v-v «.» * <•■**■* P age A2 D ecember 14, 1994 • T he P ortland O bserver Monday, Reverend Jesse L. Jackson spoke at the Park Avenue Synagogue. Following are excerpted remarks from his speech. "Inthenam e of religion, there is talk ofa Christ ian culture, a Christian nation. Yet we know that the great­ ness o f America is its ecumenical character and commitment to reli­ gious tolerance Let us remember that the concept o fa Christian coali­ tion is not 9 new. In slavers times, the eco­ nomic forces rationalized slaver} by saying that African descendants were three-fifths human Their pseudo­ scientists, predecessors of Charles Murray. rationalized slavery arguing that Blacks had a small Cephalic index, that our brains were smaller The Christian Coalition rationalized their support of these forces by say­ ing that we were the cursed descen- dantsofHam. .Germany had a Chris­ tian Coalition. It betrayed the char­ acter of the faith with silence or com­ plicity as the notion that the Jews killed Jesus became fuel for Führer, killing without conscience as people prayed in schools and churches while C O A L IT IO N The Christian Coalition the trains rolled. Only a few brave souls defied the ‘big lie.' “Often, forces have appropriat­ ed the name “Christian" but lack the character of the faith. Theirs' is a spirit of retribution and selfishness that goes against the teachings of the church. An authentic Christian Coa­ lition must be measured by the char­ acter of our faith, not by the appro­ priation of our name. The character ofthe Christian faith will make Amer­ ica better. The character of our faith has always obligated us to fight rac­ ism, anti-semitism, fascism and homophobia, to fight for the rights of working people and. indeed, to reach out to the least of these. “In 1954, the Supreme Court ruled that we must have equal protec­ tion under the law and to integrate our schools. Many of the Christian Coalition chose private Christian academies over sharing and building culturally-diverse public schools. In 1963, Dr. King's letter from a Bir­ mingham jail was written to the Chris­ tian Coalition. A group ofwhite min­ isters challenged his right to be in Birmingham and the moral substance of that mission. .. “Where there is religious perse­ cution. next comes anesthesia ofthe conscience, from whence so often follows ethnic cleansing and other forms of brutal acts of inhumanity . And so we must take this critical opportunity now offered to us by the rise of the polarizing right-wing in our nation to renew our covenant with each other and with our faiths I lie new right-wing may have temporarily captured the political center, but we are concerned with maintaining the moral center. If this were Germany, we would call it rac­ ism. Here, we call it conservatism. And it provides a cover for a public policy ofscapegoating, exclusion and distrust. “The election returns ofNovem- ber 8th were not a mandate to in­ crease the number of poor children or frighten us into a more racially- polarized society. The forces o f rac­ ism and intolerance are heading downhill like a truck with no brakes- -gaining speed and losing control. We have an obligation to take responsibility for speaking the truth about these issues—because the truth is the only brake that can stop this tru ck ’s dangerous m om entum .” CIVIL RIC/HTS JOURNAL Out Of Sight Will Not Be Out Of Mind b \ B f . rnice P owell J ackson was killed himself by other teens. The Chicago district attorney sug­ ewt Gingrich’s term as gested that there were other children, Speaker of the House even as young as eight, who were of Representatives is involved in violence and that the off to a frightening start. problem His is that we have no way to call for the use of orphanages lock them up at that age. Locking up to reduce the welfare rolls 8 year olds is not the solution. Nei­ should be a wake-up call and a ther is sending the children ofjobless call to action for each and every single mothers to orphanages. Put­ one of us. His plan gives new ting people out of sight is not going to meaning to the old joke about put them out ofmind. Thelivesofour the person who shows up on children are too important for such your doorstep and says, “I’m political rhetoric and partisan poli­ from the government and I’m tics. here to help you.” The lives ofour children are too Mr. Gingrich has proposed al­ important to leave them to the gov­ lowing states to end payments to ernment Rememberthat famous line unmarried mothers under 2 1 and to “Ask not what your country can do then use those funds for a “boarding for you, ask what you can do for your school or a group home" where chil­ country.” We must re-create that at­ dren of jobless mothers might be titude in our communities. National placed. He then suggested that Mrs. Urban League President Hugh Price Clinton, who had criticized this plan has been advocating a fund whereby as “unbelievable and absurd,” watch those who have can give - $500 or Boystown, the sentimental movie of $1,000 a year to save our youth. nearly six decades ago. William Belton, a prisoner in Sing- Mr. Gingrich is by no means the Sing, has written me suggesting that only person advocating this “put them every African American - young or away” mentality. This summer we old, wealthy or poor, even those in watched the sad case of 11 -year-old prison should give to a fund for our Robert Sandifer unfold in Chicago, youth. We must raise dollars from when he killed a teenage girl and then our own communities for our youth N But the lives ofour children are too important for the government not to provide funds as well Manyofthe problems our youth face today re­ volve around the scarcity o f jobs in our communities. Our government has yet to develop a comprehensive strategy for dealing with the enor­ mous changes in the job market over the past decade, as we transform from an industrial economy into a service and information economy. The large- scale reduction of blue-collar un­ skilled jobs has had enormous im­ pact on communities of color. Put­ ting people to work cleaning up parks and fl ipping hamburgers is not a long­ term solution for supporting fami­ lies. Families need other kinds of support as well - from government and from people. The children in­ volved in the violence or facing ne­ glect or abuse are children o f fami­ lies in crisis. They are children of families who don’t know how to be families. We need programs to help families learn how to be families We need people in our communities to help families learn how to be fami­ lies. The lives of our children are too important for us all not to be in­ better 'Ua volved, directly and personally. That's what Kent and Carmen Amos did in Washington. D C. nearly 15 years ago. They started inviting the childrenoftheir community into their own home at night for dinner and conversation and study sessions. Their numbers grew to 20 or 25 a night and in 10 years their extended family grew to 100 young people, 35 ofwhom have already graduated from college and another 28 of whom arc attending college. That extended family concept has grown into the Urban Family Institute, organized by the Amoses to facilitate safe environments for ev­ ery child, to change the process that creates and perpetuates destructive behavior and to provide a framework for community-wide nurturing. Ex­ tending the family. That’s what our grandmothers and great-grandmoth­ ers did before us. That’s what we can do again. That's what government needs to help communities find ways to do. Orphanages and prisons for children are not the answer. Extend­ ing the family is - we must keep our children in our sight and in our mind all the time. (SJditar Send your letters to the Editor to: Editor, PO Box 3137, Portland, OR 97208 The Destiny Of The Race Is In Our Hands s I reflect retrospect- ively about the arduous task of organizing the National State of the Race Conference (SORC) held in Baltimore November 17-20, and contemplate prospectively the potential impact of the SORC, I am convinced that as Africans in America we must face one fundamental fact: the destiny of the race is in our hands. In spite of the State of Emergen­ cy afflicting the masses of African people in this country and through­ out the Pan-African world, we must find the resolve to rise above our circumstances to rescue and restore the race. Without that sense of re­ solve the SORC would not have oc­ curred The SORC was an event that was necessary, an essential coming together at a crucial moment in the life and times of Africans in this hostile nation. As I recounted in an earlier article, the SORC did not be­ come a reality because we had the money or the staff to make it happen Indeed, organ izing the SORC seemed to be an impossible undertaking giv­ en our lack of resources and staff. However, we were not deterred As organizers we saw what needed to be done and launched out on faith The „»i 4 overwhelming success of the SORC is a testimony o f faith, tenacity and will. As African people we are called upon to discover within ourselves that same faith, tenacity and will as we struggle to reconstruct the Black community into the 2 1 st century. We must take responsibility forourselves, our people, the black Nation and the Pan-African world We must find the resolve to be self-initiating, self-reli­ ant and self-determining. We must organize ourselves, our collective intellect, energy and resources to re­ gain our place in the forefront of human history. In spite ofthe horri­ ble and debilitating crises we face as Africans in America and the world, we must have the faith (Imani) that ultimately we will be victorious. As the SORC unfolded in Balti­ more it was clear, to all who would allow themselves to feel, listen and leam, where the source of our collec­ tive will as an African people is to be found. The source of our strength and power is in our culture and spir­ ituality. There was a spirit and power at the SORC that was nourished by the emphasis on African culture and spirituality at the conference It was this emphasis on culture and spiritu­ ality which so infused the partici­ pants with enthusiasm for the work and filled the participants with the thirst for fellowship, bonding and community that all of the mistakes and problems of the conference be­ came inconsequential. The African nation was ch er­ ishing a friendly union with it­ self. By the time we reached the celebration o f Pan-African World C ulture on Saturday evening and concluded with the Spiritual C el­ ebration on Sunday m orning the whole conference was on a cu l­ tural and spiritual high that was incredible. The ancestors, and the G od(s) o f our “weary years" and “silent tears,” the G od(s) o f our legacy o f historical achievem ent were with us. And, so it must be as we move forward with the formidable task of raising up a race battered by the holocaust of enslavement and brutal­ ized by centuries of oppression un­ der a global system of white suprem­ acy Culture is the repository o f our historical memory of ourselves in all of its fullness - the tragedies and triumphs - and the foundation for our future development as a race And, our African culture is at once a re­ flection of and source of our spiritu­ ality an and African people. It is in our culture and spirituality that is to be found the moral codes that should guide our behavior toward each oth­ er and the world. It is in our culture and spirituality that is to be found the historical examples o f courage, re­ sistance and victorious struggles that can and must serve as the source of inspiration in the trying moments of our sojourn on this planet. It is in our culture and spirituality that is to be found the faith to face adversity and not be turned around; the faith to confront disaster and not be over­ come by apathy and inaction; the faith to see in the impossible the prospects of possibility. It is with that faith, a faith ground- ed/rooted in our African culture and spirituality that we must proceed with the awesome task of restoring the race. It is that faith which you must feel in your heart and soul as we tackle this enormous task It is this faith, with its capacity to inspire vi­ sion, love, hope, compassion, com­ mitment, dedication, energy and righ­ teous work, which must become con­ tagious in African communities in this country and the Pan-African world. It is this faith that will give African people the will to win. Persons interested in participat­ ing in the follow-up to the SORC should call: 4IO-383-9555 or write SORC c/o NBUF, 50 Park Place #938, Newark, NJ 0 7 102. p e r s p e e tir e s Art Of “Blaming The Victim” Reaches New Heights 39 ow desperate were the Republicans for a victory last month? Let’s put it this way. Their political strategists figured that if six years earlier the Bush campaign people could come up with the black crime issue wrapped in a single package (Willie Horton) as a lead pipe cinch to win an election, then, surely several hundred thousand black w ould be a m o re -th a n - successful budget issue (welfare and other income security payments to the poor). As I have r indicated in recent a rti­ cles, this ap­ proach (a t­ tack) has been collateralized by assaults on ...... the I.Q. o f blacks and their ability to grasp m odern civ ili­ zation. But, it being the case th at’ a rose by any other name sm ells as sw eet’, I have also d elineated a parallel “white w elfare” structure supported by the tax p ay ers (in clu d in g African A m ericans). This system was com prised of, first, the leading m ultina­ tional corporations in ag ricu l­ ture and food processing to the tune o f hundreds o f billions each year. And in addition to these direct su bsidies, there were m yriad ‘d o le -o u ts ’ by congressm en to th eir biggest campaign contributors. Now, in som e other uni­ verse, this situation would be h ila r io u s because th e “Solom on P lan” (R .N .Y .), d e­ scribed as a radical restru c­ tu rin g ’ by the most co n serv a­ tive o f R epublicans, contem ­ plates “a reduction o f w elfare and alm ost all other program s for the poor by a total o f $ 150 billion over the next five y ears. But please note that w hile this cut will be absolutely dev as­ tating for the poor, in the same time frame, the m ultin atio n ­ a l’s “w elfare” will be $3 tril­ lion (5 years m ultiplied by 600 billion per year, and ju st for agriculture). Y ou w ill n o te th a t we h av en ’t even m entioned the trillions in w elfare gotten away with by the “ Savings and Loan” people during the 1980’s, and we could go on ad infinitum ju st listing the rascals reported by S enator P roxm ire in his w e e k ly “ G o ld e n F le e c e Award” ... billions upon billions paid to defense contractors by the Pentagon: $600 w renches and $800 toilet seats. Boy, those colored people on welfare ought to be ashamed, they might drive this nation to econom ic ru/n. W hites support their habits. But wait a minute, why does everyone keep saying "those colored people” on the dole? A ren’t there any whites who are down on their luck? What about the tim ber industry, all the industry lay-offs and re­ structuring? Must not be any, The N ew spapers and television (including P o rt­ la n d ) se ld o m show any but A f­ By rican Am ericans Professor receiving serv ic­ Mckinley es. A num ber o f Burt ten me about this ugly racist skewing o f dem o­ graphics, including a form er student o f mine who manages a local social agency. “ It makes it difficult for both the p rovid­ ers (whose allocations or co n ­ tributions are way down), and for truly needy white clients who are often confronted with steely stares and d isb elief.” Perhaps worst o f all is the fact o f an increasing reduction o f the standard of living o f those African Am ericans who have worked, scraped and sacrificed to escape the most immediate ghetto, only to find that the white public authorities (city and county) have raised the “ Black Skin Tax” astronom i­ cally. Back on August 18, the O regonian carried an article on page A3 which also appeared in the New York Times; “ A naly­ sis Finds Suburban Taxes Pe­ nalize B lacks.” It may be su r­ prising to some (but not to me), that most o f this rip o ff occurs in the North. T h is is a c ru e l and unexcusable burden to place on the backs o f hundreds o f th o u ­ sands o f law abiding, tax -p ay ­ ing, loyal citizens who, among other things, will be the first laid o ff in econom ic downturns and who are salvaged by other versions o f the “ Black Skin T ax ” . M ore revelations next week on the real estate hustle and other thefts practiced by that great mass o f “decent, law- abiding, long-suffering m iddle class whose standard o f living has been re d u ced by b lack “ loafers” (Try v ictim s’). :__ _________________ J ^ o rtla rtò (©bserücr (USPS 959-680) OREGON’S OLDEST AFRICAN AMERICAN PUBLICATION Established in 1970 by Alfred L. Henderson Joyce Washington-Publisher The PORTLAND OBSERVER is located at 4747 NF. Martin Luther King, Jr. Blvd. Portland, Oregon 97211 503-288-0033 * Fax 503-288-0015 Deadline fo r all submitted materials: Articles:Friday, 5:00 pm Ads: Monday Noon POSTMASTER: Send Address Changes to: Portland Observer, P.O. 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