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“Remembering Our Roots; Preparing for Our Future.”

By Finnie D. Coleman
Apr 4, 2008 - 10:02:10 AM

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By Finnie D. Coleman Director, UNM Africana Studies Program
I am honored and blessed to have the opportunity to write this series of articles for the Perspective II. In the coming months I hope to share my thoughts with Perspective II readers on a wide variety of subjects.

I have long thought that the Black community is facing a variety of crises and that these are dangerous days. That said, these are also days of great promise as well and we cannot lose sight of our many accomplishments, we must cherish and nurture our history, and we must especially celebrate the great things that our youth are doing. Like many of you, I recently read a spoof email about the supposed retirement of the Ku Klux Klan.

In this email, the Grand Dragon provides a list of things that Blacks do to themselves. Moreover, Blacks do these things so well that the Klan could not hope to replicate the success that Blacks have in destroying the very fabric that holds the community together. The email ends with the point that Blacks are their own worst enemies. The fact that this defeatist and borderline demeaning email has seen such wide distribution says far more to me than its problematic content.

In forwarding this and other emails among ourselves, we inadvertently and perhaps uncritically anticipate in the replication and consumption of images and ideas about our community that do little if anything to further our progress. In fact, one might argue that these seemingly innocuous acts do far more to hurt us than overt attempts by others to bring us down. My work for the Perspective II is

first and foremost intended to be uplifting. I intend to do two things: 1) follow Dr. King's injunction to "Speak the Truth in Love" and 2) to meet Malcolm X's challenge to invest as much time in discussing solutions as we invest in discussing the problems.

I mentioned earlier that I believe that our community is in a state of crisis. The markers of that crisis are all around us and do not need to be restated here. In the coming months, I want to pose some questions that I hope spark conversations in our community. How do we effectively address pipeline issues in an educational system that systematically fails our Black and Brown children? How do we harness the tremendous power of Rap Music and Hip Hop culture? So many people dismiss the

music because of the foul, base, and self-destructive offerings of all too many mainstream artists, while ignoring the great work of the many positive and underground artists.

How might we come together to more stridently support Black businesses that provide so many valuable jobs and resources to our community? What can we do to bring more interesting and culturally enriching programming to our community? What can we do to support that programming once it is in place? I for one believe that we cannot afford to fail in answering these and other pressing questions. I look forward to discussing these and other issues in the coming months. For the moment, I would like to provide a brief update on the status of Africana Studies at the University of New Mexico.


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