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August 08, 2003Black AugustThis Sunday August 10th the Malcolm X Grassroots Movement will hold its 6th annual Black August concert here in NY: Black August: A celebration of Hip Hop and our Freedom Fighters is a project of the Malcolm X Grassroots Movement, which strives to support the global development of Hip Hop culture by facilitating exchanges between international communities where Hip Hop is a vital part of youth culture, and by promoting awareness about the social and political issues that affect these youth communities. Our goal is to bring culture and politics together and to allow them to naturally evolve into a unique Hip Hop consciousness that informs our collective struggle for a more just, equitable and human world. If you tune into WBAI right now, you can hear more info on Black August from Rise Up Radio, our stations weekly program for and by youth activists. There also may be an artist or two from the concert appearing on our show this week, but one never knows what will happen on a Saturday night. Comments
Zimbabwe is under attack April 25, 2004 How’s it? Le kae? Kungani? Yebo! Eta! I am so outrageously rejuvenated. From the moment I walked into the Zim immigration office I felt like I was in a different world and indeed I was. Zimbabweans are friendly and they love Africans no matter where you are from. They have big heats yo. They flow like liquid chocolate and are fine as hell especially the girls. My body is in pain from dancing so much. There is every type of club you could imagine in the city and they are so packed you gotta dance cuz everyone else is dancing. Went to Zim for Independence Day. nO the way to the border I picked up this white guy, who was hitch hiking because I was alone and wanted someone to drive with. I didn’t talk to him much, but he was OK. He was attempting to make it to DRC, but I doubt he will make it there once he encounters all the obstacles along the way like so many other white people I have met trying to be arrogant and courageous enough to enter war zones do. The immigration guys stamped my passports and issued my vehicle license and insurance with only a smile and raised fist though my papers we out of order and I had come and gone back to Botswana with only being half checked in, and with an old stamp….. Proceeded to customs where they did not even look at my passport, but demanded that this man get out of the car, searched every bag he had and questioned the validity of his passport. I laughed as I drove off, was speeding and didn’t have my seatbelt on when I encountered another road block about 2 kms away. So I tried to sneak and put my seatbelt on but got caught big time. The cop said, “You are trying to put your seatbelt on as you drive up. You think we don’t notice. We could tell by how the car was driving.” and he rolled his eyes. Funny. Made it to the gate… had no Zim Dollars… and an American passport. But the guards, a woman and two men let me in for the regional African fee which is 10 dollars instead of 60 dollars and did not make me pay for the kids who are both over the non paying age. They have tourist police now so the herds of guys who beg you to buy their stuff don’t surround you and take you for a ride, so I was grooving. Ran around the falls with the kids who were as amazed as you would imagine one should be when seeing one of the Seven Wonders of the World. It’s only that I had been there before. We were met by mostly other Africans who had clearly come from the cities with their kids, Unlike a tourist destination in Botswana that would be amassed with white people only. Met some monkeys who just hung out with us and let us sit right next to them and watch them clean each other. Left the falls feelin like I had been to Jah’s exclusive spa in paradise greeted with smiles, laughs, raised fists and , Yebo sistah’s as well as come talk to me’s. Rolled my eyes and yelled back and forth to the guys selling endless statues behind the iron fence, until they finally came up with a good price and the guards laughed. Was feeling intensely groovy after dropping off the white guy and having no one but me and the girls to adventure with in Zim on independence day weekend. Jumped in my car and headed toward town where I wanted to get some Zim dollars incase I needed more gas on the way to Bulawayo even though I had extra in my reserve tank. Remembered that I was going to Bulawayo to see this guy named Bob who was one of the founders of the Chicago chapter of the Black Panthers speak at Middlens university and to see this other brother from Chicago… Weird don’t you think. To cross the border and hook up with some Chicagoans in Zim, who were black panthers no less and on their way to a liberation conference in Harare. All on a whim because I was sick of the drunken bush weirdo, soldier, who made me drive him to Vic Falls to see a bush doctor about a pot at the end of the rainbow. I was grooven, feelin IRIE!!! Because every town I passed through there were people on the streets yellin….. Somethin….. because I don’t understand Ndebele or Shona past what’s up, and throwin up their fist trying to get you to stop and party with them and indeed some of the folks in front of me had done that. Through mountains and sweet little valley villages against the back drop of wicked rock faces and huge old baobabs. Food growing in everyone’s yard and the smell of roasted maize everywhere in the wind. It was beautiful. Felt like I was in church. No longer dodging elephants, but dodging people who were wandering that thick, thick, like you cant see your own hand, bush. I felt like that song “You gave me strength when I was weak” was about Zimbabwe. Because at least Zimbabwe has had the courage to stand up for us and love us no mater how light or dark or far removed we are. At least when I am in Zimbabwe I feel special and precious because I am African and my fathers lived and died within her soils. At least, they have the courage and the strength to stand up for who we are, and the right to be left alone and to live by our own terms with respect and dignity. Because Zimbabweans love themselves and know who they are, know about the past so that they know who they can be and will be. Just because they have the courage to say enough is enough and be true to who they are instead of endlessly trying to be someone else’s version of who we are. And it has made a huge difference though even they may get discouraged and feel that things are not better. Things are better because when you walk into a store in Zimbabwe there is no white store owner standing in the background ready to threaten people in and instant and arrogantly walking around as if Africa only exists because they had the power to tame her-who-has-not-been-tamed. Where someone like me feels suddenly at home because there is a whole country of people who are in love with themselves and with other Africans, there are all kinds of intellectuals to talk to, business owner’s architects, philosophers, historians, engineers, etc. Where you can not tell that the white people who are there are so white because they walk around holding hands with Africans and not trying to be noticed for their whiteness. Where little old Chinese ladies greet Shona rastas like they grew up in the same home and you meet Muslim Indians who are trying to gain spirituality through bush doctors. Zimbabwe is not land of , “White people should be scared!!!” No Zim is land of “Get Real!! And respect each other”. Not that Zim is perfect, that people don’t get robbed and that there is not racism, but you will notice the difference immediately when you cross into Zim. Hugely Fat white Borers will not be standing at the tourist area staring you down and whaling around. Nope! And that is a blessing for all Africans, to say the very least. Store owners will not roll their eyes at you and watch you as if you are stupid cattle come to feed at the only available source because there are endless sources in Zim because everyone is a business man and good at their trade. I feel like I went back to the US for a few days when it comes to the type of people I met in Zim. Zim is cool. I think I want to try and organize a show there so that people can see a different picture of her. What about the Next Black August show, why can't it be in Zim? I can’t stop writing because there is a story here. A story about what we are all looking for but feel we cannot find, yet it is right there. We are all just too scared to find it because maybe it won’t be there really. This is why there are so many fairy tales written about seeking something magical but having to face your fears, which are ultimately only what we have constructed within our own incomplete understanding. Why that dude was inspired to write the Never Ending Story, where they were fighting the “Nothing”, which was nothing other than our own inability to dream and make them come true. Here I am a living testimony to all those who say that Zim is a no go zone, as if there is a bloody war at hand. I am a single mom with two really beautiful young girls and I just drove across half of Zimbabwe until ten o-clock at night alone in search of home. Not only was I not met with any violence or crime, but rather I was met by a warmth it is hard to find in this modern world. I Stopped in all kinds of small villages along the way where people enjoy a better quality of life than in Botswana, which is so special to the west these days. No masses of starving people. One blind man and his friend who were begging for money, but less noticeable than the homeless people on the streets of any town or city in the US because everyone can visit his rural place and pick maize and mangos if he or she desires. Smart kids who can speak English as good as mine yet only studied it for a few years. So I made it to my friend’s house late and parked my car in the parking lot like one usually does in any city so that it will not get stolen or messed with. Found out that my friend is a founding member of the All-African Peoples Revolutionary Party. I can ask him any question about politics or development and he can help me. It was kinda cool. I finally got clarity on a lot of issues through a lot of people in Zim, from students to business men and house wives. There are three or four main arguments against President Mugabe presented by white people who are afraid of Zim as I meet them in passing or as work associates. The first is: If he were really concerned with righting wrongs and appropriate land reform, why did he wait so long to repossess farms? They say that he is just trying to get re-elected because he was on his way out. My response is: Would we agree that the best president is someone who does what the people want? What the people feel is good for them and their country and will benefit generations to come? If we can agree to that, then look at what Mugabe has done. He did not implement land reform at a time when he did not have the support of the people and when people did not see the importance. He implemented land reform when the very educated majority of Zimbabweans were calling for land reform. He did it when he had the support of the people. And this is what the Zimbabweans I have asked have said. One must understand that in Africa, the common individual does not watch TV everyday. They live in villages and spend their time tilling fields and monitoring livestock. Thus, it took a while for everyone to understand the importance of land reform. In addition, protest began to occur against white former colonist as a result of many injustices which Zimbabweans suffered at the hand of racist white farmers. Mugabe instituted land reform at a time when Zimbabweans were fed up. Full Stop. The second is: What about how Mugabe killed so many of his own people? This refers to the conflict which occurred with the minority Ndebele people in the South West. I agree that it is shameful the way the Ndebele suffered, but after only twenty years of independence the country became split and there was basically a civil war in Zimbabwe at a critical time in the countries development. Some people chose to side with the whites who stayed in Zim after independence and formed a separate political party which opposed the ZANU-PF. Like any other leader and like president Bush continues to do when faced with no clear enemy, Mugabe defended his party and his position. There are whites who still own farms and still run businesses in Zim because they did not oppose the ZANU-PF. It was a war like those which have occurred in every country that could not settle its disputes at the negotiating table. It is unfortunate and deserves no praise like no other war does including World War Two which supposedly liberated the Jews and saved us from communism. Nevertheless, it was simply a war the ZANU won, like the allied Forces were victorious in WWII. One cannot complain for having been on the wrong side when you chose what you thought was worth dying for, and everyone knew the stakes. I am afraid to talk about politics in Africa for that reason, but ultimately we make a choice and bear the consequences. It was not an ethnic battle, because there were Ndebele who were part of ZANU at the time and still Ndebele ministers. Some of the ZANU’s biggest supporters are Ndebele. It just happened that it was the mostly Ndebele who sided with most of the whites because Mugabe is Shona and not Ndebele and historically the two do not trust one another. Still I have many, many Ndebele friends who agree with Mugabe despite the civil war and despite what occurred. It is my prayer that Zimbabwe will not suffer any more wars or anymore blood shed over the development of their country. It is my hope and prayer that some how those who lost people in the war can recover and begin to trust and love their fellow country men though it will be a long long hard road, that the wounds will begin to heal as Zimbabwe grows into a fresh new nation of empowered individuals and that everyone will understand and appreciate the monument that Zimbabwe is for all African people who dream of a truly free and liberated Africa that supports, and encourages love and respect for Africa as a mentally and physically free and strong nation able to create a truly modern tomorrow, where we are not driven by capitalism, raised up to a false sense of comfort and security on the suffering and belittlement of others –namely our farmers and our bushmen. Hopefully, we will realize that suffering is only worth it if we change the world for our children. It is only countries like Zimbabwe, Cuba and Libya that have stood up to the west and said enough is enough. Which brings me to a third argument which is always presented by those who say that Mugabe is not a legitimate president. Some will argue that the UK paid Zimbabwe to purchase land from white farmer in order to return it to indigenous people. But the truth is that the UK began paying reparations and backed out on the deal when they felt it was appropriate before issuing the full amount. They say that Mugabe spent the money on infrastructure and paid people off. My argument is first and foremost that the President of Zimbabwe does not have any obligation to do what the UK wants him to do with money they owe Zimbabwe. Excluding the fact that there is no amount of money which could repay the ill done by colonist to the people of Zimbabwe or any other group of Africans. The whole world has been systematically brain washed to disrespect Africans and desensitized to brutality against us. If Mugabe had taken the reparations money and bought farms with it the west would have complained that he used the funds to give members of the ZANU-PF land and no one else. This brings me to another issue commonly raised. Mugabe is only giving land to those who are high up in the ZANU-PF!: So I want to ask you, If you yourself organized a resistance party with a group of other devoted individuals who would you allow to reap the benefits of that struggle first. Would it be those who fought the hardest? Those who risked their lives from the beginning when there was no one but just the few of you to defend your position, or the man on the street who would have just as easily taken up arms against you if he felt the opposition was stronger. The fact of the matter, no matter how you want to look at it, is that very few of us have the courage to believe in something and fight for it. We go along with what is happening whether we like it or not because it is easier or our lives are too full of hardships for us to think about anything other than putting food on our tables. We pray that someone will come along and be like Jesus Christ,, but no one has so far. Today, Zimbabwe does not need another revolution. It needs to work toward increased transparency, true democracy unlike in the US where there is nothing other than one party with two different faces and a population of millions who know what it means to respect people for their differences, because in fact America is the entire world all come to meet under the ability to be who they wanna be when they wanna be it, whether it is an orthodox or a devil worshiper, controlled by a government that only portrays the image of the good old boy and apple pie as it’s defense for how George Bush won a clearly tampered with election. Where only George Bush can put those who oppose him in jail for being terrorist –terrorizing his oil regime -and we watch as if drugged, maybe scared that he will slaughter us like he slaughtered them, so we pretend that we are on his side. But does that make hell any more bearable, or does it make it worse. Whether he is perfect or not, a ruthless killer, racist because some white due had the arrogance to sever one of his limbs instead of killing a hero like he deserves, and is an alcoholic or not, the hearts and minds of some of my people are not being raped and pillaged then left in a waste land where you don’t want to look at the apprehension and fear in the eyes of people who believe the stereo type media has made of something that was very tender to you. At least, in Zimbabwe most of it will be mine whether she and I share the same mitochondria or not, she will first respect me, then love me, that’s why she will be there. The fourth issue that people raise is: Mugabe is a Dictator. He did not win the elections fairly. I raised this issue, not that I felt it mattered because after all Saudi Arabia has a dictator and I do agree it is up to the people to complain by any means necessary. Still, he shouldn’t be a dictator because then you are being oppressive…. My friend who is living in Zim now said that the first person he talked to as they were counting votes was someone from the opposition party who was managing one of the voting stations and he said that the elections were fair and that most people thought the elections were fair though there were some who reported cases of fixing votes or not allowing people to vote. Thus, what can we logically say? That of course in a relatively new country where it is hard to enforce total transparency it is reasonable that some people will be corrupt just like it has been proven that a substantial proportion of Florida was deterred from voting or were led to vote incorrectly in an election where individuals came out with the intent to vote against the current US president –what’s his stupid face, DevilBoy! What most people who do not live in Zimbabwe do not know is that Mugabe has hinted that he will step down soon because he is very old. This could be a dissertation if I were a political science student, but I would just like to add briefly, that every country which is strong today has gone through a period of dictatorship or worse yet colonialism. The UK and America are arguing over the atrocities committed in developing countries yet fail to account for or even acknowledge their own injustices which continue into today. Australia and the Americas are the colonies that the UK has succeeded in subduing and enslaving both mentally and physically. So much so that Americans boast of having no colonies yet that is the very essence of what America is or should we do away with Columbus day and rewrite our history books as we rehabilitate our inner city youth as readily as elitist boast of rehabilitating wildlife, because it aint really so hard. The truth is we are all so accustomed to being controlled and led by fear that we are afraid to dream of a better world and better selves, we are afraid of being disappointed. We are only disappointed because we were expecting just exactly what we dreamed and we got something much much better. I have done some experimental testing with my dreams and, when they come true they are always better than I could have dreamed because life is all those cool things we cannot dream of , only we chose to live in hell. Zimbabweans can believe that there country is going bad or they can come to Botswana and see that the only tomatoes we get on the street are still green and have sores and bruises and that we only have one type of Morogo/Morenyo/Greens because that is all that will grow right now, and that the streets of Zim are rockin with fat nice vegetables twice the size of the ones we get in Bots. That if food were cheap, (which I am sure it is for locals) and accommodations are as they are with guys paying 20 US dollars for a two bedroom flat, and less than Batswana pay for phone services, Zimbabwe will be ok. Botswana may have a better economy, but things are expensive and people live nicer in Zim. Folks can save up their money to buy nice clothes and rebuild into a truly modern country. It is my hope that Zimbabwe will be strong enough when Mugabe goes. That it will not be immediately overrun with foreign corporations come to offer meager wages to locals for jobs which will place them in someone else’s world according to someone else’s understanding of things. Yeah, Zimbabwe was inspiring and people love to dance.
April 29, 2004 How can I believe that? When I think about the people in my life, they are not disempowered, we do have the power to change the image of Zimbabwe in the media. All our musicians out there who sing about freedom and love can take a stand for Zimbabwe. People can visit her and see that there is no one starving on the streets and Mugabe is only attempting to make his home a strong free place. He is the only one who has stood up and called the Commonwealth on the fact that they violated their own constitution to suit their own needs. For, it was not all of the member nations that voted to put sanction on Zim, it was the UK and Australia, the only two white nations that are members of the commonwealth. The truth of the Commonwealth is that it is not run according to unanimous votes cast by all the member nations, it is a means for the UK to keep its old colonies in check –i.e. to keep them colonies. We can stay in America and believe the hype, but in the end we will be no better than those who have tried to oppress Africans if we do nothing and fail to stand up. Zimbabwe is only suffering because of the sanctions put on her and because of the false image the displaced whites are trying to portray, displaced because of their choice to oppose liberation efforts in Zimbabwe, not because Mugabe is abusing his people. ( I just read a Newsweek article, where they talked about how Britain tried o colonize Iraq, but when they found it was too difficult resorted to putting a few of Iraq’s elite into power because they thought they could be “trusted”- i.e. controlled. They are upset because this tactic has not worked in Zim and actually the people of Zim elected someone that they felt they could trust) If you are a truly objective person then you must look at the case of Zimbabwe from your own perspective. If someone came into a country where your ancestors had been for hundreds of thousands of years, someone came in and imposed laws of land ownership, enslaved, massacred and placed the people of your country in a subclass, what would you do? More simply, what would Americans do if the Arab world overthrew the US government and placed Christians in a working class, only allowed for American youth to be educated at a substandard level, made it legal to beat them and exploit them as slaves, what would Americans do after fighting a war for liberation. I do not even want to write about the atrocities that would occur once Americans gained revenge. Take a look at what is happening all over the world at this very moment and you can see how Americans would react. Two entire countries have been bombed, leaving war to linger and fester like a wound. And Americans exclaim of being justified because after all they are searching for some unknown people who destroyed two buildings in one of their cites. It is insignificant that Zimbabwe should ask white farmer to give up one of their farms if they have more than one. That they refused to follow the law of the country they live in is their own fault. Though I think it ridiculous to ask a woman to wear a veil, in a country where it is a law, damn straight I would have that veil on. By white farmers refusing to obey the law they were openly refusing to concede to Zimbabwe’s independence. They are openly saying that they feel they have no obligation to follow anyone’s law other than the UK’s , the former colonial state. Zimbabwe is doing all the things any other country is doing to fight corruption and violence. In the US there is no hope of fighting either because both are so ingrained in our society that we no longer see it as crime or corruption –I have heard people call it survival of the fittest. In American, the most ruthless corrupt individuals boast of their untouchable status. This is what many people have done in Zim by refusing to comply with land reform. I just sat around my living room floor eating dinner with some Batswana friends who were talking about going to Zambia. They will not even drive their cars to Zambia or South Africa because of the crime, yet said that Zim is perfectly safe. Said that Zim cops are the best cops and criminals have a hard time getting by them. We saw this in the international news, which I am sure Americans were kept from hearing about by all those media tycoons, owned and run with oil money, who are pulling our presidential strings; Mugabe caught the US’s super secret assassination coalition sent to cause political unrest in Guinea Bissau, (sent to stage another coupe in Giuinea Bissau, which I am sure they would have blamed on Africans, because after all we are too tribalistic) and I hope he hangs them for all of the children whose lives they planned to ruin by causing yet another coup in a small African country where they thought no one was watching and no one would care. But you know what? Someone does care! And Africans rejoiced at finally having the evidence to prove that America and other western countries are in the business of destabilizing Africa to gain cheaper resources. Africa rejoiced because of Mugabe! They do not control that much of the media in Africa yet, but they will if we let them and then the veils will be over all of our eyes. It aint no different than what Bob said, you think you’re in heaven, but you’re living in hell. Zimbabwe’s cities are more modern than our because they were built more recently –it’s common sense. The streets are clean because there is nothing more refreshing than a floor you can eat off of after two kilometers in the African bush. People sweep, not only the streets in Zimbabwe, but the dirt as well. I just do not understand. If you want to start a business, come to Africa and pick one. There will be a market here because there are people here and everyone needs things no matter how poor they are; and there are always rich people where there are poor people. If people are scared of something, they should be scared of what is happening in America. They could gas half the country and convince the other half that it was terrorist, whilst it was them… the same ones we think are protecting us. It is not about white or black, it is about life, about allowing for true freedom. Greed makes people think of subjugating each other. There is no need for greed on a planet that has plenty. If we all express a tiny shred of the courage that Zimbabweans have we could actually make the world a better place. Funny that everyone is afraid to say something about their suffering for fear of having to suffer. The only reason that Americans think they are not suffering is because the media makes it look as if everyone else is suffering so that we do not notice our own. Yeah, Africa is rich that is why they want to continue the oppression of Africans, so that in the end they will have control over us and ultimately the swindling of our resources. Otherwise why are they even here and why don’t they leave. ZIMBABWE IS UNDER ATTACK, plain and simple. 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