Bronzeville

I have written previously about the current state of the black dollar in America which currently circulates and lives the community in an estimated 6 hours. This number is a stark contrast from the estimated year in which it took for the black dollar to leave the community in the 1960’s. According to the NAACP   black owned businesses are vastly underrepresented, accounting for less than 7% of all small owned businesses, even though we account for 13% of the population.   Research suggests that communities’ generational economic empowerment is linked to entrepreneurial success. Therefore, if we are serious about improving our communities, improving our schools, providing jobs we must  return to the communities of yesterday year..

During the start of the 20th Century we saw many areas become hubs for African American culture and development.  Between 1910 and 1920, a tremendous number of African Americans  journeyed to many areas including the south side of Chicago . The Douglas community area received the moniker “Bronzeville”  because of the large African American presence in the area. The 7 mile area included over 300,000 people before its down turn beginning around 1950.

Bronzeville’s businesses and community institutions  included Provident Hospital, the Wabash YMCA, the George Cleveland Hall Library,  Parkway Community House, the Michigan Boulevard Garden Apartments, Binga Bank and the Overton Hygienic Company. The businesses were more than alternatives to racially restricted establishments downtown. They were pillars of the community which helped to instill pride and contribute to the upward mobility of African Americans.

Bronzeville’s 20th century resurgence, which rivaled the Harlem Renaissance, is responsible for tremendous cultural and social advances. Pulitzer Prize recipient Gwendolyn Brooks, civil rights activist Ida B. Wells, and legendary musician Louis Armstrong were profoundly responsible for the area’s development and subsequent cultural crusade, which included advances in civil rights, jazz, blues and gospel music as well.

One school of thought advises that  Bronzeville fell into decline after the end of racially restricted housing. Upper and middle class families moved away, and over-population and poverty overwhelmed the neighborhood. During a recent interview  Larenz Tate submits another school  of thought which involves the Mafia and the Illinois State Lotto.

The Harlem Renaissance is mentioned in this piece that detailed the rise and fall of a similar but, little known  black community. However; I would be re-missed if I did not inform you that there where countless thriving all black communities around the nation. Black Wall  Street  was a very successful all black community in Tulsa Oklahoma which thrived from 1900-1921.

The area encompassed over 600 businesses and 36 square blocks with a population of 15,000 African Americans.  There were  pawn shops , brothels, jewelry stores, 21 churches, 21 restaurants , two movie theaters and a medical school. It was a time when the entire state of Oklahoma had only two airports, yet six Blacks owned their own planes. A local physician Dr. Berry owed the bus system and his average income was $500 a day in 1910. I said previously that the community thrived until 1921 because it was burned to the ground by the KKK on 6/1/1921. In the aerial  attack which spanned 12 hours an estimated  1500-3000 people where killed. This was the first and only time in United States history that our military has ever dropped a bomb on U.S. soil.  

Overtown” is one of Dade County’s poorest communities. The type of community like many around the nation that is filled with housing projects, easy access to guns and alcohol  which  begets the high crime rate. During the  1920’s, 30’s and 40’s  Overtown was Black Miami’s showcase, centerpiece, and mecca: a self-sustaining community filled with an entertainment district, shops, groceries, law offices — even a hospital.

Overtown was home to many of Miami’s successful black families. William A. Chapman Sr., a prominent black physician, lived and worked there. His house at Northwest Third Avenue and 11th Street is now used by Miami-Dade County Public Schools as a research center. There’s Dana Albert Dorsey, Miami’s first black millionaire, who made his fortune buying land. By 1965 much of Overtown had been razed for highway construction and “urban renewal.” Interstate 95, a ten lane expressway which today is Miami’s primary north-south artery, along with the East-West Dolphin Expressway (State route 836) were both constructed directly through the heart of Overtown during the 1960s. Later Metrorail, Miami’s new billion dollar urban mass transit system, was routed directly through the community causing further dislocation.

I choose these three examples of self sustaining black communities to shine a light on the disintegration of the black community. The  destruction of the black community has  happened overtly, covertly and systematically . In the first paragraph  we see another example of how integration  covertly  weakened the black community. The body of the work provides light on the direct unwavering racism that still existed and still exits  in this country. Have you checked Twitter or better yet, listened to Donald Trump?  The ending  section of the work highlights the systematic form of racism which  is the deadliest form. Anytime  blacks are not represented in “the meeting” but, more importantly “the meeting before the meeting” we will always get the short end of the stick. We don’t have to have the worse schools, gentrified neighbors or leaders that don’t reflect our needs etc but, we first have to awaken to the possibility.

“Know whence you came. If you know whence you came, there is really no limit to where you can go”.- James Baldwin.

 

 

 

 

Patrice Lumumba

In a previous blog I wrote about Toiussant L’Overture and his contributions to not only Haiti but, the blue print  he provided  men of color.  Napoleon Bonaparte had this to say about L’Overture “The prospect of a Black Republic is equally disturbing to the Spanish, the English and the Americans. Jefferson has promised that on the instant the French Army has arrived [in Haiti] all measures will be taken to starve Toussaint and rid us of these gilded Negroes, and we will have nothing more to wish for”.  In this blog I will tell you why Malcolm X called called Patrice Lumumba “the greatest black man to ever walk the African continent”.

Patrice Lumumba shows up initially as a clerical worker but, while writing several pieces that went into publication he took an interest in politics. In 1958 showing his self as a great organizer and motivator of men he co-established the Congolese National Movement. The movement called for the unification of all of the tribes of the Democratic Republic of the  Congo. According to Lumumba the unification would allow the new nation free from colonial control to move toward a Pan African view.

On June 30, 1960, Patrice Lumumba became the Democratic Republic of the Congo’s first prime minister as the country took its independence from Belgium. Only days after acquiring independence the country was split as army leader Joseph Mobutu lead the opposing faction. Within weeks Mobutu received the backing of Belgian troops and a working agreement with Democratic President of the Congo Joseph Kasavubu. On January 17, 1961 Patrice Lumumba was captured on his way to Leopoldville and he was murdered thereafter.

I think the story of Patrice Lumumba is so revealing as it holds a mirror up to the face of the negro and white here in America. I think the story also offers  insight into the thinking of the oppressed negro worldwide.  Patrice Lumumba was not killed because he attempted to unify his people.  Patrice Lumumba was not killed because he was of African decent or because he spoke out against whites. Patrice Lumumba was killed because he would not be pacified as his people continued to be  exploited, victimized, and oppressed. Patrice Lumumba was killed because he had morals and the majority of his country men and the western world did not. Patrice Lumumba was killed because he wanted the promises of today…today…not tomorrow.

What happens when you finally overthrow the system and your broken inside… your gonna end up repeating the same things. In history its happened many times when theirs a revolution and new people take power but, the cycle continues to repeat itself. Why? People that took power were poisoned by the things that they grew up watching.

– Jermaine Cole

 

No Haiti, No Louisiana Purchase

“The prospect of a Black Republic is equally disturbing to the Spanish, the English and the Americans. Jefferson has promised that on the instant the French Army has arrived [in Haiti] all measures will be taken to starve Toussaint and rid us of these gilded Negroes, and we will have nothing more to wish for.”-  Napoleon Bonaparte

http://youtu.be/vXVMr7mLgjw

The Louisiana Purchase that I read in my grade school textbook does nothing to capture the overall climate or significance of the moment in history. The portrait painted of the consummate thinker and diplomatic Thomas Jefferson. Lewis and Clark exploring territories that made up The Louisiana Purchase  with the cinema of an episode featuring Bear Grylls.

It is true that Thomas Jefferson understood the value of New Orleans as he was willing to purchase it for 3 million dollars. Napoleon’s  offer to sale the  Louisiana Territory  for 15 million which today would be 215 million shows how desperate  Napoleon was. The biggest and most successful slave revolt in history denied Napoleon of his dream of a western empire built on international trade. This dream rested in Hispaniola’s (Haiti and the Dominican Republic’s) ability to farm sugar, coffee and tropical produce. The caveat being the port of New Orleans for the shipping and receiving of goods.

In 1789 while France was in the middle of the French Revolution Haitians where fighting for independence in Saint Dominique (Haiti). The “Rights of Man” act essentially gave free slaves and mulattoes rights similar to the separate but, equal laws enacted for blacks in 19th century America.  After much fall out the measure was retracted in 1791 which lead mass slave revolts creating who we know today as  Toussaint L’Ouverture. L’Ouverture would later say “he was born a slave with the soul of a free man”.

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Toussaint L’Ouverture which translates into “the one who finds an opening” is considered the black George Washington.  Toussaint L’Ouverture fought the French for 12 years fighting off three different regimens with former slaves he trained.  L’Ouverture’s rallying cry was “egalite” which translates to liberty, equality and fraternity.

By 1802 the Haitian rebellion lead by Toussaint L’Ouverture had succeeded in killing 55,000 French soldiers. The relentless effort by former slaves slowly made Napoleon reconsider his thoughts prompting a peace treaty. In 1803  Napoleon agreed to recognize Haitian independence and later that year a tired Napoleon sold the territory that made up the Louisiana Purchase.

In it my belief that The Haitian Revolution is the most profound revolution ever realized by human beings. It is the only revolution were slaves created a nation but, nobody wants to talk about it.

–  Jean Claude Martineau

The trip of a lifetime

There was this ole boy named Johnny Francis. Now Johnny didn’t take no mess from anyone and he would be the first to tell you so. In Johnny’s mind the world belonged to him. Johnny was a nice size fellow who could whoop women and men the same. Johnny kept a razor blade in his pocket each and every day until one day he didn’t. As the story goes Johnny was walking through downtown and this old shoe shine man got in his way. Johnny kicked the old man but, before you could blink the old man tripped Johnny. Johnny ended up flat on his back as the man neatly pressed a steel blade against his neck. The old man said “I’ve killed the old man in you but, I’m going to let the new man live”.  Johnny arrived home completely shaken suddenly realizing that he had his blade in his pocket the whole time. Johnny didn’t find the blade or a lot of his others ways much useful after that.

(1)Do not boast about tomorrow, for you do not know what a day may bring. (Proverbs 27: 1)

Now, I’m Jewish and he’s a Muslim…and because of that he tells me I need to give up certain things, like pork and white women…I can give up the pork, but the white women? God D*mn, how the hell do you do that?

  • Drew “Bundini” Brown

Charlie Rose is an award winning journalist and television show host who has interviewed everyone from prime ministers and foreign dignitaries to sports stars. Charlie Rose recently appeared on TBS to speak with Kenny Smith, Charles Barkley and others during March Madness. The questions quickly turned to Rose’s background and his pointers for a good interview. Rose advised that he worked at the store that his parents owned and being the only child no adults would talk to him unless he asked questions. Rose advised that people fascinated him and stoked his curiosity more than anything.  Charles Barkley asked Charlie Rose how he interviews an entertainer and makes it look so easy as he interviews the president of a country the next day. Rose advised that there is something interesting about everyone you just have to be first curious and second prepared. Rose also advised that he just tries to stay in the moment. Kenny Smith asked Rose how he interview’s people that are difficult or considered “bad”. Rose advised in short that he is always surprised about interviews because some of the “bad people” have been the most engaging, pleasant and relaxed interviews he has had.  Rose advised that out of the what, when and why questions the “why” normally gets people talking. “Why did you feel that way”? “Why did you do you make that decision”?

Some people that know me say that I am “the life” of the party. These people would also say I am really engaging in conversation and easy to be around because I have an infectious personality. Other people would say I am deep, passionate, introspect and my thoughts seam to run endlessly like children at play. This deep/introspective perspective that I am blessed with always me to take utter nothingness and turn it into beautiful bless born on paper. Then there’s a contingent that would say I am very humble, meek, quiet, selective with my words and more selective with actions. I am all of these things and more. I embrace all of these attributes and characteristics because they create the depth that is me. I really enjoy people that have a story. I really enjoy people that have layers to their personality. In this age of followers, favorites and five minute dating I believe we are losing our substance. I think even more today than ever to be different is to me disliked.

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He was the salutatorian for his high school class and voted most likely to succeed as he graduated with a 4.2 GPA. He moved on to Stanford University where he graduated with an undergraduate degree in communications. He also completed his first year of graduate level study in communications before putting his studies on hold to enter the professional ranks. Aside from his work professionally he has started a foundation that purchases school supplies for students in low income families. The young man has visited several schools personally spreading the message of hope and determination. Sound like the guy you want your daughter to bring home?

If this same person was called a nig*er, jungle monkey or ape what does that say about our culture. If several people made comments that they believed the young man should be shot in the head would you be embarrassed? If these comments were made by your brother, sister or cousin would you be understanding and ask him/her why? I think to myself if this young man is being labeled as a thug with a degree from Stanford what would I be called? I don’t have a cookie cutter personality nor am I ALWAYS politically correct.  This blog is not about racist or racism. This blog is about the “why”. This blog is about the effort or lack thereof that we exert to understand our fellow man without judgment, condemnation or spite. If you show humility and understanding you may be the trip that allows someone to land on their feet.

A course on the origin of inequality

The mere fact of a man’s proclaiming his superiority is in itself an indication that he feels it cannot speak for itself. “Don’t tell me who you are” said Emerson, what you are speaks so loud, I can’t hear you.

Jean Jacques Rousseau was a writer and composer during the Enlightenment in eighteenth century England. Rousseau explained that primitive man with his very basic needs could not be manipulated or corrupted by his desires. In 1755 Rousseau wrote A Discourse on the Origin of Inequality. Rousseau attempted to find a way of preserving human freedom in a world where human beings were increasingly reliant one another for the satisfaction of needs. Rousseau argued that at the core of the modern man he is not moral or naturally social. Rousseau saw clearly that man derived his sense of self-worth from the opinions of others and considered that thinking corrosive of freedom and destructive of individual authenticity. The centralized theme in the work is trying to be free in a world where men let their needs corrupt and rot the so called “civilized man”.

Slavery was never about hatred. It was capitalism. Christopher Columbus saw the Indians with gold and said “take me where that is”. – Jermaine Cole

Jermaine Cole

Was the SNL skit purely satirical and harmless in intent? Yes, it most likely was. Dick Gregory is a comedian and social activist that reached the height of his fame as an entertainer in the 1960’s. Imagine if Kevin Hart stopped touring and acting in movies at various points because he was at the front line of a cause. Gregory’s commentary and theatrical satire on hatred and racial supremacy could make the biggest racial bigot or hate mongrel crack a smile. “Last time I was down South I walked into this restaurant and this white waitress came up to me and said we don’t serve colored people here”. “I said: that’s all right, I don’t eat colored people bring me a whole fried chicken”

Do I think that there is a clear bias in the justice system against blacks? I think there are many factors that go into why blacks are arrested in higher numbers. I also think there are reasons why blacks receive harsher punishments for the same crime committed. You can point to lack of education, family dynamics and also the culture within some inner city neighborhoods. Blacks also do not trust the police for varying reasons which surely plays a part in how blacks and law enforcement interact. If you give the barista at Starbucks hell every time you’re there she will overtly or covertly act out at some point. Is it right? No. Is it true? Yes. With all of that said we all would be remised if we did not consider the very real role racial superiority plays in the justice system. However, I don’t think racial superiority is unique to individuals in the justice system. It’s just only so much the white guy that’s the meter maid can do to show me that he is superior if I still have time on my meter.

In 1964 Malcolm X visited the holy city of Mecca on a quest for personal and spiritual growth. “America needs to understand Islam, because this is one religion that erases the race problem from its society”. Malcolm wrote this as he watched Muslims of all colors drinking from the same cup of brotherhood. “We were truly all the same (brothers) because their belief in one God had removed the white from their minds, the white from their behavior, and the white from their attitude”. Malcolm then intimates that if American whites could accept the oneness of God they could accept the oneness of man and the race problem would not exist.

In the 50 years since Malcolm’s travels where are we with race relations in America? It pains me because the people that always talk about the problem are more oblivious than most. W.E.B Dubois spoke of that harm that black leaders picked by whites can have on social growth. “What can be more instructive than the leadership of a group within a group? That curious double movement where real progress may be negative and actual advance be relative regression”. I contend that if racial superiority was going to end by education or other means it would have happened by now. I hold to the belief that the race problem will only cist to exist in America if everyone believes in one God. I believe the only other progress made in relation to race revolves around the extinction of the darker African American complexion. If the former mulatto or mixed African is the dominant race whites would be more willing to accept the differences that create racism or the racial superiority complex.

ABC..1,2,3 I’m not letting money control me

Shaq is rich; the white man that signs his check is wealthy. Here you go Shaq, go buy yourself a bouncing car. Bling-Bling….I ain’t talking bout Oprah; I’m talking about Bill Gates.. OK! If Bill Gates woke up tomorrow with Oprah’s money he would jump out of a window. I’m not talking about rich, I’m talking about wealthy. – Chris Rock

People pray for poor people, but they listen to rich people. I want to be rich. – John Thompson II

Of the billionaires I have known, money just brings out the basic traits in them. If they were jerks before they had money, they are simply jerks with a billion dollars. – Warren Buffet

Pregnant people get strange tastes. I was pregnant with poverty. Pregnant with dirt and pregnant with smells that turn people away, pregnant with cold and pregnant with shoes that were never bought for me, pregnant with five other people in my bed and No Daddy in the next room, and pregnant with hunger. Paste don’t taste too bad when you’re hungry. These words uttered by a welfare child who saw his mom raise 6 children as a maid. – Dick Gregory

When I was in high school the big thing was to go to college graduate and get a desk job with benefits. Imagine my surprise when I get out of school the oil field workers, construction, energy company workers are making twice as much as me. It was just that, a surprise. I was not envious. I didn’t regret going to school nor was I going to apply to work in these professions.

I recently was faced with a possible opportunity to interview with one of those jobs and it made me revisit how I look at wealth and financial flexibility. I was the kid that would work and save my money for months just to purchase an item I really wanted. It was never about the money. My younger sister would spend money she received that same day. My older sister would spend half, loan out some and save the rest.  I could go without candy; chips and other “nick knacks” because I was focused on what I wanted. I have never been focused or driven by money. I have always looked at money as a tool to acquire goods or services etc.

I think most people would say they would like to live comfortably and that’s fair. I’ve never measured success in dollars and cents. I always felt like if I was happy with me, put God first and I received my families respect and admiration I would be successful. I felt like if I was trying to be the best person I could be I would be successful. As far as wealth I admit I never really gave it much thought until the last few years. Hill Harper is his book The Wealth Cure advises that money is not wealth. “Money plus wellness equals wealth”. In a sense wealth is tied to your health and financial flexibility. If you stay in your financial lane unburdened by unnecessary debt you will remain flexible.

Kevin Hart who, at this present time is about as big as it comes in Hollywood did the Laugh at My Pain tour in 2012. I stay in my financial lane people! Let me explain what I mean when I say this. Here’s what happens you start to make money you meet other people that make money. When you meet other people that make money you want to hang out with these people. Naturally you want to spend money like how they spend money but, you realize that you don’t make the same kind of money that they make. Hart ends the set advising he doesn’t hang around athletes because “they don’t respect money”.

At its core money is just printed green paper that only has the assigned value that has been placed on it. How do you look at money? Do you feel pressure to keep up with the “Jones’s”? That Lexus are condo with the view may be way more significant to you than just “a car” and a “house”. Do you look at money emotionally? Man I had a bad day but, some new shoes will make me feel better. I don’t feel like even leaving the house “I don’t get paid until next week”. We have given money and its pursuit to much value and control over our lives. Money has its place and that is a fact. We need money to acquire goods and services. It is also the compensation we receive for labor and ingenuity. I still can’t comprehend how $8.00 compensates a man for an hour of his life but, I digress. I also encourage people to enjoy the fruits of their labor but, in moderation. By in large I want us to understand that money is not the path to happiness or fulfillment.

I was having a recent conversation with an associate explaining my views on money, wealth and etc. The questions of what is money to you and how do you look at money came up. I asked are you looking to attain money for greed, security, a tool or for some other reason. She posed the question “what if I want to take care of my family or set myself up for the future”. I advised that was very admirable but, at what cost. When your kids are grown and your parents long gone will they remember how well you took care of them or that you were never there. Is it not our purpose in life to help others how can you help others and enjoy life if you are centrally concerned with yourself? You have to find a balance.

The starting point of all achievement is DESIRE. Keep this constantly in your mind. Weak desire brings weak results; just a small fire makes a small amount of heat. – Napoleon Hill