BLACK HISTORY MONTH THE (ACRED WISDOM OF AFRICA It T a k e s A V illa g e B y S obonfu S ome To create a community that will work for people here, there is a need to look carefully at some o f the fun­ damentals o f a healthy community - spirit, children, elders, responsibil­ ity, gift-giving, accountability, an­ cestors, and ritual. People in the West can create a sense o f community in their cities just as people in West Africa have. They can do this by providing one another with continuous support. Each o f us needs something to hang on to. T hat’s why you have all these small communities here and there - a group o f women working on social issues, a group o f men, and all these small groups pursuing a common goal. They are attempts to re-create a piece o f that greater community that used to be and that has been destroyed. The only difference is that most o f these communities don’t focus on spirit. They tend to leave the spirit outside o f their activity, which is a mistake. It’s another way o f saying, “We are in control,” when in fact a true community must be based on spirit. Spirit should be the leader and the g u id e for ev e ry b o d y in a community .Community is the spirit, the guiding light o f the tribe, whereby people come together in order to fulfill a specific purpose, to help oth­ ers fulfill their purpose, and to take care o f one another. The goal o f the community is to make sure that each member o f the community is heard and is properly giving gifts he has brought to this world. W ithout this giving, the community dies. And without the community, the indi­ vidual is left without a place where he can contribute. The community is that grounding place where people can and share their gifts and receive from others. Intimacy, the natural attraction o f two human beings to each other, is something that the elders say is ac­ tually prompted by spirit, and spirit brings people together in order to give them the opportunity to grow together. That growth is directly con­ nected to the gifts that tw o people are capable o f providing to the vil­ lage. And this is why when a couple is in trouble, the whole village is in trouble. People in the village will involve themselves in the problem s o f a couple and dissect them and make sure that they fix them because their interests are at risk. So community support is not entirely altruistic. People are not necessarily coming to help the couple. They are coming to help themselves. If a couple is in trouble, those around them may not get what they need.The absence o f true community leaves a couple to­ tally responsible for themselves and anything else around them. It nar­ rows down their ways o f getting needs met, so that their relationship becomes their community. And if it is not able to fulfill this role, then the individuals begin to feel like a fail­ ure. It affects the psyche so dramati­ cally that they feel that there’s no place for them. What they thought was their support group, their part­ nership, is unable to satisfy their needs. There are things that men do in order to nourish what they call their female self and things that women have to do in order to nourish their male self. In the village, once a year, men who have gone through initia­ tion together meet at the same spot where they were initiated and have a ritual that looks something like moth­ ering. Their behavior is a kind of strict male-to-male emotional ex­ change. T here’s something about it that breaks down the narcisstic feel­ ing that comes with managing re­ sponsibilities. Even though it’s not a funeral (where men, women, and children can cry together), the men cry as much as they want. T here’s a need to reawaken the part o f the self that is in touch with emotion, and this ritual allows them to do so without waiting until somebody dies.There is a caretaking, not prescribed, but a random caretaking, that goes on. Someone, because o f inner pressure o f some sort, will break down, and someone else will take care o f him. And while taking care o f him, the caretaker too is going to break down, and someone is going to come and join them. So it becomes a continu­ ous support and nurturing ritual. It makes it easier for some reason, when the men come back, for them to stop feeling that they have to invoke some kind o f control within the ritual space o f intimacy. In other words, when the sense o f responsibility and o f being a man in the community stops overwhelming someone who has participated in this ritual, the circle o f intimacy they create with their partner becomes closer to what spirit wants.The belief is that the male tends to put on his warrior mode even in the ash circle o f inti­ macy. When that w arriorselfhas not been tamed by some kind o f moth­ erly energy, it is almost impossible for a man to engage in intimate rela­ tions with his partner. In the village, in order for the feminine and the masculine energies to live harmoniously, women and men must commit themselves to work at balancing their sexual energies. When either energy dominates, it becom es overpow ering and can threaten the stability o f the village. For this reason women not only gather up on a yearly basis with their initiation sisters, but they also get together as often as they can and go to a cave or go to the bush. There we do a set o f rituals in order to build our masculine energy by acting out our rage and anger and by taking on m en’s roles. W hen we go home there is a small welcoming ritual. We are all received into our homes in such a way that we don’t start to build upon our re­ newed masculine energy and be­ come completely masculine, nor do we go back to being completely in the feminine energy. We accept the tradition that women must work with women in order to build a feminine identity and that men must work with men in order to build a masculine identity. This way, when a man and a woman come together, they are better able to relate to each other. You may notice in many villages in Africa that during the days women are all together, men are all together also. This is not a sexist practice. It’s just that for som e reason there’s a feeling that a clear sense o f other­ ness is essential to a harmonious coming together with your mate. Today w eare called upon to wage w ar with the opposite gender. Wc need to embrace the new millennium with a brand-new eye, a new heart, one that allows for mutual respect. W omen and men live their own mys­ teries, and neither gender will ever fully grasp the other. The model o f the village is there to encourage sex­ ism, nor to make men and women the same, but to create an environment in which both genders appreciate and honor the other. Ritual is what I call the "sacred geometry" that’s needed to pool our energies and create a healing effect. We must move that energy from our center of being. IGINS “Yo” “Yo,” the word used on rap tunes and as a slang greeting is actually a sacred African mantra. The Bambara o f Mali believe the Universe begins and ends in the sound ofYo. Yo is the first sound, but it is also the silence at the core o f creation. And emanations from this void, through the root sound Y o, created the structure o f the heav­ ens, o f the earth, and o f all living and nonliving things. They proceed with the belief that everything, including hum an consciousness, em anates from the root sound Yo. Negro The word Negro poetically refers to the tribes people o f the Niger River, meaning people o f the "water flowing into sand.” It specifically refers to the Niger River, whose strange U-shaped course must have convinced early travelers that the river simply termi­ nated in the desert sands. Black The original definition o f ‘black’ bears little resemblance to the mean­ ing o f the word today. In African mythology, black has no intrinsi­ cally negative connotation. The phrase “black people” means People o f the mountains o f the west; people o f the setting sun; people o f the dream time; people o f the seeded earth; people o f the fertile womb; people on an underground journey toward God- realization; people o f immeasurable radiance; people o f infinite com pas­ sion. The Cross The Cross was know n as a sa­ cred symbol in A frica w ell before the advent o f C hristianity. Known as yow a, this cross, w hich pre­ dates the intrusion o f C hristianity into central A frica, is the center- piece o f oath taking and some ritual intiations. The Bam bara o f W est A frica holds that the center o f the cross is sym bolically the kuru (God-point); here the Bam bara say, life em erges from divinity through birth and merges back into divinity through death, and through this cyclical transformation, we achieve immortality. Original Sin A frican m ythology dictates hu­ manity was bom not in Original Sin but in O riginal B lessing. The Mbuti o f the Congo region do not regard the separation o f hum anity from God as a fall from grace. The Mbuti honor a divinity that is ev­ erywhere felt, a sacred presence experienced not ju st the trees and stream, or the sky and soil, but from the totality, down to the last gram o f sand Virgin And Child The image ofthe Virgin and Child was an image borrowed from a much earlier Egyptian image o f Itis hold­ ing Horus. The divine Goddess Mother, an image replicated in an Egyptian statue o f the pharoah Amun Ra sits on the stone throne o f the Great Goddess Isis, as though a child on the lap o f its mother.