B acìi AZ U r — J une r / • 1 X fjil C 1 ! J 1 • n support of the national day of commitment to children on June 1 - Stand For Children - Children First for Oregon Is releasing a new report called “County Data For Community Action: 1996 Status of Oregon’s Children.” The report provides 36 fact sheets with information o f how counties are doing on 14 indicators o f child well­ being and reports on progress toward meeting the 1995 statewide bench­ marks. Information is included on how to use the county data to improve the qual ity ofhow to use the findings in the report for community action. “The report’s findings highlight the need for all Oregonians to get involved in turning things around for our children, if we are to reach the Oregon Benchmarks forChildren and Fam ilies,” said Gary Dombroff, E x ­ ecutive Director. “ We hope all Ore- New Report On Children To Be Issued gonians w ill jo in the Stand For C h il­ dren effort by pledging to change at least one thing in his or her life in order to put children first -- anything from reading daily to your own child to volunteering in your local school.” The Children First report com­ pares county data rates in 1990 to 1994/95 and assesses whether there Civil Rights Journal: by ' B ernice P owell J ackson hose who find th em ­ selves incarcerated on Mother's Day and Fa­ ther’s Day often find themselves forgotten by the outside world. So, as we approach Father’s Day, it would be well to remember that there are men in our prisons who are striving to change their lives and their relationships with others, in­ cluding their families. Here are two stories o f healing and hope Bad Dads That’ s the name o f a Fox T elevi­ sion documentary which w ill air on Father’s Day, which focuses on an unusual parenting program called H .O .P .E . for Life . Conducted at Lew isburg Federal penitentiary in Pennsylvania, this program places incarcerated fathers, who admit to was a change for better or worse, or no change for each o f the 36 coun­ ties. It found several clear trends that were true for the majority ofcounties across Oregon. The percent o f women receiving adequate prenatal care has increased in 30 counties (however, no counties have achieved the 1995 benchmark of 95 percent). ITie Mortality rate among infants has decreased in 21 counties and more childcare spaces have been made available in 27 counties. Crim es against individuals has increased in 26 counties and the ju ­ veniles arrest rate has increased in 27 counties. Teen suicide has increased in 24 counties. “ The First step to improving the quality o f life for Oregon’s children is to become better informed about the overall condition o f the children in out county and to identify the issues that need out attention,” said report author, Swati Adarkar. “ We are hoping that the county profiles will provide communities with a snap shot ofyour children and families are doing on some important indices o f community health and well-being and that the suggested action steps w ill hop more people to get involved in reaching the ch i Idhood benchmarks.” An Inside View Of Father’s Day hav ing been “ bad dads” together with at-risk teens who have been neglect­ ed, abandoned or abused by their parents. O ver the course o f four weeks, the men struggle to become better fathers and the teens struggle with the connection between their actions and their past. The dads are faced with the unde­ niable effects o f their actions and apathy on their children and their families and then are provided with concrete ways to improve their rela­ tionships with their children, regard­ less o f age or c ircumstance. The teens are helped to real ize the consequenc­ es o f their behavior. Through participating in this pro­ gram, these incarcerated dads not only can help themselves and their children, but they can help the ch il­ dren o f others to stay out o f prison. This is a very different Father’s Day present to all involved. God's Inside-Out Kitchen Most Americans have heard o f Sin g Sing. Most, however, have not heard o f a program dubbed “G od ’s Inside-Out Kitchen,” which was be­ gun by Sing Sing inmates this year. Fifteen Sing Sin g prisoners, who are students in the master’s degree program o f the New Y o rk Theolog­ ical Sem ¡nary, organized a food drive for the homeless for Easter. They collected 500 cans o f food, even though inmates earn at most $ 1.55 a day and a can o f tuna costs 65 cents in the prison commissary. “ We are portrayed in a certain way, not as caring, giving people,” said Leonard Lott, a student in the program. But students in this pro­ gram devote 15 hours o f volunteer work with other prisoners as chap­ lain’s assistants, A ID S prevention teachers and Alternatives to Violence program leaders. For this project, the prisoners linked up with the Rye Presbyterian Church, whose members visit with the prisoners twice a month. The church youth group held a fund-raiser, earning more than $600 and church school members spon­ sored a food drive during Lent and the food and money were all given to the Interfaith Soup Kitchen for Eas­ ter dinner and for their food pantry’s future use. This Father’s Day remember the dads in prisons across this country who are working to help others and working to help themselves. (Bad Dads w ill air at 7:00PM (6:00PM Central) Fox Television) The Ballot As A Weapon In The Black Freedom Struggle rom the perspective of the new White power in the South, the most im portant element of the system of apartheid instituted in the Post Reconstruction period was the disenfranchisement of African voters. The betrayal o f 1877 effectively removed the protective cover o f fed­ eral troops which had ensured that B la c k s could vote in the south. Though the ballot was not immedi­ ately taken out o f the hands o f Blacks after 1877, the populist revolt, which saw Whites and B lack coalesce at the ballot box to challenge for power, persuaded the power elite that vast majority o f Blacks must be perma­ nently disenfranchised. A series o f legislative measure was adopted throughout the South to make it virtually impossible for most Blacks to qualify to vote: the Grandfather Clause, which provided that only those B lacks who grandfathers had voted would be eligible to vote; the Poll Tax, a monetary fee which had to be paid before you could register, a decided dis-incentive for a population o f peo­ ple who were largely impoverished; Literacy Tests which were used to check the prospective voter’s under­ standing o f various clauses and provi­ sions o f the U.S. Constitution, a diffi­ cult task for former slaves who were mostly illiterate; Ifall else failed, there was lynching, terror and intimidation, a tactic which was very effective in the absence o f federal troops to protect Black voters. B y 1895 when Booker T. Wash­ ington made his famous Atlanta E x ­ position Speech, the glory days o f B lack Reconstruction were over. The W hite-Black coalition which had threatened the power el ite in the South was shattered, and the ballot had been removed from the hands o f B lack folks as a weapon o f B lack advancement. D efying Booker T . W ashington'sadvicethat B lacks and Whites should remain “as separate as the fingers on the hand: on social and political issues/concems, young turks like W E B. Dubois would insist on mounting legal challenges to the sys­ tem o f apartheid, including the dis­ enfranchisement o f B lack voters. I, would be the N A A C P which would hammer away on this issue in lawsuit after lawsuit until all o f the Post Reconstruction era barriers erected to prevent Blacks from voting would eventually be overturned by the fed­ eral courts. These victories proved to be moot, however, in the absence of mechanisms to protect B lack voters from the terror tactics employed by Whites to discourage B lacks from registering to vote. While Blacks in the South were disenfranchised. B lacks in the North retained the right to vote. However, the effectiveness o f Black ballot pow­ er was severely limited for decades because o f a fierce allegiance to the Republ ican Party. For decades north­ ern Black Voters were locked into the Republican Party, the party o f the corporations and the rich and the super-rich, paying a debt o f gratitude to Abraham Lincoln for “ freeing the slaves.” In the process, Blacks be­ came a non-factor in the inter-party rivalry between the Democrats and the Republicans. A ll o f this would change with the Great Depression. Blacks began a gradual and decisive shift to the Dem­ ocratic Party, pragmatically respond­ ing to the New Deal initiatives of Franklin Delano Roosevelt. The Great Migration to the North had positioned the B lack vote to be piv­ otal in the competition for presiden­ tial power between the two parties. With Roosevelt enacting an Execu­ tive Order banning discrimination in federal employment and advancing social programs which positively impacted the livesofm illionsofBlack poor and working people, Blacks cast their lot with the Democrats. B lacks became a part o f a New Deal C o a litio n w h ich w ould a llo w Roosevelt to occupy the White House for an unprecedented four terms. p e r s p e c tiv e s Summer Reading List, Conclusion ushing th a t word “electic” to the limit, I take this opportunity to suggest the following titles for your enjoyment as well as an understanding of the swiftly changing and dangerous world around us. “The W ar Against Children: How the Drugs, Program s, and Theories o f the Psychiatric Estab- lishm ent A re Threaten ing America’s Ch i Idren with a Medical Cure’ for Violence.” by Peter R. Breggin, M.D. St. Martin’s Press, 1994 Some readers are familiar with his best-selling books which oppose the “establishment drug dealers” : “Talk- ing Back to Prozac”, “To xic Psychi­ atry”. And some remember my 1994 article on the U.S. Government-spon­ sored conference called “Genetic Factors in Crime”, where I detailed the resurgence o f last-century’s pseu­ do-scientists and their racist theo- ries--the very same used by Hitler’s Nazis to support their use o f drugs and gas ovens as a solution for “ infe­ rior races” . It is fortunate that we have people like Dr. Breggin to warn o f the “dan­ gerous assault on inner-city school children with such bio-medical social controls as “ritalin” . A s the doctor predicted, the wide spread use o f the mind- numbing ritalin has found quick ac­ ceptance in the white communities. The nation (and the profit centers o f the world’s major pharmaceutical companies who now work with and fund many local educational estab­ lishments). A ll ofthis, notwithstand­ ing the fact that this racial, genetic and I.Q. nonsense was so adequately refuted in Jay Stephen Gould’s little book,” The Mismeasure o f Man,” W.W. Norton, 1981. Get it! “The Invention o f Africa: Gnosis, Philosophy, and the Order o f Know l­ edge.” V .Y . Mudimbe, Indiana Uni­ versity Press, 1988.1 heartily recom­ mend this book which intelligently and honestly addresses fundamental questions that concern us all. “What is the meaning o f Africa? “ What is and what is not African philosophy? “Is philosophy part o f Africanism ’? These are the kinds of fundamental questions this book addresses. We know only what Europeans have taught us. T avis S miley addy Vasquez, the first Latino president of the Orange County board of Supervisors in California derided Gov. Michael Dukakis by saying, “He may speak Spanish, but he doesn't speak our language.” That’s exactly how 1 feel about so -c a lle d b la c k co n se rv a tiv e s. They're o f my color, but not my kind. Isn't the phrase “black conser­ vative” an oxymoron anyway? I ’ve often wondered what it is these black Am ericans are conserving. The “ Right” (or half-right as I prefer to call them, since they only tell h alf the truth) isn’t just Newt G ingrich and Pat Robertson. Par, o f the front line o f the attack on B lack Am erica included Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas, talk show host Ken Hamblin, professor Shelby Steele, economist Thomas Sowell and congressman Gary Franks o f Connecticut. Like the black sol­ diers in the film “G lo ry,” these black conservatives have been pushed to the front o f an armed charge to retake the hills upon which Am erica was built. The only problem is that it is not an Am erica that was available to or open to black people. In 1995 a protest march orga- I nized by black leaders took place in front o f the home o f Clarence Tho ­ mas to express the black communi­ ty’s disapproval over his attacks on practically everything that is black. Clarence Thomas is black Am er­ ica’s worse nightmare; neither he nor other black conservatives speak for B lack America. They have been appointed by the Right establishment, mostly because oftheir pigmentation rather than their argumentation. The R ig h t’s very promotion o f black conservatives is an enormous act o f duplicity and deception. Too much Right-w ing politics are aimed squarely against minorities. Unfortunately, like slavery’ itself, many o f the advances o f present day conservatives could not have been accomplished without help from the ranks o f those being victim ized. Just as Africans aided slave trad­ ers in search and capture o f other Africans, black conservatives have aided and abetted efforts to rollback many o f the hard-won social, eco­ nomic and political gains among the African American community over the past 40 years. B y endorsing the half-truths and distortions o f conservative whites for ending affirmative action or cut­ ting welfare, black conservatives have allowed themselves to be used to carry out the dirty work o f close- minded people who do not have the interests o f African Americans and poor people at heart. Worse, they lend credibility to the views that are misguided and even racist. The campaign o f Alan Keyes and the publication o f books such as “ Please D on’t Feed the B lacks” (re­ titled “ Made in Am erica” ) by Ken Ham blin, w ill undoubtedly add to the hoopla surrounding black con servatives. One alm ost gets the im pres­ sion that A fric a n A m e rican s are b e c o m in g a b unch o f R ig h t ­ w ingers. Y e , every p o ll, study and survey in A m erica shows that the o ve rw h e lm in g m a jo rity o f b la ck A m e rican s b elieve that a f­ firm ative action is fair, rem edies a h isto ric in ju stice and allow s better Cv 'l^tie (3dhtor r Send your letters to the Editor to: Editor, PO Box 3137, Portland, OR 97208 for the ad m issio n , h irin g or p ro­ m oting o f a ll q u a lifie d ca n d i­ dates. M any adam antly oppose scho o l ch o ice , fearful that it w ill further ruin in n e r-city scho o ls; oppose three strikes le gislatio n , not because they are soft on crim e but because they believe in second chances; oppose the death penalty not because they don’t want to pun­ ish crim inals but because they are aware o fho w unfair the system can be; and support a more expansive view o f government. The debate between black liberals and black conservatives dates back at leas, as far as W E B. DuBois and Booker T. Washington, who had pro­ found disagreements on the direc tion o f social, political and economic policy for B lack Americans a, the beginning o f this century. However, Dubois and Washing­ ton always had the best interest o f black people at heart! think m anyof the Back conservatives today are interested prim arily in their self pro­ motion and financial gain. The only thing the Right wants for black people is a vote and their help in condemning those black stereo­ types o f which they don’, approve and which they blame for the moral decay o f America. V .Y . Mudimbe argues that the various discourses themselves estab­ lish the worlds o f thought in which people conceive their identity. West­ ern anthropologists and missionaries have introduced distortions not only for outsiders but also for Africans trying to under­ stand themselves. As the case with b lack thinkers who seek to “deslaverize” the African American m ind set, Mudimbe’s historical anthropology achieves the “decolonization” o f ac­ ademic knowledge o f Africa. V .Y . Mudimbe is professor o f Romance Languages and Compar­ ative Literature at Duke University. A ll o f the books cited here have excellent bibliographies and refer­ ences. I highly recommend the following (or either of) two books which so beautifully tell and illustrate the an­ cient Egyptian (African) myth o f Isis and Osiris (and Horns and Seth) -- the story o f a goddess’ search for and reassembling ofherhusband’s/broth- er’s dismembered body -- has haunt­ ed humanity’s imagination for mil- lennia(including Sigmund Freud and entire schools o f psychiatry). The tale o f love and betrayal, death and resurrection, has made its way from the Nile Valley to affect cultures all over the world. Isis’ journey to find and awake Osiris echoes Psyche’s quest for Eros and Orpheus’ search for Eurydice, and direct parallel exists between the worship o f Madonna in early C hris­ tianity and the cult o f Isis and her many devotees in Greece and Rome. Everyday manifestations o f these African concepts are seen all over the place. “Osiris” the African god o f vegetation and yearly resurrection appears today as “The Jolly Green Giant” a logical trademark foragood products company ( 1925, Minnesota Valley Canning Co., Symbols of America’, Biking Press). And the eye o f “Hours” is incorporated into the official seal o f the United States, see reverse o f your dollar bill (At the request o f Thomas Jefferson). See “ Isis and O siris,” Jonathan Cott, Doubleday, 1994 and also see “The Myth o f Isis and O siris” , Jules Cashford, Barefoot Books, 1993 To fullfi 11 the request o f many teacher, I have continued these citations on another page. 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