Wednesday, June 26, 2013

What if Blacks ruled the World?


The other day I was listening to the artist KRS-One, a prolific and political rapper. In his song, “You Must Learn“ he goes on to educate his fans about innovative African-American leaders like Benjamin Banneker (almanac), Granville T. Woods (inventor), Eli Whitney (inventor), Lewis H. Latimer (inventor), Charles Troupe (performer) Garrett Morgan (inventor), Harriett Tubman (Abolitionist), etc. In another song called, “What is That,” he begins to rant about how African-American kids are only taught to “read, write and act,” where he compares this limited approach to “teaching white kids how to black.”  Then he begins his case in explaining our black genealogy in the following lyrics. 

Genesis chapter eleven verse ten: 
 explains the genealogy of Shem. 
Shem was a black man in Africa
. If you repeat this fact they can't laugh at ya

.

Genesis fourteen verse thirteen: 
Abraham steps on the scene. 
Being a descendant of Shem which is a fact
 means Abraham too was black

. Abraham born in the city of a black man 
Called Nimrod, grandson of Kam. 
Kam had four sons, one was named Canaan
. Here, let me do some explaining

.
Abraham was the father of Isaac. Isaac was the father of Jacob
. Jacob had twelve sons for real
 and these were the children of Israel

. According to Genesis chapter ten: 
Egyptians descended from Ham. 
Six hundred years later my brother read up
. Moses was born in Egypt



In this era black Egyptians weren't right
. They enslaved black Israelites. 
Moses had to be of the black race. 
Because he spent forty years in Pharaoh's place. 

He passed as the Pharaoh's grandson. So he had to look just like him
. Yes, my brothers and sisters take this here song
. Yo, correct the wrong.

These songs got me thinking…what would the world look today if things were reversed and ruled by blacks and how would I feel?

Since I’m a white, Latina female who grew up in an urban environment in Rochester, NY, I’d think I would be Ok with it. My mom worked for the Rochester City School District and as a family we attended lots of educational activities with other urban city kids. Puerto Ricans, African-Americans, arroz con gandules and soul music consistently surrounded me.  This was the norm for me in the mid 70’s. There was the Puerto Rican Day Parade, us kids doing the “mathematical bump” and parties with inter-racial couples with PhD’s.

I attended “The World of Inquiry,” a fully integrated, multicultural school; one of the best expeditionary learning schools in the country. However, at 10 we left the city; moved to the burbs and into a predominantly all white school. I still remember feeling out of place there, like I didn’t belong. It was exceedingly quiet, reserved and conservative. I was in culture shock and I while I adapted, I never forgot my urban roots and culture.

Back to the question….How would it be living in a world that disliked me because of my skin color?How would I overcome such obstacles and hostility at work and within society? The thought of all these feelings overwhelm me and place me back in time when we first moved to “white” suburbia.  

Over the weekend I attended a graduation ceremony for the same suburban town I was relocated too. In a crowd of 1,500 people, I was amazed to see things had not changed very much and the lack of diversity was quite stunning.  So while Adele Bovard, Superintendent of Schools (Webster, NY) bragged and stated all kinds of exemplary statistics about Thomas’ academic student achievement, I realized the glorification stems from a predominantly white student body whose parents have higher educational attainment levels. In that precise moment, I thought how this amazing high school could benefit the many minority students who continue to face under-achievement in the Rochester City School district. An environment with teachers who care and where students excel in a competitive environment; where safety is an every day occurrence and aspirations dictate the future; this environment and its conditions could reap high rewards for any student regardless of race or socio-economic status. The question that lingers for me is, can forced integration improve educational attainment levels for the students of the City of Rochester & elsewhere? A city that continues to be one of the most segregated in America.

My hope is that if we can put ourselves in another person’s shoes for a meaningful moment, we can develop a spirit of compassion, understanding and tolerance to build communities where race doesn’t matter and where opportunity for advancement exists for all.