Category Archives: African American Legacy

The importance in salvaging the African American legacy

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by: Samori Swygert

It’s imperative that we pick up the baton and carry the torch that was carried by our ancestors.  Our posterity and future is completely dependent on what we do now.  Our elders are dying, and our legacy, heritage, and tradition is dying with them.

Many people ask, “why does a lot of your writing revolve around Afrocentricity?”.  First, the answer is because we need the most help right now.  Secondly, all other cultures embrace all their cultural heritage without pushback from their own.

Dr. Claud Anderson says, “you can walk down the street of Chinatown, Little Italy, and Little Havana”.  We can walk by synagogues and yeshivas.  You can see America’s traditional representation by schools like: George Washington University, American University, or go to Manhattan and shop along Avenue of the Americas, or visit the Jefferson Memorial, Columbus Circle, the Washington Monument, see Mount Rushmore, Kennedy Space Center, visit the Lincoln Theatre, open an account with Bank of America, and we still have sections that fly the confederate flag with pride.  I applaud these other cultures for the protection and preservation of their legacy, because you are supposed to!

What are we leaving as evidence for African Americans, and what will we do to foster a continuum of African American excellence?

Our communities and institutions are in disarray and disrepair. The important thing to remember is, this can be fixed!  Why would any other race help us, if we are not actively trying to improve and ameliorate our situation?

 President Barack Obama encouraged us to pull ourselves up by the bootstraps, and to stop moaning and groaning. This is why I assert an African American stance in my writings.  Let me be clear!  I’m not talking about developing racism, and hatred. This is about repairing, rehabilitation, and restoration.

My answer is simple and a reiteration of many that have gone before me. We must continue the focus on education with application, foster innovation, and have cultural loyalty.  Our kids must focus on nothing else but learning and application.

The following are my reasons for this stance.  We complained about the verdict of the Trayvon Martin case, and how officers are acquitted of offenses in cases like Rodney King, Oscar Grant, and countless other court cases.  These illustrate the necessity of more African Americans in law school.  This ensures that we have equal representation with our judges, defense and prosecuting attorneys.  We also saw the makeup of the Zimmerman jury pool.  This is why we need to avoid prison because we need more eligible blacks to preside on the jury of our peers.  We’ve also seen how a Pennsylvania judge got busted for taking financial deals to railroad black defendants to jail.

Our children need education to fill positions in banking, real estate, and finance.  This ensures that banking institutions are not conducting biased business and housing loan denials to qualified African Americans.  This reassures fair hiring is being practiced.  We’ve witnessed Bank of America being fined $ 2 million dollars for discriminatory hiring practices that resulted in the denial of over 1000 qualified African American job applicants.

We need our children to enter the political arena.  The more mayors, governors, senators, representatives, supreme court justices, and etc, potentially increases the representation of our concerns and presence in the American political system.  We need blacks that can filibuster the same way Ran Paul can for hours on end.  We need influential black lobbyist and watchdog groups that can keep the community abreast of political issues of grave concern.  This is best illustrated by laws like Stop and Frisk, cumbersome Voter ID laws, striking down sections of the Voting Rights act, the rolling back of Affirmative Action, and even the accessibility of funds for HBCUs.  Yes, we need more African American politicians!

Our children need to continue seeking degrees in education.  School after school is being closed all across America.  The emergence of charter schools are ubiquitous.  This implies that we need more African Americans as teachers, principals, chancellors, superintendents, and school board personnel.   Dr. Juwanza Kunjufu has pointed out in several studies that more effective learning occurs when the student and teacher share the same ethnicity.

There are teachers of various ethnicities that are excellent, because I’ve had some in my educational experience.  However, I feel that a more genuine interest is innately exhibited when a teacher can see themselves in the students they instruct.

 A good movie to watch and serve as an illustration is the Dead Poets Society.  You can see  the passion Robin Williams’ character exudes in the education of his students.  You can also see that there was no black child in that movie either!  Moreover, you can see how positively this type of educational setting was received, because it won as Best Film and Best Screenplay in the USA and the UK.  This illustrates how white America viewed culturally devoted educational instruction as positive.  African American teachers may be more understanding of particular behaviors, whereas teachers of other ethnicities may attribute a child behavior to mental disorders and recommend a psych evaluation for your child.

 We need more African Americans in the healthcare field.  How would you fill knowing that your doctor is examining you with biased eyes?  Of course not all physicians are bigots, but you would be a liar and fool to say there are none, when there are still open KKK rallies, Neo Nazis, and Skinheads.  There is a bit more comfort in knowing that ideally your physician, nurse, pharmacist, and other healthcare practitioner is providing the best care possible uninfluenced by skin color.  We also need more African Americans in the science and research fields, to produce more data and research on how new drugs and procedures work on our genotype and physiology.  I won’t go into how the Tuskegee experiment was conjured.

Lastly, we need to control our entertainment.  Once we gain control of entertainment, we will be navigating to a brighter future.  This guarantees proper and positive representation in the media.  Our commercials will have equal representation and advertising of our own businesses.  The business owners decide upon the number and type of actors in their commercials and movies.  We can control our image and depiction as movie characters, and control the content of our music. This creates positive imagery for our children to emulate and seek higher heights.

If America is so upset, tired, and concerned about the poor, uneducated, welfare, thug-like, baby momma blacks, then this is all the more reason to support salvaging a positive African American Legacy.  This is all the reason bigots shouldn’t sabotage our decision to improve ourselves unless they want to see us fail.  The more positively independent we become, the less we are the perceived burden.  I feel it is timely and appropriate that we do for self and salvage our legacy via these means.   What do you think?

You can also read this at: http://www.kulturekritic.com/2013/11/news/samori-swygert-importance-salvaging-african-american-legacy/

The irony behind Nelson Mandela’s hospitalization

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The Irony behind Nelson Mandela’s hospitalization

by: Dr. Samori Swygert

Nelson Mandela earned his international notoriety by boldly confronting and condemning the racist system of apartheid in South Africa.  He is revered by many as a beacon of courage, fortitude, and resilience. During the mid 1940’s to the early 1990’s, the National Party, a political party comprised of Afrikaners that maintained a racist and segregationist socio-political philosophy commanded the South African government.  The ideologies and philosophies were endowed to white supremacy that extended from prior Dutch colonial rule of the South African region.

Nelson Mandela was a persistent agitator that sought to dismantle this oppressive regime. He was eventually jailed as a political prisoner for his activities.  Nelson Mandela earned a two-year diploma in law which enabled him to utilize his training in his pursuit to disrupt the oppressive system of apartheid.  He also established the first black law firm in South Africa with an associate called Mandela and Tamblo.   He was arrested several times for conducting, and participating in what would be termed “sedition”.  In the system of apartheid, resources were reallocated and redistributed to enrich the privileged, and deprive the underprivileged. The racism permeated all institutions (financial, educational, political, labor, law and etc).   The heads of South African apartheid regimes conducted acts of removal, where approximately 60,000 black people were forcibly moved from Johannesburg to Soweto.  Black African communities were bulldozed and rebuilt to construct white communities. Laws and policies were preferentially skewed in favor of the National Party such as the Public Safety Act of 1953, where mass arrests were enforced upon nonviolent, civil disobedient protestors of apartheid.  Ultimately, Nelson Mandela was arrested in 1962 and started a 27 year prison term.  When released he became the first Black South African president in history.  Mandela’s story is extremely compelling and complex, but there is an ironic twist to this.

In recent years Mandela has been hospitalized, discharged and readmitted for numerous physiological ailments associated to general aging, and secondary ailments associated with the harsh environmental conditions of his prison facilities.  He’s battled prostate complications, pneumonia, and other pulmonary illnesses.  This week he has been readmitted to Pretoria Hospital in South Africa, and listed in a “serious but stable” condition.  What is significant and ironic about this prominent leader staying at Pretoria Hospital?

Historically speaking, the majority of South Africa was once inhabited and controlled by the famous Zulu Tribe.  During the 1800’s, a group of Dutch emigrants called the Voortrekkers from the Cape Colony traveled into the South African region controlled by the Zulus.  The Voortrekkers tried to arrange a geographical settlement between themselves and the Zulus.  The supposed agreement deteriorated and resulted in the Zulus killing approximately half of the Voortrekkers.  The remaining Voortrekkers that were focused on conquest engaged in a retaliatory strategy against the highly skilled Zulu warriors.  The emigrant Dutch resurfaced with superior weaponry, guns!  They literally circled their wagons and had a 2-3 man reloading system, and when the Zulus approached with spears and other subpar weapons, approximately 15,000 Zulus were slaughtered and only 3 Voortrekkers were injured. This was known as, The Battle of Blood River.  Subsequently, the descendents of the Voortrekker lineage have maintained power and control over South Africa ever since.  The National Party had genealogical and philosophical heritage directly linked to the Voortrekkers.  The leader of the Voortrekker assault on the Zulus at The Battle of Blood River was named, Andries Pretorius.  There is a whole region of South Africa named Pretoria after the Voortrekker general, and so is the hospital that Nelson Mandela is currently staying.  The same bloodline that usurped and commandeered the South African region from the Zulus started the system of apartheid.  This is the very same system Mandela fought against, and now at the tender age of 94 his health is in the hands of healthcare practitioners in the hospital named after the patriarchal leader of this oppressive regime.  If you would like more info on this topic, I encourage readers to buy the book or watch the documentary entitled: Guns, Germs, and Steel by Jared Diamond.  He clearly explains the timeline of events and historical perspectives.