Saturday, August 16, 2008

Remebering the work and lives Honored Ancestord






Greetings Beloved Comrades,

This has been another momentous week on a personal, communal and global level, and I pause to reflect on some events in relation to the work, life and legacy of honored ancestors.

As you know August 13th, marks one year since Baba Asa Hilliard transitioned to that higher level of consciousness and being. Again I want to thank the Hilliard family for sharing this beloved son of Africa with us and appreciate those who paused in awareness, to honor and continue his work.

I was privileged to share a few precious moments with Mama Robbi but because of her dignified forbearance, I did not realize until after the conversation, in which I was requesting her assistance, that this week marked that anniversary and the emotional gravity that obtained. With classic nobility she attended to my requests, not once indicating the challenging sentiment of this first year since the transition of her beloved father. It was only after I called back that she acknowledged the weight of the moment. I share these private moments because it signals to us all, the importance of being in appreciative awareness of the love and dignity, the nourishment and creative genius of love that lies within. It is without reservation that I salute the Hilliard family for their devoted service to African people.

Begging your indulgence, I must mention that August 13, 1972, marked the transition of another beloved freedom fighter and healer, who is not known in these parts but is my ancestor. That woman hailed from Guyana, is another devoted child/daughter of Africa, a Garveyite, devotee of then Emperor Haille Selassie and servant of the Ethiopian Orthodox Church, my grandmother.
This is also the time to remember, celebrate, honor and most importantly learn and continue the teachings and the work of the Honorable Marcus Mosiah Garvey. This is how I strive to remain connected to my ancestor.

Yes, I feel a little pride in noting that Baba Asa transitioned on the same day as Granny Sarah. To me both remain as beacons to better tomorrow, offering liberation and nourishing inspiration of work life and living today.
Following is a sample of the brilliantly nourishing work of Baba Asa.

To Be an African Teacher
By Asa G. Hilliard, III
Fuller Callaway Professor, Atlanta University
Former First Lady Hillary Rodham Clinton has been criticized by right-wing conservatives—and even libertarians after her comments centering upon her book It Takes a Village: And Other Lessons Children Teach Us. Her catchphrase was, “It takes a village to raise a child.” Most North American patriots and corporate-backed propagandists argue that Ms. Clinton is asking too much of us regarding the education of our children—Asa Hilliard III moves in the opposite direction: he effectively says we are not doing enough. The words here suggest that it takes a refined and nurturing cultural foundation to raise a child—and the teachers of our children take up their task as one dutifully follows a religious calling.

…Ptahhotep, instructs the ignorant in the knowledge and in the standards of good speech. A man teaches as he acts… The wise person feeds the soul with what endures, so that it is happy with that person on earth. The wise is known by his good actions. The heart of the wise matches his or her tongue and his or her lips are straight when he or she speaks. The wise have eyes that are made to see and ears that are made to hear what will profit the offspring. The wise is a person who acts with MAAT [truth, justice, order, balance, harmony, righteousness and reciprocity] and is free of falsehood and disorder.

—Ptahotep 2350 B. C. E.
(From The Teachings of Ptahhotep, the oldest book in the world, 4750 years ago, an African book from KMT [“Egypt”]).

Many of us do not know it, but African people have thousands of years of well-recorded deep thought and educational excellence. Teaching and the shaping of character is one of our great strengths.

In our worldview, our children are seen as divine gifts of our creator. Our children, their families, and the social and physical environment must be nurtured together. They must be nurtured in a way that is appropriate for a spiritual people, whose aim is to “build for eternity.”

What a pity that our communities have forgotten our “Jeles” and our “Jegnas,” our great master teachers. What a pity that we cannot readily recall the names of our greatest wise men and women. What a pity that we have come to be dependent on the conceptions and the leadership of others, some of whom not only do not have our interests at heart, they may even be our enemies. Some actually seek to control us for their own benefit through the process of mis-education.

Henry Berry of the Virginia House of Congress (during the antebellum period) said this about African people:

We have closed every avenue through which light may enter their minds. If we could only extinguish the capacity to see the light, our work would be complete.

So we have two primary reasons for knowing our heritage in education and child raising, or socialization.

We have the best teaching and socialization practices ever developed anywhere in the world. These practices are still good for others and for us now.
The primary tool of our oppression is mis-education by our oppressors. We must regain control over the primary education and socialization of our children.
Everywhere on the African continent, from the time of the Pharoahs in Ancient KMT (Egypt) to the modern era, great African civilizations in many river valleys, from the Nile to the Niger and to the Cape, were the center of the most sophisticated education and socialization systems ever developed on the Earth. Some of these civilizations developed in Africa long before other civilizations developed anywhere else in the world. The vestiges of these brilliant African creations can still be found in Africa and throughout the African Diaspora (see Finch, 1998).

We must consider our ancient traditions; traditions that made us respected teachers all over the globe. Our people must hold their heads high in all matters that pertain to teaching and learning.

African traditional teachers were and are people of high character, who have deep respect for ancestors and for community tradition. African teachers accept the calling and the obligation to facilitate inter-generational cultural transmission. African teachers also strive for the highest standards of achievement in emerging science and technology, areas that have always owed much to African scholarship.

Our genius is a part of the foundation of the revolution in knowledge in physics, mathematics, engineering and cyber-technology. Our genius is present at the deepest levels of the arts and humanities. All of this is in spite of overwhelming resistance to our learning by determined oppressors.

Therefore, for many African Teachers, tapping the genius and touching the spirit of African children is not a mystery. Not only can our children learn, they bring awesome intellects to the task. It is a routine manifestation of the African teacher’s excellence to nurture this genius. Along with teaching content, teaching good character and social bonds are our historical and contemporary strengths.

African teachers, worldwide, share in a cultural deep structure, based upon an African “world-view,” a shared way of looking at the world and the human experience. This world-view channels the focus of African teachers, providing them with appropriate patterns for thought and practice.

While it certainly is a practical necessity to get academic degrees and certification from non-African institutions, such teacher training and legitimation is really minimal preparation for African teachers. We go far beyond these things to reach our traditional higher standards, whether we work in public or in independent settings, whether we teach our own children or also teach the children of others.

For the African teacher, teaching is far more than a job or simply a way to make a living. Students are not “clients” or “customers.” Our students and parents are our family. No sacrifice is too great for that family, for its growth and enhancement.

What is special about an African teacher? It is the world-view and the practice that comes from our world-view, even when it is a dim memory.

A teacher of African ancestry who does not go beyond certification and degrees to know or to embrace an African world-view is not an African! Cultural excellence is the essence of and African teacher. In all of our learning, we must acquire an understanding of ourselves and our heritage. This does not mean that we cannot learn from others. However, we must be critical learners, rejecting anything that is anti-African.

African teaching functions must be embedded in and must serve an African community. Traditionally, African communities have been identified by a shared belief in several key elements. It is these elements that are the foundation for African teachers.

The belief that the cosmos is alive.
The belief that spirituality is at the center of our being.
The belief that human society is a living spiritual part of the cosmos, not alien to it.
The belief that our people have a divine purpose and destiny.
The belief that each child is a “Living Sun,” a Devine gift of the creator.
The belief that, properly socialized, our children will experience stages of transformation, moving toward perfection, that is to be more like the creator (“mi Re” or like Ra, in the KMT language, meaning to try to live like God).
Since the deep guiding principle of “living like God” is to follow MAAT (Truth, Justice, Righteousness, Order, Reciprocity, Harmony, Balance), then African teachers focus the curriculum on the real and the true, on what was, what is, and on what can be, in keeping with divine principles.
African teachers place a premium on bringing their students into a knowledge of themselves and a knowledge of their communities. African people place great value on WHO each person is, on WHO the community is and the honored place that each member of the family occupies within the community.
African teachers respect mastery, and seek through apprenticeship to learn from truemasters, masters who are valued agents of the African community, who are steeped in the deep thought and behavior of the community, who exhibit an abiding unshakable primary loyalty to the community and who are in constant communication with the wise elders of the community.
African teachers recognize the genius and the divinity of each of our children, speaking to and teaching to each child’s intellect, humanity, and spirit. We do not question a child’s possession of these things. In touching the intellect, humanity and spirit within children, African teachers recognize the centrality of relationships between teachers and students, among students, and within the African community as a whole.
For the African teacher, teaching is a calling, a constant journey towards mastery, a scientific activity, a matter of community membership, an aspect of a learning community, a process of “becoming a library,” a matter of care and custody for our culture and traditions, a matter of a critical viewing of the wider world, and a response to the imperative of MAAT.
The African teacher is a parent, friend, guide, coach, healer, counselor, model, storyteller, entertainer, artist, architect, builder, minister, and advocate to and for students.
A brief sample of African socialization can be found in the work of K. Kia Kimbwandende Bunseki Fu-Kiau and A. M. Lukondo-Wamba, master teachers and authors of Kindezi: The Congo Art of Babysitting(1988):

The Kindezi can only be perceived and understood through the social context of the community it serves as an art and a big social responsibility. It is through the role that Kindizi plays in the community that one can appreciate its importance in the dingo-dingo (process) of shaping African social patterns. The quality and personality of the ndezi/babysitter, make by influence the quality and personality of the child in the sadulu (school place) and the community as well. Since it is the ndezi with whom the child stays all day long, the future of the child will greatly reflect the impact of Kindezi, the art of babysitting, not only upon the child but upon the society itself.

The contribution of Kindezi in Bantu societies in general, and the Kongo in particular, cannot be under-estimated or denied. The role it plays in all aspects of community life is so great that it merits erection of a monument. (p. 20)

…Though things are rapidly changing today in Africa, the Kindezi, in its substructure, still remains as a skill and are to be learned by all young community members, girls as well as boys, through an initiatic and practical process for, as a Kongo proverb would say, Kindezi M’fuma mu kanda (The art of babysitting is a baobab to the community), i.e., a string supporter of community economic activities… Babysitting, sala sindezi, is not instinctively acquired as some would assume or pretend. Dingo-dingo diena it is a process by which one discovers the mystery of human growth and reaches the total understanding of the psychology of the child.

By babysitting, one learns the wonderful skill of being responsible for another life and how to become a new “living pattern.” A “living pattern” is a model through which cultural values are transmitted from generation to generation. Through Kindezi, Africans acquire this skill, a skill that has made the African not only one of the most religious human beings on earth but, also, one of the most humanistic.

African parents, mothers in particular, have a great concern about their children’s childhood because they are aware that Kimbuta kia muntu, bonso kimuntu, ga mataba–“One’s leadership, like one’s personality, finds its roots in the child-hood.” Earlier events in the childhood life play an important role in adulthood. As such, great attention is paid to whoever has a role to play in the life of a child—the human being with the quickest copying mind. This basic understanding that childhood is the foundation that determines the quality of a society is the main reason that prompted African communities to make Kindezi and art, or kinkete, to be learned by all their members. Thus Kindezi is required in societies that want to prepare their members to become not only good fathers and mothers, but above all, people who care about life and who understand, both humanely and spiritually, the highly unshakable value of the human being that we all are. (p. 4–5)

Typically the African teacher leads a social collective process, one where social bonds are reinforced or created. In this social process, the destinies of the students are connected to each other, to their families, to their communities, to their ancestors, to those who are yet to be born, to their environment, to their traditions, to MAAT as a way of life, and to their creator.

From these few thoughts, one can see that the popular use of the African proverb, “It takes a whole village to raise a child,” is interpreted in a very trivial way, and is taken out of context. Africans who use the proverb understand it. It is a part of their world-view, their value system, a world-view and value system that may not be shared by those who quote Africans out of context. As Fu-Kiau and Lukondo-Wamba show above, the proverb is really about raising a village, not merely raising a child. It is not a matter of welfare as it is understood in the West. It really takes a whole village to raise itself, a village that values every member as a “living sun,” a village to which the child belongs, a village where every child is shown that he or she “will never be given away.” Clearly, this is a different order of “child care.” This is African teaching/socialization, and the incorporation of the child into the community.

Africans never take teaching lightly. It is a sacred calling. The long night of slavery, colonization, apartheid, and White supremacy ideology ruptured the traditional bond between African teachers and their nurture, and even their memories of that nurture. We have been reduced in our expertise, lowered in our expectations, and limited in our goals. We have even been dehumanized and de-spiritualized. We must return to the upward ways of our ancestors. We have forgotten our aims, methods and content.

We must not bring shame on ourselves and upon our descendants. We must bring light to the world again.

Selected References and Bibliography
Ainsworth, Mary (1967). Infancy in Uganda Infant Care and the Growth of Love. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press

Anderson, J. D. (1988). The Education of Blacks in the South, 1860-1935. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press.

Callaway, H. (1975). “Indigenous Education in Yoruba Society” in Conflict and Harmony in Education in Tropical Africa (Studies on Modern Asia and Africa : , No. 10), G. N. Brown and M. Hiskett (Eds.). Rutherford, N. J.: Fairleigh Dickinson University Press.

Carruthers, J. (1995). MDW NTR Divine Speech: A Historiographical Reflection of African Deep Thought from the time of the Pharaohs to the Present. London: Karnak House.

Erny, Pierre. (1973). Childhood and Cosmos: the Social Psychology of the Black African Child. New York: New Perspectives.

Erny, Pierre (1981). The Child and His Environment in Black Africa: An Essay on Traditional Education. New York: Oxford University Press.

Finch, Charles. (1998). Star of Deep Beginnings: The Genesis of African Science and Technology. Decatur, Ga.: Khenti Inc.

Fu-Kiau, K. Kia Bunseki and Lukondo-Wamba. (1988). Kindezi: The Congo Art of Babysitting. New York: Vantage Press.

Geber, M. (1958). “The Psychomotor Development of African Children in the First Year And The Influence Of Maternal Behavior.” Journal of Social Psychology, 47, 185-195.

Hilliard, Asa G. III. (1998). SBA: The Reawakening of The African Mind. Gainesville, Florida: Makare Publishers.

Pearce, Joseph Chilton. (1977). Magical Child: Rediscovering Nature’s Plan. New York: E. P. Dutton.

Webber, T. L. (1978). Deep Like the Rivers: Education in the Slave Quarter Community, 1831-1865. New York:W. W. Norton

Wilson, Amos (1991). Awakening the Natural Genius of Black Children. New York:Afrikan World Infosystems

Woodson, C. G. (1968). Miseducation of the Negro. Washington, D. C.: Associated Publishers (first published in 1933)

Asa G. Hilliard, III is the Fuller Callaway Professor at Atlanta University in Atlanta, Georgia. He may be reached at ahilliard@gsu.edu.

Monday, July 21, 2008

t r u t h o u t | Women Hardest Hit by Food Crisis

t r u t h o u t | Women Hardest Hit by Food Crisis

Our Economic Woes and Opportunities

Greetings Comrades,
A happy Monday to you and all your relations. After a wonderful weekend of nourishing "struggle", I felt obligated, indeed duty bound to share with you the fruits of our labor. A major aspect of our efforts was the examination of the prevailing economic crisis, our economic survival and what opportunities obtain therein. What resulted was a reaffirmation and clarification about our personal and collective human experience, of which economics is but one aspect.
Actually there was only three of us that gathered together and teleconferenced one sister into the conversation. It very quickly became clear, that what we are struggling with is beyond an orthodox construct of economics. Interestingly my wise brother had pointed observed that our economic solutions had to be linked to our spirit, the energetic dimension of our being. The poignancy of this point blew with refreshing brilliance into our deliberations.
We began, by affirming that the material conditions we face individually and collective, were untenable and out of this consciousness a new vision must emerged to move us to where we need to be. Initially we discussed the validity of the goal of economic sustainability with our collective and our community. The objectives towards that goal seemed quite obvious, do like our ancestors did, struggle collectively, develop co-ops, share our resources, "su-sus", box hand, think about, creating community housing, share our living space. Well this is not rocket science, the models exist...Maroon communities, the efforts of Marcus Garvey, the nation of Islam, Hebrew Israelite Nation, cooperative and intentional communities thrive in several areas of the US and beyond. The material resources, the knowledge, even the need exist. So what is the problem.
The question of trust emerged in our discussion, because even as we identified simple, affordable collective proposals the need for a functional level of trust, the need for sincerity, for comradeship marched into our consciousness with unrelenting pace. Why should we trust each and invest our hard earned and already short financial resources with each other, even if we all claim the same cultural identity, one love etc.
Now we could have proceeded on faith and said that, we will just have to trust each other. However, bearing in mind the admonition of that great sage that " we should tell no lies and claim no easy victories", we humbled ourselves. We agreed that in order to secure the trust needed to pursue an effective economic solution, we needed to build relations withs ethics and integrity and that this would be our essential investment. We believe that we need to invest time, intention and effort in getting to know each other to , know our comrades and as we "ground with each other" ( a la Walter Rodney's Groundings with My Brothers), clarity and trust will result and allow us to invest precious resources with each other.
Over the next few weeks this collective will do just that, build our relationships, so that we can create a healthy, nourishing way of being, that will allow not only to cope with the prevailing economic crisis but to facilitate the development of a sovereign, liberated community, made so because it will and can only come from our souls and from us nurturing each other as we move forward as comrades.

Peace
Sizwe

PS as we struggle to deal with our very real challenges over hear consider the plight of our relations on the continent and elsewhere.
The link above is the article dealing with the plight of that sister in Burkina Faso. As a people we can really tolerate a lot of trials and tribulations , but things are really dread.

Saturday, July 5, 2008

Indepedence Day 2008

Greetings Fellow Travelers,
Here in the US, July 4th marks the highpoint of patriotism, so called, of the citizenry. There is little doubt about the fervent sincerity of those thankful souls who have found hope and deliverance on these shores and seek to pay tribute to the historical process that made it possible. But the Fourth of July has deeper and more complex implications than the messages evident in the parades, fly overs, firework displays, parties and barbecues. For many other people, many other nations, the Fourth of July marks a time of tragedy, for others the end of independence. In acknowledgment of Fredrick Douglas') haunting question, What to the Slave is the Fourth of July?, I offer in this additional thought, What to Humanity is the Fourth of July? To that question as to Douglas' the meaning of this holiday to the slave, has little to do with celebration, indeed it seemed then like a cruel prank and dehumanizing insult. As to the indigenous peoples of these lands Fourth of July, must have seemed like an obscene, vulgar, exercise of further humiliation by conquering forces of Europe. For both of these societies, the birth of the nation the cost of independence was paid for with their blood, with the destruction of their civilizations,the loss of their freedom and the slamming shut of the door of providence, by the material and cultural bondage of their relentless conqueror. In this enterprise therefore was the meaning of the Fourth of July to the slave, to humanity a crime against humanity itself.

From FD himself, two paragraphs of his historic critique:

"But such is not the state of the case. I say it with a sad sense of the disparity between us. am not included within the pale of this glorious anniversary! Your high independence only reveals the immeasurable distance between us. The blessings in which you, this day, rejoice are not enjoyed in common. The rich inheritance of justice, liberty, prosperity, and independence bequeathed by your fathers is shared by you, not by me. The sunlight that brought light and healing to you has brought stripes and death to me. This Fourth of July is yours, not mine. You may rejoice, I must mourn. To drag a man in fetters into the grand illuminated temple of liberty, and call upon him to join you in joyous anthems, were inhuman mockery and sacrilegious irony. Do you mean, citizens, to mock me by asking me to speak today? If so, there is a parallel to your conduct. And let me warn that it is dangerous to copy the example of nation whose crimes, towering up to heaven, were thrown down by the breath of the Almighty, burying that nation in irrevocable ruin! I can today take up the plaintive lament of a peeled and woe-smitten people".

"What, to the American slave, is your Fourth of July? I answer: a day that reveals to him, more than all other days in the year, the gross injustice and cruelty to which he is the constant victim. To him, your celebration is a sham; your boasted liberty, an unholy license; your national greatness, swelling vanity; your sounds of rejoicing are empty and heartless; your denunciation of tyrants, brass-fronted impudence; your shouts of liberty and equality, hollow mockery; your prayers and hymns, your sermons and thanksgivings, with all your religious parade and solemnity, are, to Him, mere bombast, fraud, deception, impiety, and hypocrisy-a thin veil to cover up crimes which would disgrace a nation of savages. There is not a nation of savages. There is not a nation on the earth guilty of practices more shocking and bloody than are the people of the United States at this very hour".

Turning to the historic plight, the genocide of indigenous people of this hemisphere, the thoughts are overwhelming and painful. Almost equal in intensity to the crime of this devastating holocaust, is the shocking dismissal, the mockery of the meaning of this experience to the first people. It is no less obscene than the pronouncements of those who reportedly deny the slaughter of the Jews by the Nazis. We must never forget that this declaration of independence was made on the bent but not broken, yet unconquered body and soul of the civilizations, that predated the arrival of the invaders of this hemisphere.

From Assata Shakur's blog:

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PanAfrican Perspective

Thinking of the Indigenous People this 4th of July
"...diseases was even used as a weapons by whites who purposely passed out smallpox-infested blankets to the Indians...disease might be called another battleground for the Indians...As to land consessions, disease through depopulation played a large part in the ultimate displacement of tribes...

The words of Four Bears, a Mandan chief who at the time was dying from smallpox, help make the subject more human, rather than one of abstract demography and statistics:

"Four Bears never saw a white man hungry, but what he gave him to eat...and how they have repaid it! I do not fear death...but to die with my face rotten, that even the wolves will shrink...at seeing me, and say tp themselves, that is Four Bears, the friend of the whites."

Atlas of the North American Indian
by Carl Waldman
p167

Update: Well how are the descendants of those historic actors faring today, the conquers still rule and the suffers still suffer. Obviously this is much too simplistic an observation of the current situation. Here are some observations that speak to the meaning of independence today, not only to the First Peoples and the descendants of enslaved Africans, but to humanity in general.

Well there is Barak Obama, 1st NON WHITE contender for Commander in Chief of the nation. Intriguing historic and psychological implications in light of our discussion.
Regarding the brutal state of the economy, what is the meaning of independence when the resources needed to exercise it are being snatched from the mouths of our children, by the astronomical increase in the price of food. A knock on effect and consequence of the global war on terror, that has lead to that factor so toxic to economic sustenance....destabilization, the character of war . Of course the war mongers make out like bandits.
Examine any area of endeavor, of the pursuit of life liberty and happiness and let's ask what to the native people, what to the descendants of slaves, what to humanity and indeed what to the rulers, does the Fourth of July mean in 2008?

Sizwe

Thursday, June 19, 2008

Walter Rodney & Working People

Greetings,
Last Friday, June 13th, marked the 28th year since Walter Rodney was assassinated in Guyana by agents of the state. In tribute to the work and dedication of this scholar activist, a groundings of sisters and brothers was held in Little Five Points, in the Radio Free Georgia building, in Atlanta GA. Appropriately, the gathering was made up of working people, that strata of society that was essential to Walter's analysis, his thesis and his activism. This grounding humbly tried to remain true to the vital massage of integrity evident in Walter's work for the liberation of working people everywhere.This includes his appreciation of their critical role not only in the production of goods and services, but in the creation and maintenance of culture.
The focus of the discussion was on the conditions facing working people today and looking at Walter's scholarship and activism for direction. Essentially the cost of living, the cost of working is becoming increasingly prohibitive. This is realised in the price of energy in the US, the price of food globally and the impact on the lives of those who toil to produce the wealth for the mega corporations, but do not benefit from the profits. These were the issues, the economic oppression, injustice that informed Walter Rodney's understanding of the importance of grounding with his brothers and yes, sisters. Hopefully the message can make it into the consciousness of the others in academia, who seek to honor or be guided by the service of this intellectual worker.
Walter's appreciation and service to Pan Africanism was noted, particularly to the point that this was evident in his application of theory, of history, to the challenges in the objective conditions facing Africans and oppressed people around the world. Walter Rodney did put Marxist theory to significant use in his assessment, exploration and application of possible solutions to the plight of the oppressed. In this he was quite clear about the role of imperialism and its neo colonial and neo liberal structures in the oppression of the working class. Correspondingly Walter was not willing to give a "pass" to the contradictions within those oppressed communities themselves. Indeed it was on this critique, this level of integrity, that he challenged the corruption within Guyanese society in the 1970s and for which he was ultimately assassinated.
The major theme that emerged was the discussion was the inadequacy of the current dominant global culture in addressing the needs of the working class, indeed of humanity. To be sure, we noted that the current unipolar world, the dominant economic world order was not designed to serve the masses anyway. Walter Rodney's work, points to the need not only for an intellectual critique of the ills of imperialism, but for us to do the disciplined work of assisting in the liberation, the self emancipation of people's creativity, of people's power, to create a better world, a more humane society.
It was agreed by the gathering, that we should convene ongoing groundings in the communities of the working people of Atlanta, in this way we propose to honor the legacy of Walter Rodney by actively engaging the lives of the working class.

"People's Power, No Dictator"

Wednesday, June 18, 2008

The Worth of the Work We Do

Greetings,
I was reflecting on the ever present question of the worth and meaning of our work. It stands to reason that if we are spending the most productive part of our day, putting forth our best physical and mental efforts, a lot more than a nice paycheck should be forthcoming. I would be simplistic and suggest that whatever our vocation it should be nourishing to us and our communities. Is this your situation? This has been the quest of my work life so far and indeed in the relationships I have built, I have found that nourishment. So take a look around in your work station and appreciate the nourishment coming your way. If it is not....................question for you to answer.
In this stream of consciousness I reflected on the work of one dear sister and comrade and tried to wrap a few words of appreciation for the love, labor and wisdom that she is offering to the youth in summer camp.


If you have created a space for young minds to journey
Then you are fulfilled
If you have helped guide the youth to a place of safety and enlightenment
Then the honor is yours
If you have inspired the creativity in latent souls
Then you are the lightening rod
If you have helped soothe a bruised heart
Then you are the healer
If you have helped the young grow beyond their own selves
You are our sacred guide
If you have brought strangers together as friends and comrades
Then you are indeed mother goddess
Birthing
A better world for us all
Medase

Monday, June 16, 2008

On Current Economic Challenges

Greetings Friends/Comrades,
It has been a long time. Since I last posted the dire economic straits, have gotten even more dread and not just for the captains of industry and the mega corporations, who we see crying the blues in the corporate media everyday and then some. Indeed one could be excused for concluding that the major victims of this economic meltdown are the rich and powerful and that the common citizen caused the crisis by greed and risk taking, manifested in the fashionable reason for all current capitalist problems...the sub-prime market.
Well to me there are several factors that figure in this equation. Firstly the proposal that it is the inevitable outcome of a system driven by the principle of ever increasing profit and demand, that is coming apart on its own inherent contradictions.
Secondly the world has been experiencing this global war on terror that is extracting from humanity, particularly the Iraqi people, a terrible price for the imperial pursuits of the militarily dominant, global power. The economic costs of this war is a factor not normally included when the popular media, seeks to address the problems of the global market we suffer in.
In third place is the mega profits being reaped by oil barons from the astronomic rise of oil/gas prices, driven by the knock on effects of the war and the inability of the hallowed marketplace to balance that conundrum or maybe even desire to put a brake on rising prices. After all economic suffering for some adds up to huge profit for others.
My main thought this morning is that the rising cost of energy, transportation, housing, food and other staples of life, is having a devastating effect on working peoples lives and raising the question about the cost of working. Some are already finding that it is costing an obscene amount of money to actually get to work, even as the traditional benefits of pension, health, vacation and the like continue to shrink.
Well I don't think it all has to be doom and gloom. At the end of the day several sectors of society were already struggling, even when the economy was doing better. Now we may find it more appealing to look to our comrades and friends as we seek to address the economic challenges that face us. Indeed just on the level of transportation and purchasing or even growing food, it might be of significant benefit to revisit the option of a collective process as we work to improve the conditions of life and living in these times. Maybe it time to think, act, work and live in cooperative, collective communities, where we produce what we need and consume what we produce.
Peace
Sizwe