9 • • ,- > J anuary P age * 05, 1994 • T he P ortland O bserver 2 J < / *» ......«... O je ^ r t l a t i b © bseruer p e r s p e c t i v e s F I a in b o W African American Spirituality: A Universal Inheritance by P rof . M ckinley B urt Tw o recent headlines for major news articles by New York Times colum nists scent at first blush to reach to the heart of m odem m an’s spiritual dilem m a. Within a week we had, “ Baby Boomers, Now Parents, Turn To C hurch”, and “ New Age Spirit Q uest Leaves Indians Decrying C ul­ tural T heft”. Just what is it that is driving this frantic search for answers to a world wide phenom enon of disillusionment and uncertainty ? Is this a new crisis of beliefs, religion - about one’s place in the universe, in the scheme of things? A nd, more importantly, why now? Has the failure o f institutions, long trusted and revered, long de­ pended upon for balance and support in an otherw ise uncertain w orld brought our fear and trepidation to a critical mass? In these frantic (be­ lated) searches for answers some even wonder if it is safe to look too deeply within. The human psyche suddenly seems too fragile, too vulnerable as senseless violence reaches a crescendo in the nation, throughout the world, in fact: not just among strangers but neighbor against neighbor, children against parents and other children, class against class, and even the peace makers quarrel bitterly. It seems that a terrible sense of “alienation” has gripped mankind, transcending race, consequent and geography. Nighdy, blood drips from television set. W ebster’s dictionary describes “alienation’: “A withdrawal or sepa­ ration o f a person or his affections from the values of one’s society or family - from a position o f former attachm ent.” Others, like the aca­ demic spokepersons for those “baby boomers” (bom soon after W orld War II), describe the current era as one of “enorm ous fragm entation o f the spirit” with parents expressing con­ cern about the moral and religious socialization of their children. Well and good from the pundits and social arbiters for the articulate m iddle class, but how is it with the ethnic and economic m inorities?The Blacks, the Indians, the poor. That New York Tim es article about the “New Age” spiritual guest of middle class whites (Oregonian, 12/27/93) was merciless in its indict­ ment of a blatant “m ockery” o f the original A merican’s reverence for the nature o f the world. “W isps o f smoke rose from burning herbs...a prayer to mother earth and father sky... a song about the return of the bison and reverent words offered for the ‘red nation ’... All that was missing among the forty was an 'In d ia n ’”. The kind of activities bring on comments like those o f John Lavelle, a sioux who is director o f the Center for Support and Protection of Indian Religions and Indigenous Traditions: “This is the final phase o f genocide. First whites took the land and all that was physical. Now they are going after what is intangible”. Speaking of the “intangible”, how much of the residual rights in the block buster movie “Geronomo” will find its way to Indian institutions? Not much if any, considering the mounting envy and jealousy over Indian Casino op­ erations (and Salmon fishing). Some say small compensation for the tril­ lions in land and resources taken. And lives? But, wait a minute now. What about this African American spiritu­ ality that springs forth from an A fri­ can tradition that was recorded many thousands o f years ago when the rest of the world was in a barbaric stupor. Can today’s blacks reassert a moral authority and tradition that is docu­ mented in the Bible and other reli­ gious writings—in Greek and Roman history, on Egyptian papyri and pyra­ m ids, on E th io p ia n and N ubian Temples? Can they reinstitute the soul-sustaining reverence for God and man they brought with them as slaves in an alien land? This is the moral im perative which enabled blacks to not only maintain sanity and a sense of self, but to move forward and build those institutions, spiritual and secular, that have sustained them to date. It is now, in this universal crisis o f spirit and soul, that we must wonder if that millenniums-old consciousness o f the order of things which brought the rest o f the world out o f spiritual darkness, can again bring the light. Especially when the very A frican American youth is in violent and destructive ferment. Next week: how we did it before and how w e m u std o ita g a in if we are to survive. O ur spiritual inheritance from day I in Ethiopia. C S fe A : L I T I Ö N New Year’s Resolution state and local level, thereby threat­ ening the hard-won gains in minority representation made because o f the 1965 Voting Rights Act; and W hereas, HR-2862, which has 98 co-sponsors and is currently pend­ ing before C ongress, threatens to codify the Shaw decision which would be a major setback to equal voting rights and representation in this coun­ try; and W h ereas, even with the 1965 Voting Rights Act, African A m eri­ cans and other minorities continue to face barriers in achieving a fair share o f political power nationwide as evi­ denced by the fact that there are nearly 500, OOOpublicly elec ted or appointed officials in our country, yet African Americans, who represent 12.8 per­ cent o f the total population and would hold approximately 60,000 of those offices, hold only 7,500 or a mere 1.5 percent o f those offices; and W hereas, this is the only court case in which the Supreme Court has created a remedy without a violation - i.e., a showing that anyone’s rights have been violated; and W h ereas, the im plications o f Shaw for reducing the mere 1.5 per­ cent o f African Americans who hold political office in our country is a W hereas, The President has yet toappointan A ssistant Attorney G en­ eral for the Office o f Civil Rights, whose duties would include enforc­ ing the provisions o f the 1965 Voting Rights Act; and W hereas, the rights o f those citi­ zens who arc protected by the Voting Rights Act are now more vulnerable than any other time in this decade; and W h e re a s, for the d isen fran ­ chised, the 1965 Voting Rights Act is the most important piece o f social legislation o f this century; and W hereas, the Suprem e Court in the case o f Shaw V. Reno, ruled that irregularly shaped minority districts are subject to Constitutional chal­ lenge and therefore threatens to un­ dermine the 1965 Voting Rights Act; and W h ereas, our President, in his advocacy for color-blind constituen­ cies, recently stated, “ too many o f us are still too unwilling to vote for people w hoaredifferent than w earc;” and W h ereas, the U.S. Congress is currently considering legislation that would seek to use the interpretation in Shaw as a basis for challenging m i­ nority districts in court at the federal, major threat to Black social, educa­ tional and economic progress at many levels and areas beyond the political arena; and W hereas, these attacks on the 1965 Voting Rights A ct by the C on­ gress and the Courts will potentially instill a chilling effect on the w illing­ ness of state legislative redistricting bodies to draw electoral districts with the aim of remedying the past effects o f voter discrimination; N ow , th e re fo re , Be It R e ­ so lv ed th a t (Y o u r O rg a n iz a tio n ) go on re c o rd as se e in g the Shaw d e c isio n as the g re a te st th re a t in our day to eq u al re p re se n ta tio n for p e o p le o f c o lo r a t the fe d e ra l, sta te and lo cal le v e l; and Be It F u rth e r R e so lv e d th a t (Y o u r O r­ g a n iz a tio n ) u rg e D e m o c ra ts in C o n g re ss to u n an im o u sly o p p o se H R -2862. Be 11F urthcr Resolved that (Your Organization) urge the President o f the United States to appoint an Asst. Atty. Gen. for Civil Rights who has a track record consistent with the In ­ tent of the 1965 V.R. Act. Respectfully su b m itted to, T he P resid en t T he W hite H ouse W ashington, DC 20500 C e le b ra te D iversity Most Insured Americans Will Get Better Health Benefits M ost A m ericans w ho now have health insurance will get better ben­ efits under the C linton Health Re­ form, according to a report released today by the consum er group Families USA. “ In su red A m erican s are B IG W inners under the Clinton R eform , ’ said Ron Pollack, executive director of Fam ilies USA. “ M ost A m ericans with private insurance will get better benefits and m o re s e c u rity u n d e r P r e s id e n t C linton’s Health R eform ,” Pollack said. The new report looks at the num ­ ber o f insured A m ericans in every state to get im proved coverage in five benefit areas under the Clinton Re- form --prescription drugs, long term care, vision services, dental care, and mental illness or substance abuse treat­ ment. The report also calculates the num ber o f insured A m ericans who will pay less in d e d u c tib le s and copaym ents, and the num ber o f in­ sured Americans w ho will get strong new protection against insurance com ­ pany discrim ination. The report finds that 53 m illion insured A m ericans will gain new or improved coverage for prescription drugs by 1998,121 m illion currently insured A m ericans will gain dental benefits by 2001, 139 million will gain new vision protection by 1998, 153 million will gain improved ben­ efits for mental illness and substance abuse by 2001, 2.6 million will be eligible tb receive new long term care service at home by 2003, 37 million will pay lower amounts in deductibles and copayments in 2001, and 31 m il­ lion will gain protection against in­ surance company discrimination by 1998. The Families USA report does not count those on M edicaid or the uninsured, most of whom will also benefit. Four out of five elderly use pre­ scription drugs, yet fewer than half have private insurance coverage for drugs. Medicare does not now cover prescription drugs. Under the Clinton Reform, 22 million older Americans will gain new coverage for prescrip­ tion drugs under an expanded M edi­ care by 1998, according to the report. “ Under the President’s Reform, our grandparents will no longer have to choose between buying groceries and buying their m edicine,” Pollack said. The prescription drug benefit will also help 32 million Americans under age 65. The greatest numbers o f Ameri­ cans of all ages will gain new or improved drug coverage under the Reform in California (5.6 m illion), New York (3.9 million), Texas (3.1 million), Florida (3.1 million), Penn­ sylvania (3 million), Illinois (2.5 mil­ lion), Ohio (2.3 million), New Jersey (1.8 million), M ichigan (1.8 Million), and North Carolina (1.4 million). The insurance m ost Americans have today does not cover dental care. Under the Clinton Reform, 121 mil­ lion privately insured Americans will gain dental benefits by 2001, accord­ ing to the study. O f those, 87 million will be adults and 34 m illion will be under 18. The greatest numbers o f privately insured Americans will gain dental benefits by 2001 in California (12.3 million), Texas (8.4 m illion), New York (8.3 m illion), Florida (6 mil­ lion), Pennsylvania (5.9 m illion), Illi­ nois (5.8 million), Ohio (5.5 million), Michigan (4.7 million), New Jersey (3.9 million), and Virginia (3.5 mil­ lion). M ost insured A m ericans now have policies that exclude vision cov­ erage. american consumers pay for the vast majority o f vision products and services out-of-pocket. Under the Clinton Reform, 139 million privately insured Americans will gain new vi­ sion protection by 1998, according to the report. T hegreatestnum bersof privately insured Americans will gain vision benefits in California (14.2 million), Texas (9.9 million), New York (9.1 million), Florida (7 m illion), Illinois (6.7 million), Pennsylvania (6.6 m il­ lion), Ohio (6.4 m illion), Michigan (5.4 million). New Jersey (4.3 m il­ lion), and Virginia (4 m illion). Americans whose insurance po­ lices include some mental illness or substance abuse benefits today often have very limited coverage. Under the Clinton Reform, 153 million A m eri­ cans will gain improved benefits for mental illness and substance abuse by 2001, according to Families U SA ’s report. T hese sta te s have the h ig h e st num bers o f in su re d w ho w ill gain im proved c o v e ra g e fo r m en tal ill­ ness or su b sta n c e a b u se in 2001: C a lifo rn ia (1 6 .3 m illio n ); New Y ork (11.1 m illio n ); T e x a s (9.4 m illio n ); P e n n sy lv a n ia (8 .2 m il­ lio n ); Illin o is (7.7 m illio n ); O h io (7 .6 m illio n ); M ic h ig a n (6.2 m il­ lio n ); New Je rse y (5.4 m illio n ): an d N orth C a ro lin a (4 m illio n ). Nearly every American family eventually faces a long term care cri­ sis. Very few Americans can afford insurance to protect them from the bankrupting costs o f long term care. Under the Clinton R eform , all A m eri­ cans with severe disabilities will be eligible to receive new long term care services at home. It is estimated that 2.6 million Americas will actually get this care in 2003. The greatest numbers of Ameri­ cans will get long term care at home under this new coverage in 2003 in C a lif o r n ia (2 7 4 ,0 0 0 ), F lo rid a (184,000), Texas (174,000), Illinois (115,000); Michigan (78,000), New Jersey (76,000), and North Carolina (74,000). M illions o f Americans pay high deductibles and copayments today. A bout 25 m illion A m ericans had health expenses that amounted to ten percent or more o f their income in 1993. Under President Clinton’s Re­ form , nearly 40 m ill ion insured Ameri­ can will have low er deductibles and copayments by 1998. The greatest numbers of Ameri­ cans will have lower copayments and deductibles in 1998 in California (5.7 m illion), Texas (3.4 million), New York (2.7 m illion), Florida (1.9 mil­ lion), Illinois (1.4 million), Pennsyl­ vania (1.4 million), and New Jersey (962,000). Today, millions o f Americans with health problems face discrimina­ tion by insurance companies. Some are denied health coverage for condi­ tions they or their family members already have, or are charged higher premiums. By 1998, underthc Clinton Reform, 31 million potential victims o f insurance company discrimination will gain new protection, as the dis­ criminatory practices are outlawed, according to the report. T he g re a te s t n u m b e rs o f people w ill b e n e fit from these in ­ su rance refo rm s in C a lifo rn ia (3.5 m illio n );T e x a s (2.2 m illion); New Y ork (2.1 M illio n ); P e n n sy lv a n ia (1.5 m illio n ); F lo rid a (1.5 m il­ lion); Illin o is (1.5 m illio n ); O hio (1.4 m illio n ); M ichigan (1.1 m il­ lion); N ew Jersey (1 m illio n ), and G e o rg ia (8 4 5 ,0 0 0 ). “ Insurance companies w on’t be able to discriminate against Ameri­ cans who are old or sick or have sick children under the President’s Health Reform. Such insurance companies practices will simply be banned,” Pol­ lack said. The estimates in the report are based on several government data sources: the National Medical Expen­ diture Survey, the Survey of Income and Program Participation and the Current Population Survey. The data in the report was calculated by Fami­ lies US A with the assistance o f Lewin- VHI, a technical health care consult­ ing firm. The new report, “ Better Benefits: Millions Helped by Clinton Reform,” was produced by Families USA Foun­ dation. Families US A is the national con­ sumer group fighting for health and long term care reform. THIS WAY FOR BLACK EMPOWERMENT Minister Farrakhan And Black-On-Black Violence O n Saturday, D ecem ber 17, I had the privilege of addressing M in­ ister Louis Farrakhan’s “Stop the K illing” rally at the Jacob Javits C on­ vention Center in New York City. I was particularly honored to welcome the minister to New York and deliver the first speech o f the rally. M inister Farrakhan ’s appearance before a crowd o f 25,000 African A merican New Yorkers was an ex ­ trem ely important event, not simply because it was the m inister’s first public appearance in New York City since 1985, but also because it cam e at a time when the Black com m unity o f the c ity -a n d the nation-finds itself in a leadership crisis. In the wake o f Mayor David D inkins’ defeat, Black politicians are circling like vultures. T hey’re ru n ­ ning every which way (mostly to the right) in an attem pt to make th em ­ selves acceptable to the white pow er structure. T hat’s why the arrival o f ing. W e ’ve got to turn out those M inister Farrakhan-a man o f p rin ­ w ho m a n ip u la te our fe a rs for their ciple who puts the needs o f the com ­ ow n p o litic a l g a in .” munity before political am bition-w as “There are wealthy power bro­ kers in this country who are making so welcome. W e’re all aware o f the epidem ic millions off of our kids doing crack. of violence,crim eanddrugabuse that There are corrupt police officers liv­ is destroying the very social fabric of ing in style by confiscating and our communiues. Some of our politi­ reselling guns and drugs while our cal leaders are responding to this kids go to jail and the politicians turn their heads. And there are Black crisis by blaming our young people. leasers who maintain their positions The Reverend Jesse Jackson, for ex­ ample, has been touring New York of power in the Democratic party by schools and churches calling on our exploiting our despair and our power- chi ldren to turn their friends and peers lessncss while they bow down to the Zionist elements who maintain un­ in to the police. B ut as I p u t it a t the ra lly , due influence in this city and die “ T h e B lack c o m m u n ity h a s to corporate elements who dom inate th is co n c e rn its e lf less w ith w ho it country.” D issin g our c h ild re n may win tu rn s in an d c o n c e rn its e lf m ore w ith w ho it turns o ut. W e ’ve got you a D em o cratic p arty nom ina­ to tu rn o u t those w ho th riv e on tio n , b u t it p la y s rig h t into the v io le n c e , w e’ve g o t to turn o u t h an d s o f the w hite ra c ists. As the th o se w ho b e n e fit from the k ill­ M in iste r put it at the rally : “ You say this is a tough g e n e ra tio n . We tion, independent of the m anipula­ p ro d u ced it. D o n ’tc h e c k the fruit. tion, leaders such as Minister Louis L e t’s check the tr e e .” Farrakhan, Reverend A1 Sharpton and Our Black misleaders-in New myself.” York and nauonally-are doing virtu­ M inister Farrakhan and I do n ’t ally nothing to help our people over­ see eye to eye on everything, but we com e the poverty, racism and hope­ agree that there are solutions to the lessness which produces self-destruc­ violence that plagues our communi­ tive violence and drug abuse. Instead ties. The Nation of Islam had dem on­ they’re busy trying to figure out how strated the success of some of its to broker our misery into getting solution to fighting drug dealing and elected mayor or senator or governor drug abuse. Activists and leaders who or whatever. If the African American work with me have created program community is serious about doing after program-including the All Stars something to stop the violence, w e’re Talent Show Network, the Barbara going to have to make some tough Taylor School, Pregnant Productions- decisions. which provide non-violent environ­ “The issue,” I told the crowd at ments where our young people can the Javits C enter,“ is whether you will grow and develop in positive direc­ have the courage and the intelligence tions. to stand up on behalf of our people to These solutions have been de­ turn out the Judases am ongst us and nied and in many cases attacked be­ to stand up with the Black leader who cause the leaders who have generated strive lobe independentof the corrup- thcm -M inister Farrakhan and mv- k k « self-are independent. But that, of course, is exactly why they work. M inister Farrakhan and I can see and implement solutions to violence and crime precisely because w e’re inde­ pendent, politically and financially, of the Democratic and Republican Parties. Those who control the two old parties aren ’t interested in a solu­ tion; they would just as soon see us kill ourselves off. All they’re con­ cerned about is keeping a lid on the Black community, which means mak­ ing sure we do n ’t shake things up too much. The question facing the Black community is: are we going to follow the independent road which will lake us to the end o f violence or will we once again settle for a Democratic or Republican Party-controlled approach that is more about power and privi­ lege for the few than dealing with violence in our communities? Jj1 J., f