è • *• •T? « .i . it..* . . * . tiiPRMi . ì . -< k \ • * • • > ‘ .***•*• <• ¿ >*.•/• ■ > •'*«. 3 «’ • - T ' • . . • - P age A2 -------- --------- f 1 (l'S P S 9 59-68«) E stab lish ed in 197« Charles Washington Publisher & Editor Mark Washington Distribution Manager Gary Ann Taylor Business Manager Sean Cruz Consultant & Editor Portland Observador Danny Bell Advertising Sales Manager Gary Washington Public Relations Paul Neufeldt Production <& Design Kovonne Black /< u s i néss A s sis la nt Contributing Writers: Prolessor McKinley Burt. Lee Perlman, Fred Hembry, Eugene Rashad 4747 NE Martin l.uther King, Jr. Blvd., Portland, Oregon 97211 503-288-0033 • Fax 503-288-0015 Email: Pdxobserv@aol.com Deadline f o r a ll su bm itted m aterials: Articles:Friday, 5:00 pm Ads: Monday, 12:00pm POSTMASTER: Send Address Changes To: Portland Observer, P.O. Box 3137, Portland, OK 97208. Second Class postage paid at Portland. Oregon. Subscriptions: $30.00 per year I he Portland Observer welcomes freelance submissions. Manu­ s c rip ts ami photographs should be clearly labeled and will be returned it accompanied by a sell addressed envelope. All created design display ads become the sole property of the newspaper and cannot be used in other publications or personal usage without the written consent ol the general manager, unless the client has purchased the composition of such ad © 1996 THE POR TLAND OBSERVER ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. REPRODUCTION IN WHOLE OR IN PARI WITH­ OUT PERMISSION IS PROHIBITED The Portland Observer-Oregon’s Oldest Multicultural Publica­ tion is a member of the National Newspaper Association-Founded in 18X5, and The National Advertising Representative Amalgamated Publishers. Inc. New York. NY. and The West Coast Black Publishers Association • Serving Portland and Vancouver. S ubscribe to w $ b rtia n i» (O h sm w r The Portland Observer can be sent directly to your home for only $30.00 per year Please till out. enclose check or money order, and mail to: S ubscriptions rtiu P ortland O bserver ; PO B ox 3137 P ortland , O regon 972«8 Name: Address: City. State: ___________ ______________________ Zip-Code: T hank Y ou F or R eading T he P ortland O bserver Civil Rights Journal One Step Forward And One Step Backward B ernk e P oweli . J ackson *ke many ° th e rs ’ 1 find myself looking at events in California as a bell­ w ether of what the rest of the nation can expect in the future. ’J I As our most populous state and perhaps the most diverse, it has the potential o f giving us some sense o f what our nation will be like in the 21st century, now less than three years away. Events at the end o f 1996 in California send mixed mes­ sages about progress in living into a multiracial, multicultural world. First, there was the decision by a federal court judge to stay the im ­ plementation o f California Propo­ sition 209, which would eliminate affirmative action in that state. The court said there was the strong pos­ sibility that the new law will be proven unconstitutional. Agreeing with the judge, the Clinton adm inis­ tration announcedjust before Christ­ mas that it will mount a legal chal­ lenge to that California ballot initia­ tive as well. That was indeed, a step forward. And while G overnor Pete Wilson and backers o f the end to affirmative action have cried foul, the reality is that the courts have always had the pow er to examine the constitutionality o f laws, wheth­ er state or federal. T hat’s a part of the American system o f democracy, whether they like it or not. But the second California inci­ dent was at least one step back­ wards. It is the Oakland School Board’s decision around ebonies. While I have not read the entire resolution, much o f what I have read in newspaper accounts is fright­ ening to me. As the child o f a poor single mother, as a graduate o f inner city public schools, as an African Amer­ ican myself, I know that there is another language spoken in the streets o f the ghetto. I have no prob­ lem with it being spoken there. 1 do have a problem when a school sys- Editorial Articles Do Not Necessarily Reflect Or Represent The Views OJ (Elie ‘P o rtlan d © bseroer r J (El}e Jjo rilattò (i)bserut'r by U λ — tern legitimizes that street language and infers that African American children can do no better. If that is the case, then let’s close down all inner city schools and use that mon­ ey for building more prisons be­ cause we are saying that these young people will never be able to get jobs or function in the real world which speaks and writes real english, not ebonies. Having gotten that off my chest let me say that I believe the Oakland School Board has succeeded in get­ ting the nation’s attention focussed on how our school systems are fall ing many young people in our inner cities. Too many teachers believe that students who speak street lan guage do so because they are stupid or are just too lazy to correct them and help them learn correct English Too many school administrators have set their sights too low for their students and are not requiring them to learn proper English. Too many school systems have not focussed on supporting those teachers and students who do want to teach and learn and have been forced to make budget cuts which adversely impact the classroom. Too many o f us outside o f educa­ tion have written off entire groups o f inner city young people who once wanted to learn and those who still go to school every day and study hard in spite o f a multitude of diffi culties. The Oakland School Board is right about one thing - we need to be more sensitive to our young peo­ ple and we need to re-commit our­ selves to educating every young person in this nation, no matter where they live, no matter what their in­ come, no matter what their race. But the ends do not justify the means and if we want African American young people to compete in today’s world o f information, they must be able to speak and write english prop­ erly. N A T IO N A L ack in the days when rock-and-roll (not to men­ tion the Democratic Par­ ty) contained a bit of class anal­ ysis, Johnny Rivers sang movingly of life among the dispossessed: “girl, it ’s hard to find nice things, on the poor side of tow n.” C O A L IT IO N If there is any tune all year when we should remember this, it’s Chi risi- mas lime. We all know the story (though if you have never heard Jesse Jackson deliver his own special ser­ mon on the birth of Jesus, your life is definitely incomplete.) An unemployed carpenter. An unmarried mother. On the road, away from home, turned away at the inn. Born without health insurance, sur­ rounded by animals in a stable, not a doctor in sight. Condemned by the authorities, targeted for capital pun­ ishment by Herod, Ihe reigning con­ servative. Jesus, the liberator, come to free the slave, redeem the prodi­ gal, save the lost sheep. In Mary’s words (Luke 1:52 & 53): “He has put down the mighty from their thrones, and exalted those of low degree. He has filled the hun­ gry with good things, and the rich he has sent empty away.” Of course, these days we would be treated to the spectacle of William Bennett and Dan Quayle lecturing Mary about the virtues of married p e The poor side of town life. The AMA would spin Jesus’s birth to try to demonstrate that we really don’t need "socialized medi­ cine” Foreveryone. And George Will and Thomas Sowell would no doubt explain to us that Jesus’s rise from a lowly stable to the "Prince of Peace” proves that all can pull themselves up by their bootstraps, if only they would try harder. There are still those who under­ stand the meaning of the Jesus story- -Bob Herbert is one. His column summarized a study released by the National Center for Children in Pov­ erty at the Columbia School of Pub­ lic Health. The study is entitled "One in four” because between 1979 and 1994 the rate of poverty for children under 6 went up from 18% to 25%--up to one in four of our most vulnerable. The study begins with this heart- wrenching paragraph: r s p e "In the United States, distinguished by its extraordinary wealth, there are 6 million poor individuals known to few others but their own families. They cannot vote, they cannot work, most do not even go to school. They are America's youngest poor-chil­ dren under age six." Herbert notes that the "demo­ graphics defy the convenient and execrable stereotypes." He summa­ rizes from the report: •Children in all ethnic and geo­ graphic groups are affected. • While Black and Latino/Hispan- ic children, especially in big cities, are disproportionately poor, the pov­ erty rate for young children grew twice as fast among Whites as among African-Americans during the peri­ od studies. •The overall child poverty rate in the U S. is much higher than in any c t / poverty rate for young White chil­ dren. • Geographically, the poverty rates for children under 6 are 36% in urban areas. 17% in the suburbs, and 27% in rural America. •Most poor children--62%--live in working families. Less than 1/3 live in families relying exclusively on public assistance. • Young children are the most like­ ly age group in America to be poor. Or as Reverend Jackson phrases it (in almost every public speech he’s given in recent years): "Most poor people are not on welfare; they work every day. Most poor people are not Black or Brown; they’re White, female, young, and 2/ 3 are children.” Unfortunately, the policy-makers who passed last year's “welfare re­ peal" law have decided to fix this problem by creating more such chil­ dren. According to an estimate by the Urban Institute, the new welfare law may increase the number of children in poverty by up to l.l million. Absent a serious jobs program, the sarcasm that S enator Ted Kennedy used to apply to President Reagan will also apply to welfare repeal: "Ronald Reagan must really love the poor; he's helped make so many more of them.” r e s We have fire, now let’s move on, II just noticed that I ap­ pended this advice to my first article of 1 9 9 5 : “An­ other priority is to remain up beat, whatever the predictions of the doomsayers. Some have been in the 'apocalypse Now’ mode since birth. Put more ac­ cent on the positive.” Follow ing right along in that mode, I’ll take this opportunity to extend my congratulations and deep­ est appreciation to those members of the community who made so many important and lasting contributions toward improving the quality o f life here in Northeast. I am joined by the many in this felicitation and we in­ clude the multitude o f volunteers and other unsung heroes who labor without stint - often without com ­ pensation. Our accolades are intended to cover a spectrum o f contributors: ranging from those who serve the youth, the elderly and the indigent to the two black business men I saw on television picking up the grocery tab for Albina families at the E & M Com m unity Market. W ell done, Harold Williams and Roy Jay; that was an exemplenary model we hope to see emulated by many others and across the spectrum o f commercial and social interaction. And let us express our gratitude to those teachers who labor so dili­ gently to prepare our young ones for such an uncertain and challenging world. We know that they have a daunting task and that frustration is the name o f the game (see my article this week on “Ebonics/Black En­ glish”. My personal acquaintance with over a score o f Portland teach­ ers informs me that most understand quite well that with few exceptions our criticisms and challenges o f the education system are directed at the adm inistration, occasionally the union and particular politicians. Speaking o f teachers, I am led full circle back to the ‘discovery o f fire’. I suppose I should have added an admonition or warning that old, good things are not to be abandoned per se, but, where possible, polished and adjusted to new purposes and new times. When thinking o f teachers who have contributed so very much to the quality o f education in Port­ land schools, Ms Claudia McDuffie came to mind. And very forcefully so when I recounted my transport o f Albina Youth to new and enriching experi­ ences in Westside “Electronics land” — as I once took our youth to see U . S. Forest Service installations and Af­ rican American role models. Earlier Ms McDuffie had directed “Opera­ tion BEEP” while teaching at Boise Elementary School and I accepted ______ By Professor Mckinley Burt her invitation to serve on the board o f this forward-looking project. Designed to broaden the experi­ ence and perspectives o f inner-city youth in respect to environmental con­ cerns, vans were used to transport the children to new landscapes and inter­ faces with nature that otherwise would never be provided them. It worked beautifully, thanks Claudia. And certainly, the concept o f building firm foundations (proven ones) came to the fore when I distrib­ uted one o f the usual handouts to my youth group for study and comment. These were photocopies o f an 4/10/ 91 article o f mine in the Portland Observer: “Isaac Newton: Black History Student.” The thrust o f the article was to reveal and document how much o f the w orld’s mathemati­ cal and technological advances were based on African concepts. While much o f my material came from “Isaac Newton: H istorian”, Belknapp Press (Harvard University Press) 1965, other critical documen­ tation came from my usual corre­ spondents at Cambridge University in England, and from the Vatican library. One o f the most telling rev­ elations by this great mathematician and one that speaks to the matter at hand is his statement to the effect that all o f his great concepts were accom plished because he “ stood upon the shoulders o f the great ones who came before him.” They don’t tell you that in school o f course or o f the libraries o f mate­ rials from his research o f African geometry, philosophers and religion — or o f his holding up publication of his magum opus, “The Theory of Universal Gravitation” until he got final measurements o f the Great Pyra­ mid from Smythe and Buratanni, the scientists working in Africa. I’ve learned how to really motivate black kids — with history. Next week more technology with my expanding youth group. CHILDWATCH Let’s celebrate our young people beating the odds M n arian W right E delman p by i m n 31 ■bile th e media would have us believe that our young people are all gangsters, drug users, and “pred­ ators,” we need to remember th a t fewer Black children are gettin g pregnant, and more are graduating high school and go­ ing to college than In recent years. I met a few extraordinary youths recently when the Children’s Defense Fund honored them for beating the odds at our annual national benefit. Myia Alston is one such young lady. She watched as drugs took hold o f her parents and left her family in such financial despair that its mem ­ bers were constantly evicted from their home and frequently went hun­ gry. Things got so bad that Myia m oved away to live with an uncle and his wife. But that didn’t work out either, because she felt even less stable and secure there, and there were days when she still went hun­ gry. But amid all the hardships, Myia managed to do well in school, be­ coming a member o f two honor soci­ eties . As problems mounted at home, she spent more time studying and helping those less fortunate than her­ self. Herdream is to become a broad­ cast journalist, and I have no doubt w e’ll be seeing her delivering the television news someday. Theodore M. W esby III is another young person who deserves recog­ nition for his commitment, achieve­ ment, and wisdom beyond his years. He has faced more than a lifetime o f struggles but has always managed to overcome them. His story is one hope and encouragement. He and his mother lived in a homeless shel­ ter, where every day was a struggle just to survive. Last year, they moved to Washington, D.C., where they found a new beginning. In June, Theodore will graduate from high school a year early, after spending two years in night school. In addi­ tion to his accelerated class sched­ ule, he has volunteered more than 200 hours o f community service and participated in numerous school ac­ tivities. After facing, challenging, and overcoming all o f the odds be­ fore him, Theodore says, “The best is ahead o f me, because I’ve con­ quered the worst.” Yohannes “Johnny” Demoz’s sto­ ry is one o f great sorrow but even a «art Vi _____ greater triumph. W hen Johnny was eight years old, a bomb blew up just a few feet from where he stood in his homeland o f Ethiopia. In the explo­ sion, he lost his sight, his best friend, and his childhood dreams o f becom­ ing a soccer player. He was forced to relearn many o f the basic skills he had already mastered. After leaving Ethiopia, he discovered many new struggles in America. He had to learn not only English, but Braille as well. He has mastered both languages, and has become an honor student. Seventeen-year-old Daysi Blanco has faced the kind o f serious medical problems that would leave most o f us feeling hopeless and alone. When she was four, and still living in her naive El Salvador, she dislocated her hip. But her family was too poor to see that she got proper medical treat­ ment until three years later, when they m oved to the United States. Still, after three surgeries, she con­ tinues to walk with a pronounced limp. When Daysi was 11, her doc­ tors told her she had cancer, which they treated with chemotherapy. But the treatment was too strong for her young body, and Daysi suffered se­ rious hearing loss. Now equipped _TYrtirni Varaci /lie aid. Daysi has also with a hearing taught herself to read lips. She found out recently that she must undergo another surgical procedure to ward off the threat o f more concer. Like the other young people I’ve mentioned, Daysi’s life has been an uphill battle from the beginning. She has missed out on many childhood adventures because o f her illnesses. Despite the constant hurdles Daysi has faced, she has risen above them with dignity and grace and has refused to feel sorry for herself, instead com­ mitting herself to service. She has assisted poor and elderly people, tu­ tored elementary school children, and counseled at the 4-H Club. She says she plans to spend her life as a doctor, helping and healing others. Each o f these young people re­ minds us o f how every child is made in the image and likeness o f God, and that it’s our job to ensure that they are able to live and flourish the way God intended. It’s also important that we don ’ t get so busy lamenting the youths who are doing the wrong thing that we forget to praise those who do the right thing every day. Every community should celebrate their young people who beat the odds. better 'T~0 TThe (SUditor Send your letters to the Editor to: Editor, PO Box 3137, Portland, OR 97208 I O M l