Portland observer. (Portland, Or.) 1970-current, August 19, 1998, Page 4, Image 4

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    AUGUST 19, 1998
Page A4
(Elje Jìortlauò ©hseruer
Editorial Articles Do Not Necessarily
Reflect Or Represent The Views Of
^ o r tl a n h ffibseruer
r e s
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TTuxn “A
Its all about the art o f reading - you
can’t curl up in the NET with a good
book. It won’t allow you to reach up
on your shelf and effortlessly turn to
that awesome paragraph or chapter
which is hard-wired in your mind for
life.
Occasionally, the page is a work o f
art where some inspired ink slinger
has made ornaments out o f the letters
o f the alphabet with his use of swirling
serifs. And sometimes an equally strik­
ing illustration will adjoin the script.
You can close your eyes and re-read
the message on the bus, on the plane,
or between servings at that good res­
taurant; you will never lose a fact.
I received some interesting com­
ments on last week’s introduction to
this series, “McKinley, I knew you
would find a way to get us’ in there
some way.” You certainly got that
right! I’ll be on my job as long as we
have rascally main-line’ historians
who somehow always manage to leave
out the warm, human element ot A fri -
can interaction with other races o f
mankind.
The reader had reference to my
account o f the ‘Havana Cigar-Mak-
<Thr ^ o r t l a n b (tflb B eru er
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ers’ in Key West, Florida who wrote
to Alexander Dumas, the noted black
French author (“The Three Muske­
teers, The Count o f Monte Cristo,
Etc.” ). These workers (1870) sought
permission to name their prize prod­
uct after a character in his novel. It
seems that they employed a narrator
to read to them
during their boring
task and Dumas-
was their favorite
author. R equest
granted.
1 have written an
o rg a n iz a tio n in
Key West to learn
if the Cuban expatriates still follow
this practice. Thistechniqueofa ‘read­
ing’ is followed in our neighborhood
book clubs today and on a regular
basis at popular bookstores. But I’ll
warrant you that even the most knowl­
edgeable military buff doesn’t know
that his didactic practice began al­
most 1500 years ago on a craggy
Ita lia n
hill
c alled
“ M onte
Cassino”( scene o f a bitter World War
II siege).
Civil Rights Journal
Environmental J ustice And Convent
B y B ernice P owell J ackson
Convent, Louisiana is a little town
o f 2700 or so people located be­
tween New Orleans and Baton Rouge.
Sitting right alongside the M issis­
sippi River, Convent is in an area
which the state calls the Chemical
Corridor because o f the dozens of
chemical plants located there. Those
o f us who are concerned about envi­
ronmental justice have another name
for that area however. We call it
Cancer Alley because of the incred­
ibly high incidence of all types of
cancer found in the residents. And,
oh, by the way, the majority o f the
residents o f Convent are African
American and most of them are poor.
For hundreds o f years the area
between Baton Rouge and New O r­
T hank Y ou F or R eading T he P ortland O bserver
Tragedy and Hope in Africa
afterm ath of the tragedies an ocean
away actually reaffirm som ething
enormously positive: they reaffirm
O nce again, the w orld is con­
the essential decency o f hum an­
fronted by the scourge o f evil, by
kind, and its determ ination to per­
the aw ful w illingness o f some hu­
sist despite crushing setbacks.
man beings to inflict pain and su f­
So, as in Oklahom a C ity, we see
fering upon the innocent in order
not only the organized governm en­
to, by their perverse reasoning,
tal response. we also see ordinary
make a political statem ent.
citizens rushing to the sites o f the
Once again, we endure the agony
tragedies to, if necessary, help in-
o f the afterm ath.
and, equally im portant, to bear
We see, w ith a shock, the physi­
w itness to-the search for survi­
cal dam age that has been done to
vors.
human bodies. Because the shock
They com e because they know
w aves o f the horrendous crim e
that
the hope o f finding survivors
reach every place human decency
is
in
itse lf a repudiation o f the
exists, w e feel the psychological
barbarism
o f the killers. They un­
traum a o f those who were at ground
derstand
that
in bearing w itness
zero and survived, as if the broken
against
atrocity,
we declare our­
w indow glass and shards o f metal,
selves
for
decency
in the conduct
w ood and concrete w ere lacerat­
o
f
human
affairs.
In
N airobi and
ing our ow n souls.
Dar
Es
Salaam
as
in
O klahom a
The bom bings o f the American
C
ity,
that
universal
reaction
rep­
em bassies in N airobi, Kenya and
resents
the
hope
o
f
the
w
orld.
Dar Es Salaam , T anzania are trag ­
In that way, the tragedies in
edies in w hich the human costs-o f
Nairobi
and Dar Es Salaam also
lives cut short, o f prom ise not to
offer
the
Am erican people a more
be fulfilled, o f suffering loosed
positive way o f looking at Black
around the globe yet again-for-
Africa, a region o fthe world whose
ever dim inish into insignificance
reality, still, is so often skew ed by
the tw isted souls responsible for
some observers’ untrustw orthy at­
it. they have forfeited their con­
titudes.
nection w ith hum anity. They are
A frican A m e ric a n s’ feelings
as w orthless as dust.
about the rela tio n sh ip to Black
W e in A m erica know, now to
A frica has long been subjected
our sorrow, that individuals o f such
to the sam e kind o f racist d isto r­
profound malevolence lurk not ju st
tion as our p ercep tio n o f our re ­
in A sia, A frica, Europe or Latin
latio n sh ip to A m erica itself. The
A m erica. They are not ju st o f
reality is that B lack A m e ric a ’s
“ th o s e o th e r p e o p le .”
The
true feelings have alw ays been
crum pled wreckage in Nairobi and
m ore com plex, m ore nuance than
D ar Es Salaam should rem ind us-
th e ra c ist fa n ta sie s have su g ­
in case w e’ ve forgotten-that a simi-
gested.
lar horrific act happened in the
M ora M c C le a n , p re sid e n t o f
American heartland, destroying the
th
e
A fric a A m e ric a In stitu te ,
lives o f A m erican men, women,
sk
e
tc
h e d one fa c e t o f th a t r e la ­
and children, as these have d e­
tio n s h ip w hen she w ro te in a
stroyed the lives o f A fricans and
r e c e n t is s u e o f th e U rb a n
Americans.
L e a g u e ’s m a g a z in e , O p p o rtu ­
But we m ust not fail to recog­
n ity J o u rn a l, th at an atta c h m e n t
nize that, in its awful w ay, the
H ugh B. P rice , N ational
U rban L eague P resident
by
f
Alberto Manguel in his “History of
Reading” (Viking 1996) tells us that
Saint Benedict o f Nursia founded a
monastery on this cragg hill halfway
between Rome and Naples. "Believ­
ing like sir Thomas Browne, that God
offered us the world under two guises,
as nature and as a book, Benedict
__ decreed that reach­
ing would be an es­
sential part o f the
monastery’s daily
I I’ k o i essor
\ 1 ( K IM I V
life.”
We rem em ber
Bl R I
that the Cuban ci­
g ar-m akers
in
F lorida had a
‘reader’ to reveal the beauty or inspi­
ration o f literary gems which could
relieve a boring task. Saint Benedict
anticipated them with his “Article 38”;
that there should be an appointed
reader during meal times and that
there should be the greatest silence at
the table. “Whatever is needed in the
way o f food, the brethren should pass
to each other in turn, so that no one
need ask for anything.”
You may not wish to “ask for any-
thing” while being enthralled with
this beautiful and oh-so-informative
book. One o f the joys o f reading
Alberto Manguel’s text is that this
author himself often invokes that
“whole page” image for the reader;
imprinting a message that can easily
be recalled anytime; anyplace. That is
communication.
As I said earlier, “you cannot curl
up in the NET with a good book”, and
peo p le are fast learn in g that
cyberspace is for the storage and re­
trieval o f data. Book publishing and
distribution is accelerating weekly -
new catalogs in your mail each day.
And have you seen “Reader’s Digest”
big new entry into the fray; and I do
mean big’. You won’t stick these
new issues in your pocket or purse.
Yes, there has been a major para­
digm shift-back to the printed page
for true knowledge. The WEB pro­
vides the data; titles, authors, pub­
lishers, booksellers and prices. You
know, I remember a page from child­
hood, Herman M elville’s descrip­
tion o f becalmed sailors in “Moby
Dick, like a painted ship on a painted
sea.”
Cont’d next week.
to o n e ’s a n c e s tr a l h o m e la n d
do es not a u to m a tic a lly d im in ­
ish th e a tta c h m e n t to o n e ’s own
n a tiv e lan d . In fa c t, the e x p e r i­
ence o f A m erican e th n ic groups
as a w h o le in d ic a te s th a t it o f ­
ten le a d s to a g re a te r c iv ic in ­
v o lv em en t.
The joyous embrace of that com ­
plexity can be seen in the lives o f
Julian Bartley, the A m erican C on­
sul G eneral in N airobi, and his
son, Jay, both o f whom perished in
th e e m b a ssy b o m b in g .
M r.
Bartley, 55, was a 24-year veteran
o f the Foreign Service having pre­
viously served in the Dom inican
Republic, C olom bia, Spain, Israel
and Korea, his son, 20, a sopho­
more at United States International
U niversity, in N airobi, was w ork­
ing at the em bassy for the summer.
A ccording to the N ew York
Times A ugust 9 account o f the m e­
morial service in N airobi for the
American victims, “ By all accounts
the father and son w ere an im­
m ensely popular duo w hose head­
long em brace o f Kenya life had
been lovingly retu rn ed by the
people they met and befriended.”
The larger point is that the trag­
edy also underscored that it was
not ju st A m ericans o f A frican de­
scent who saw the beauty in Black
Africa.
A friend told the Tim es that
M olly H uckaby H ardy, 51, an­
o th e r career Foreign S ervice em ­
ployee w ho w as w hite and who
also died in the N airobi bom b­
ing, “ju s t loved being th ere, I
think. She found East A frica a
beau tifu l p la c e .”
It is this-the stories o f the ca­
pacity o f hum an beings to see and
em brace the beauty o f their sur­
roundings, be they in O klahom a
or Black A frica-w hich transform s
the horror o f this tragedy into a
declaration o f hope.
leans was an agricultural and fishing
area. Before the Civil War it was an
area full o f plantations and in the
century or so after the war it re­
mained a rural area where people
fished in the river for oysters and fish
and grew crops which fed their own
families. But about forty years ago
all o f that changed as the state ot
Louisiana decided to give tax abate­
ments to huge chemical corporations
to locate their plants there, along the
-
river where transportation was easy
and cheap. The trade-off for this new
development, or so the residents were
led to believe, was good jobs.
After nearly two generations o f
this development most o f the people
who live along Cancer Alley remain
poor and few o f them work in the
highly-technical jobs which the plants
offer. A drive through the parking
lots around the plants shows license
plates from other states and other
. • and i only
_1__ a X* tew
_ families have
counties
really benefitted from the plants.
Now the state o f Louisiana wants
to locate a new plant in Convent.
They want to locate one o f the most
toxic o f all chemical plants in little
Convent, promising jobs and eco­
nomic development. They want to
allow Shintech, a Japanese-owned
plant to build the w orld’s largest
polyvinyl
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