: Articles: Monday, 5 p.m. - Ads: Tuesday, 5 p.m. PO STM ASTER: Send Address Changes to: Portland Observer, P.O. Box 3137, Portland, OR 97208. Seoono 'lass postage paid at Portland. Oregon The Portland Observer welcomes freelance submissions Manuscripts and phono­ graphs should be clearly tabled and will be returned if accompanied by a self addressed envelope All created design display ads become the sole property of this newspapor and can not be used in other pubdeabor..', or personal usage without tho wrtten consent cl the general manager, unless the client has purchased the compos.tien of such ad 19C0 PORTLAND OBSERVER ALL RIG HTS RESERVED. REPRODUCTION IN W HO E O R IN PART W ITH O U T PERMISSIO N IS PROHIBITED. Subscriptions $ 20 00 per year In the Tri-County area; $ 2 5 0 0 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 Advert s- ing Representative Amalgamated Publishers, Inc., New York, NY. a < In The Beginning Was The Word, Part III PROFESSOR MCKINLEY BURT We continue on w ith more golden literary gems, chiseled in stone and recorded on papyri in a distant A frican past--an indelible documentation an­ tedating the Greeks and the Hebrews, and even s till echoing in A frican Am erican style and manner from ser­ mon to rhetoric. L et us begin w ith “ The Soul’ s Declaration o f Innocence,” often called "T h e Negative Form o f the Ten C om ­ mandments” by Biblical historians who have dated their origin to 2000 B.C. This declaration was to be made by the soul in the Judgment H all o f Osiris in the presence o f the council o f forty-two gods. The heart being weighed against the symbol o f truth and found correct was then restored to the de­ ceased who entered upon the life o f the blessed. O ye Lords o f Truth! I have brought you truth. I have not p riv ily done e vil against mankind. I have not a fflicted the m iser­ able. I have not told falsehoods. I have had no acquaintance w ith sin. I have not made the laboring man do more than his d aily task. I have not been idle. I have not been intoxicated. I have not been im m oral. I have not calumniated a slave to his master. I have not caused hunger. I have not made to weep. I have not murdered. I have not defrauded. I have not eaten the sacred bread in the temples. I have not cheated in the weight o f the balance. I have not w ithheld m ilk from the mouths o f sucklings. I have not slandered any one. I have not netted sacred birds. 1 have not caught the fish which ty p ify them. 1 have not stopped running water. 1 have not robbed the gods o f their offered haunches. 1 have not stopped a god from his manifestation. 1 have made to the gods the o f­ ferings that were their due. 1 have given food to the hungry, drink to the thirsty, and clothes to the naked. I am pure! I am pure! (The D elphian Text, p. 71) But, also, in a lighter vein we have from the same period the poetic litera­ ture o f love and romance. Note in the second paragraph below that w ith very little m odification we have a modem A frican Am erican “ blues” : “ M Y B A B Y D O N E LE F T M E A N D A IN ’T NO DOCTOR C A N H E LP .” ‘ Sweet in love, Mut-ir-dis, priest­ ess o f Hathor, Sweet in love, says King N, Sweet in love, say the men, Sweet in love, say the women. The daughter o f the king, sweet in love, is the most beautiful o f women. A young g irl whose equal has never been seen Her hair is blacker than the night. Blacker than grapes, than the fru it o f the fig-tree, Her teeth are more neatly set than grains o f com, Her breasts are firm ly planted on her chest.’ T have not seen my beloved for seven days, 1 am prey to listlessness, M y heart has become heavy. 1 am forgetful even o f my own life. When the physicians come to me, T heir remedies do not satisfy me, The magicians are helpless. M y sickness cannot be discov­ ered. But i f they say to me, “ Look, there she is,’ ’ then 1 am restored to life .’ Believe it or not, those transla­ tions arc from the pages o f a book by die very flabbergasted historian who claimed that the Africans ‘ ‘ had no flo w o f inspiration, the narrative is always perfunctory and the style bare. ’ ’ T ru ly, prejudice has blinded the best o f Euro­ pean historians. The “ blues” poems are found on p. 215 o f M ontet’ s, Eter­ nal Egypt. It is no wonder then that as we examine the further development o f the w o rld ’ s literature and drama we find the fo llo w in g statement on page 131, Voi 1, o f the 1958 Encyclopedia Brittanica (H ow many o f your teach­ ers w ill tell you that these soulful and inspirational A frican literatures and ceremonies were the seminal base o f all the subsequent culture?) ‘ ‘ It was not u ntil the gods o f Egypt were accepted by the Greeks that there appears any ceremony w hich can truly be called dramatic. The greek drama arose through the worship o f the gods o f vegetation, and later developed into the form o f the plays o f die great drama­ tists.” (Aeschylus, Aristophenes.etc.) Is it any wonder then diat the tamed historian o f ancient medicine, D.T. Atkinson, was forced to the conclu sion, TH E GREEKS W ERE N O T O ­ RIOUS T H IE V E S ” (M agic, M yth and Medicine, 1958. Fawcett W orld L i­ brary). M ore next week. Portland Observer encourages our readers to write letters to the editor in response to any articles we publish. United Airlines POCTLflM&RVER Are • The • Proud • Sponsors • Of Reinvestments Community HIGH SCHOOL STUDENTS IN HOME REPAIR TRAINING PROGRAM COMPLETE PROJECT UNDER PDC’S URBAN HOMESTEAD PROGRAM Forty Portland high school students have spent the last year completely re­ building an abandoned home in North­ east Portland purchased through the Portland Development Commission’ s Urban Homestead Program. On Tuesday, October 16, the stu­ dents celebrated completion o f the proj­ ect by holding an open house and driving a ceremonial " fin a l” nail o f simulated gold into the rehabilitated bouse. They were joined by the new owner o f the house, PDC Urban Homestead Program staff and the instructors who guided them. The home was purchased under PDC’s Urban Homestead Program, which provides low-cost home ownership op­ portunities to qualifying city residents. The homesteader is required to repair all major housing code violations and live in the house for at least three years. This is the fifth home completed by llic Portland Public School’s Home Repair Training Program (I IRTP) since it began in 1985 under a cooperative agreement with PDC’ s Homestead Program. Stu­ dents enrolled in the program conic from a variety o f Portland high schools. Students who have participated in HRTP not only have helped reclaim some o f the c ity ’s stock o f low-income hous­ ing hut, in some cases, have found re­ warding careers through the program. Some students have gone on to open theirow n building and remodeling busi­ nesses. I IRTI’ students, who lili the role o f general contractor, began w ork on the project in October 1989. Their work included a new front porch, vin yl siding, exterior and interior painting, repair o f windows, new roof, new kitchen and bathroom, new floor coverings, and ex­ tensive sheet rock and wall repair. Elec­ trical and plumbing work is typically subcontracted. The students work in tw o shifts, one group in the morning, another in the af­ ternoon, leaving half the day fo r their regular classes. "The program really gives those participating a leg-up on others entering the building and remodeling trade,” noted HRTP Coordinator John Harris. “ Our kids have some real skills to offer an employer.” PDC Urban Homestead manager Jennifer Gardner praised the remodeling work done by the students. “ Our hous­ ing specialists constantly monitor work done by all pur contractors and subcon­ tractors. The rehab work done by the HRTP program a.ways meets, and often cxoccds, our guidelines. A high degree o f workmanship is accomplished." In addition to the Urban Homestead Program, HRTP students also perform a variety o f home repairs under PDC’ S’ s Single Family Housing program. Under both programs the homeowner only pays for the materials used by the students and the cost o f the subcontractors. Fall finds the HRTP students al­ ready working on their next Urban Homestead home rehabilitation project. Northeast School Earns National Recognition Northeast Portland’s Alameda Ele­ mentary on A p ril 27 earned a national award from the federal Drug-Free School Recognition Program. Alameda, 2732 N.E. Fremont St., was one o f 51 schools nationwide to w in the award sponsored by (he U.S. Dept. o f Education. Alameda and the o ilier Oregon w in ­ ner, Oceanlakc Elementary in Lincoln C ity , were among four Oregon schools nominated and among 123 schools se­ lected nationwide fo r site evaluations last February. Only four winners were selected from Oregon, W ashington and Idaho in Re­ gion X o f the federal department. The other two arc ju n io r high schools in Ch­ eney, Wash, and Pocatello, Idaho. School representatives from Alameda and Oceanlakc w ill jo in other national winners in awards ceremonies in late M ay or early June in Washington, D.C. Charles N a kva sil, p rin c ip a l at Alameda, said the school has been in the forefront o f drug and alcohol educa­ tion since 1980 and has “ tried to crack the barriers o f m isinform ation by en­ couraging self-esteem in students.” He went on to say Alameda accomplishes that by teaching decision-m aking skills to help youths take early steps toward drug-free lives. ; deliver added safety for the elderly and homebound. I /\ "Reinvestments in the Community" is a weekly column appearing in API publications through out the USA 1 i I 5