P age A2 O ctober 4, 1995 » T he P ortland O bserver Send your letters to the Editor to: Editor, PO Box 3137, Portland, OR 97208 Bv P aul R ockwell ,C alifornia R ainbow A< iiv im r T if' or over 25 years, / f f t opponents of affirm- 1 ative action for women and people of color have overlooked a key American reality-the role of affirmative action in the lives of White men. Opposition to affirmative action is based on selective inattention to the social props on w hich W hite men themselves depend. Most o f us recall the first healed arguments over preference programs which took place over 25 years ago in teach-ins about the Vietnam War How easy it is to forget that people o f color were over-represented in the involuntary battlefields o f Indochina, while primarily White college youth were building their careers through one form o f affirmative actio n -”col- lege draft deferment.” Some profes­ sors, judges and journalists who op­ pose affirmative action today took advantage o f such programs years ago. It is time to consider the extent to which White males continue to be intertwined with preference policies. Tax breaks for corporations, subsidies for middle-class home buyers, mass transit subsidies for White suburbs, ( I Reflect Or Represent The Views O f Win' fjortlanii dPhseruer b ittf C O A L IT IO N Angry White Guy Speaks Out bank bailouts for desperate bank exec­ utives, selective allotments for tefu- gees and price supports for corporate farms are all shot through with consid­ erations of need and preference. In fact, in the last 50 years o f social engineering, the vast majority o f affirmative action policies were not m inorities; they were White males. Under F D R . the New Deal embarked upon a massive affirma­ tive action approach to social crisis. The post-W W II Marshall Plan pro­ vided billions o f dollars for training and jobs in Europe. Former enemies got free training programs in Europe that were denied Black G Is at home in America. The New Deal concept o f government intervention (affir­ mative action) into social problems became unpopular only after it was applied to the crisis o f segregation. It was not affirmative action itself, but the extension ofaffirm ative action to minorities and women that caused the backlash. Supposedly this backlash is led by “angry White males.” Well, we too are angry White males; but, con­ trary to the caricature, we support affirmative action. A s White males whose families got free medical care, or unquestioned access to higher education through the G l B ill, and shared in the social uplift o f the New Deal, we support affirmative action for those who are still left out. There is a normal tendency for us to overlook the social props, the net­ work o f special benefits on which we and our families depend. The late Mitch Snyder, advocate for the home- less, once gave and address to an afflu­ ent, White audience. He asked the, “Who lives in subsidized housing?” No one raised a hand. He then asked who owned a home. After everyone’s hand went up he pointed out that the I reasury gives up $46 billion a year to homeowner dedications in a system that predominantly benefits those who earn more than $50,000 a year. Tax breaks for homeo w ners may not be wrong. What is wrong is the smugpsychologyofthe Pete Wilsons, Pat Buchanans, Bob Doles and Phil Gramms, who take advantage o f all kinds o f breaks for themselves while denying affirmative action to the most oppressed members o f society. Affirmative action is already part ofthe fabric o f American life. We are all bound together in a vast network. It is hypocritical and profoundly wrong to call affirmative action for minorities “ racism in reverse,” whi le treating affirmative action for bank­ ers, corporate farmers, and White men of power, as entitlements. Note 1: Paul Rockwell isaR ain - bow activist from California. Note 2: JaxFax readers in Arizona take note and take action (write, call, mobilize, organize, activate): your state legis­ lators are trying to introduce legisla­ tion very similar to the infamous California C iv il Rights Initiative. Civil Rights Journal: Saving A Culture That Could Save Ours bv B ernice P ow ell J ackson frican Americans and native Americans share (C a common history of oppression in this country. While our stories are not the same, there are many shared themes and shared outcomes of that history. So it’s not surprising that we have come to common solutions to our problems. One solution can be summed up in the Akan word “sankofa” -- going back to our foots’lirortfertcr go Ter-r' ward. In other words, we must re­ claim our past in order to make •'»-» » '• . ... A ter progress as a people Another solution is that educa­ tion can play a liberating role for our people and is critical to the revital­ ization o f our communities. Livin g in a nation where information and the access to it promise to be the key to survival in the next century, both native Americans and African Amer­ ican must Find a way o f equipping our children to be a part ofthe future economy and that world. For native Americans the inter- section ofthese two solutions is found in the American Indian College Fund ( A IC F ). Modeled on the older, high- ly-successful United Negro College Fund, the A IC F was established in 1989 by the presidents o f the Amer­ ican Indian Colleges. The American Indian College Fund now includes 29 two and four year colleges with 15,000 students, located on or near reservations in 12 midwestern and western states. The A IC F raises funds for these institutions which are used to provide scholarships and student rfd as well as to strengthen native American studies departments and to begin to build endowments for its member institutions. These are some o f the nation’s newest colleges, serving some o f the nation’s poorest people. The first tribal colleges were founded during the movement o f Native Americans for self-determination in the 1960’s and 1970's. They were founded by native American leaders who saw that mainstream education was fail­ ing their people and that their tribes were in danger o f losing both their past and their future - o f losing his­ tory and culture as elders died out ues, music, I iterature and art is one of without passing on the languages and the critical missions o f these colleg­ culture to the next generation and as es. Traditional college academics are young people succumbed to the dan­ offered alongside classes in Native gers o f alcohol and despair brought American history, language, litera­ about by poverty and latk o f self­ ture and arts. esteem. Native American colleges are H is to ric a lly , education was now more than institutions o f higher a d iffic u lt issue for native A m e r­ education. They are home - centers icans. W hile tribal leaders had o f every aspect o f Indian life -- for u su a lly negotiated for access to many Indian communities. On many education in their treaties with reservations, they operate the only the U .S . governm ent, those p ro ­ libraries, daycare centers and tribal v isio n s were rarely honored. In ­ archives. They operate health care stead white e d u cato rs 'and m is­ centers, employ hundreds o f tribal sio n arie s provided education f o r ’ members and produce nurses, doc­ Indian ch ild ren , prem ised oti.the tors, technicians, teachers and ad­ concept o f assim ilatio n o f Indian ministrator so desperately needed. people into the larger society. Sitting Bull, the Lakota Sioux T h u s , these e d u c a to rs o ften chief, once said “ Let us put our minds forced Indian ch ild ren to live in together and see what life we can boarding schools away from their make for our children.” The Am eri­ fam ilie s, w hile fo rb id d in g them can IndianCollegeFund and its mem­ to speak their own languages and ber institutions have taken that chal­ g iv in g them C h ristia n names and lenge seriously and are making it a new identities. reality. But new native American col­ (Note: fo r more information leges are grounded in traditional In­ on the American Indian College dian culture and values. Preservation Fund, write 2 t W. 68th Street, Suite o f tribal languages, traditions, val- IF, New York, NY 10023.) V a n t a g e P o irvt: “Farrakhan Made The Call - But The March Belongs To Us All” b R U on »1 i » N D I an iels his slogan advanced by the All African Wom­ en’s Revolutionary Un­ ion of the All African People's Revolutionary Party (founded by Kwame Ture aka Stokely C arm ich ael), captures the essence of the evolution of the Million Man March (MMM) and Day of Absence (DOA). A vision in the mind o f Minister Louis Farrakhan which was initially promoted by the Nation o f Islam has been embraced by m illions o f A fri­ cans in America and thus has emerged as an evolving mass action o f major proportions. Minister Farrakhan and the Na­ tion o f Islam clearly remain the princi­ pal guiding force and institutional an­ chor for the MMM (which isappropri- ate given the call). But, to his credit, Minister Farrakhan has consistently pressed to have the March become more than just a Nation o f Islam event. In that regard, the National African A m erican leadership Sum m it (N A A L S ), under the leadership o f Dr. Benjamin F. Chavis, has played and instrumental role in building the M M M . Indeed, the meetings of N A A L S have been a critical sounding board where various proposals on the character o f the March and criticisms/ recommendations have been heard. In addition, key leaders from the Nationalist and Pan-Africanist com­ munity, most notably Dr Conrad W orrill, Chairman o f the National Black United Front, have played im­ portant roles in planning the March from its inception. Bob Law, Haki Madhubuti, Dr. Maulana Karenga, and Imari Obadele are also at the center o f the planning/organizing process, and Bob Brown o f the A ll African People’s Revolutionary Par­ ty is the Director o f Logistics for the March. Adding to the ecumenical character o f the MMM, prominent African Centered and progressive Christian ministers are actively in­ volved in the mobilization for Octo­ ber 16 e g.. Rev. Frank Reid, Balti­ more, Rev. W illie Wilson and Arch- Bishop George Augustus Stallings, Washington, D .C., Rev. C alvin O. Butts and Rev. Johnny Youngblood, New Yo rk, Rev. Wendell Anthony, Detroit and Rev. A l Sampson, C h i­ cago. The role o f women, concerns about the “Atonement" focus, and questions about the “political" direc­ tion and follow-up have been among the issues most hotly debated and discussed across the country. Though it is not likely that the ultimate shape and form o f the MMM w ill satisfy everyone, the march has been signif­ icantly impacted and changed as a result o f the discussion/debate, criti­ cisms within the community and the input/recommendations from various leaders and constituencies. With a few weeks left, the MMM/ D O A is still not sufficiently clear on gender equity issues and political direction for many social and politi­ cal activist. Though I share these concerns, my own view is that even with its flaws, the M M M /DOA has evolved and is still evolving into an event which w ill be one o f the most significant mass actions o f this de­ cade. For information about the M M M /DOA, call: 202-726-5111 To The Portland Observer far better question (and one that should be m ore im p o rta n t to answer (article by Chester A. Higgins, Sr., Portland Observer Aug. 23rd) would seem to be Where is He? According to him “Ben Chavis should be back in the pack, not out front.” He acknowledges in his article “ Mr. C h avis......alleged” “ impropri­ ety," so why does he display his opinion that is o f detrimental value to the significance ofaccom plishing the goal o f the March? Why does he take the advantage o f display ing his opin­ ion so prominently to put a damper on a worthy cause unless he him self is “knocking it" (to the contrary o f what he intones o f himself). If his “ b e e f’ is not something he can “ground" convictorily, at least for the purpose o f the March, he should just keep his mouth shut, obviously he doesn’t have anything solid, pos­ itive, (or worthy, it would appear) to contribute. Forgetting about Ben Chavis for a minute, if you, Chester A. Sr., were a person who has vision or is enlight­ ened, why didn’t you exert yourself and “ensconce yourself as one o f the prime leaders o f the March?" Dr. Ben Chavis is a B lack man, and that alone qualifies him to be in whatever place or position his efforts and his record on issues o f human rights puts, so finds him. What is your record? Are you a Black man? Are you participating? What is your contribution? Are you one o f those you speak o f who “re­ sent it or even hate it?" A self-Exam - ination may be in order here And what does it matter who leads it? that, is irrelevant. A ll B lack men who participate are o f equal importance. There is no individual status to be Editorial Articles Do Not Necessarily 1 gained here. It is a seeking o f collec­ tive status. Those who sit back in delusion and analyze or nit-pick.. are the ones who are not (yet) important. I have a distinct feeling that you w ill not be there...and if you are, it w ill likely be as a rebel-rouser caus­ ing dissention and/or fostering dis­ unity. I, for one, would rather you stay at home. You write and submit and article, but you certainly are not intelligent. An article in the same paper asks “ Why are B lack women furious with Black men?” this, is a prime example o f why we are frustrated and have had it up to here with those Black men who waste both time and energy trying to hide from their blackness. Those who don’t feel they don’t have, won't get Those who do know it and seek to ignore it, or to deliber­ ately distract are probably coward And those who choose to not ac- knowledge, to not act (or even to not care, for that matter) about that wh ich stares them in the face every day...at the very least, don’t sabotage. Those who will, are your brothers. And that which they pursue is but their God- given right, taken away. To those B lack men who still search, your tenacity and persever­ ance do not by any means go unno­ ticed. We know you are tired... it plac­ es on you twice the burden o f other men It is unfair, but a reality. We know you can hold fast and accomplish, we know how brilliant and flexible you are (educational degrees are not the sole suppliers o f brilliance). The occasion may not always lend itself enough, but this is one perfect time to say: We appreci­ ate you, we love you, we applaud you, and we are with you God-speed. Joan Gordon Portland, Oregon p e r s p e c tiv e s The Anatomy Of A Language II: Is Is! (Of Course It Is) P rof . M< K inlev B i kt efore we proceed with our review of that great speaker’s/writ- er’s helper (or thinker's), “ R oget's In te rn atio n al Thesaurus: Fourth or Fifth Edition”, let me acquaint you with the woman who, in her time, was undoubtedly the world’s greatest authority on “the verb to be." bi seller, “ In Lo ve With Norm a Loquendi.” Latin translation, “the everyday voice o f the native speak­ er.” So it was not about a girl at all, but turned out to detail his life-long love affair with Latin Translations and the vernacular. Well, ok, may­ be it wasn’t quite that funny, but it does cause one to think again about Miss Moore, the sixth grade teach­ er. She used the vernacular only occasionally and, then, only to gain the rapt at­ By Professor tention o f a Mckinley restive audi­ ence. She Burt was not into “ B lack E n ­ glish” per se; sort o f a poets li-1 cense’. Now, o f course, it is the case | that one can gain great facility with words, and that further, with good j pronunciation and articulation, the words may gush forth as though you were and erudite fountain o f I wisdom. So, even as you become more fam iliar and facile with "Roget’s Thesaurus, keep in mind how important it is to “not only mean what you say”, but to “say what you mean.” “ Semantics’ is the key (the study o f meanings). Since for lack I o f space, I w ill have to resume our analysis o f Roget’s Thesaurus next week, I ’ll just include aclassicallu-| sion to the semantics by the Rever­ end Charles Lutwidge Dodgson, I better known to most as Lew is | Carroll. This author o f “Alice In Won-1 dcrland was a fun-loving 19th-cen- tury college professor, mathemati-1 cian, logician and inventor o f mind- bend ing puzzles. |; He wrote another all-tim e | c h ild re n 's (? ) cla ssic “ Through T h e L o o k in g G la s s ” , a lso a m ind-bender with subtle, but | M iss O p h e lia Moore, one o f two sixth-grade teachers at the John Marshall Gram m ar S c h o o l- and an absolute stick­ ler for the‘K in g ’s En­ glish’ -- would never the less have her fun days. After first peering up and down the hall to make sure that Mr. G .D . Brantley the very proper and rotund princi­ pal was not on his almost perpetual rounds, Miss Moore would “get down” and I do mean “down.” Propping her usually prim and proper self against her desk in a “ghetto slant” she would take us through another determined exer­ cise in the verb-to-be’ and all the possible semantic confusion is could cause: “A thing either is or it ain’t! And even if it ain’t, maybe it wuzor will be - or could’ be, after all it is in our minds, isn’t it?” A n d, after some b rie f e x ­ posure to some ‘O ld e E n g lis h ' versions o f the m atter, M iss Moore w ould return us to some more co n ven tio nal and current concepts. (A c tu a lly , a cco rd in g to many lin g u ists such O ld E n ­ g lish e xpression s as “ I be hun­ g ry ” or “ I be g o in g ” are correct, but arch aic). But our fo rm id a­ ble teacher, h avin g now left the ghetto far behind, w ould now have us firm ly into the present su b jun ctive tense, for a situ a­ tion contrary to fact: “ I f I were a K in g ” . sophisticated exercises in se­ Sin ce we all are g o in g to be m antics. In C h ap ter6, A lic e de­ in an im proved situ atio n for m ands that “ Hum pty D um p ty” reading, sp eaking and w ritin g clean up his act and speak in a I (we had better be, co n sid e rin g lo g ica l manner so that she m ight all the past and o n g o in g la yo ffs understand him. But old Hum pty that are dem anding im m ediate Dum pty puts forth his devastat­ entrepreneurial and co m m un i­ ing rejoinder, “ T h in g s Are What I cation s k ills o f a high le ve l), I S a y 1 hey Are! -- No more, no maybe y o u ’ ll enjoy a little jo k e le ss’ . Want to try to analyze by fam ed p u n d it, W illia m that on a lo g ic m atrix are on | Safire. your com puter? A while back, he wrote a best Roget resumed next week. ^ a rtla n h QDbseruer (USPS 959-680) OREGON’S OLDEST AFRICAN AMERICAN PUBLICATION Established in 1970 Joyce Washington-Publisher The PORTLAND OBSERVER is located at 4747 NF. 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