Showing posts with label The Souls of Black Folk. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Souls of Black Folk. Show all posts

Thursday, March 30, 2017

Black Politics in Cleveland, Part II

Roundabout musings on black power, black potency, black excellence
The Souls of Black Folk in the Twenty-First Century

In today’s first post we tried to distill 140 years of black political activity in Greater Cleveland to provide some context for the current deplorable state of our political affairs, where we have more representation than ever, but seemingly less power, and most certainly less public service. Already we have heard directly from several of our readers, mostly in a positive vein, although one — Cleveland NAACP president Mike Nelson — called up to dispute our characterization of his organization as “stirring”.

The prompt for that first post was the euphoria we felt from attending two events the day before yesterday. The first was a program at Case Western Reserve University, hosted by its Weatherhead School of Management. It was a high caliber discussion of macro economic trends delivered by Michael Jeans with such clarity that even nonfinancial initiates could assimilate, followed by a discussion of opportunity structures for businesses and the traps for the unwary that surround those opportunities. What made it special in addition to its first rate quality were two things: a) knowing that two African American bankers — Michael Jeans of JumpStart’s Growth Opportunity Partners subsidiary, and Ndeda Letson of Citizens Bank — were involved in every detail of the event, and that it was carried out to perfection, even to the catering, and b) it was inclusive.

May I digress for a moment? Roger Wilkins earlier this week. He was an unassuming black man of great intellect and integrity, a civil rights champion of national repute, and a path-breaker in many ways. From obituaries [Washington Post[1]; New York Times[2]] I learned, unsurprisingly, that he was in some ways tortured by the pressures he was forced to bear as a black man who came of age in mid-century America. The pressures were by no means unique to him. While they have dissipated to a great degree for many black people, especially those with some economic means, they are nonetheless known to virtually every adult African American of a certain age. President Obama alluded to this fact more than once, although he tended to do so obliquely — precisely because those pressures remain so feral in American society and polity.  (If you doubt that, glance at the White House.)

For Wilkins, who worked at the highest “blue chip” levels of American government and society, the pressure cooker was often too much; he had difficulty reconciling the privileged arenas in which he worked and socialized with his notion of blackness and his understanding and empathy for the less fortunate for whom he was a fierce and relentless advocate.

There are moments in life where the twoness of being African in America, so peerlessly expressed by DuBois[3], disappears because you find yourself in a place where even the micro-aggressions have faded away. That’s what true inclusion can feel like. And I thought how Wilkins would have loved to have been where I was both Tuesday morning and Tuesday evening, in settings where excellence and ethnicity combined in a way that could make grown men cry for joy. Black folk, and the woke part of our nation, got a taste of that during the Obama years, and we ain’t never gonna forget or quit trying to reproduce it wherever we can.

So Tuesday night I had two events to cover, and apologies to the Black Professionals Association Charitable Foundation [BPACF] which was having its annual meeting and announcing to the world that Erskine Cade [“Ernie”] was its 2017 Black Professional of the Year [an inspired choice, we think], I never got there, which means I also missed the tribute BPACF was scheduled to give honoring the life of Charleyse Pratt, a very accomplished sister who died earlier this month.

Truth is, I had barely walked in the door of The Lofts suite at 40th St. and Payne Ave. for the local launch of a political action committee when I knew something special was going down.

To begin with, the room was full and the vibe was warm, natural. Healthy [that no micro-aggression thing again. You can feel its presence or absence in the atmosphere, like extreme humidity.] I saw people whose presence surprised me; they weren’t they types who usually attend political affairs. The crowd skewed millennial but all generations were there, Gen Xers and Baby Boomers and whatever fills the gaps. And significantly, there was a total absence of that segment of the political crowd whose hands are always out, looking for the hustle.

[By way of contrast, I remember when Gov. Kasich came to town a few years ago to tout his administration’s success in achieving the state’s set-aside goals for the first time in history. It was indeed a signal achievement in which he took justifiable pride — “just do it”, I think he said. That accomplishment was an example of what it takes when the intent to be inclusive is real: leadership and commitment from the top, and the willingness to hold subordinates accountable for performance.

There was a huge crowd of folk at that Kasich photo op, but even apart from the hoopty-do of a gubernatorial road show, the vibe that day was different. That particular mostly black crowd had a different flavor than either of Tuesday’s events. The people who hustled over to see and meet the Governor or his posse, to get in the pictures, to secure the right contact, put a chill in the air for this reporter. You could sense they were there, figuratively, with hands out, palms up, grins at the ready.

(That sounds harsh, but then this site is called The Real Deal.)

I think I just broke my promise that this was going to be a 100% positive report, and I know I have buried the lead, which is that



[1] From a young age, he once wrote, he was compelled to spend his life “blasting through doors that white people didn’t want to open.” Mr. Wilkins said he lived at times with a painful duality as an African American who had risen to positions of leverage in white-controlled halls of power.
He felt an obligation to serve the black community, but he also desired an identity independent from it — “my own personal exemption,” he said. … He spent periods of his life at the Ford Foundation, where he awarded grants from its luxurious New York offices, and on the riot-ravaged streets of Detroit, where he was confronted by gun-wielding state troopers unaccustomed to encountering a black federal authority. … Intense and sensitive, Mr. Wilkins … saw himself as a microcosm of high-achieving black America at a time of limited new opportunity amid still-festering historical bigotry.

[2] Mr. Wilkins had little personal experience with discrimination. He waged war against racism from above the barricades — with political influence, jawboning, court injunctions, philanthropic grants, legislative proposals, and commentaries on radio and television and in newspapers, magazines and books.
Outwardly, he was a successful, popular black man with more white acquaintances than black friends. … As he rose to prominence, he came to regard himself as a token black in institutions and social circles that were overwhelmingly white and privileged. It troubled him deeply. In [a] memoir, he acknowledged years of unease with his blackness, of trying to live up to the expectations of whites.
[3] “One ever feels his twoness, — an American, a Negro; two souls, two thoughts, two unreconciled strivings; two warring ideals in one dark body, whose dogged strength alone keeps it from being torn asunder.” — W. E. B. DuBois, The Souls of Black Folks, [1903]
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Tuesday, February 04, 2014

Third Grade Tests may be trap door to Third World Living Standards; Education in America with K D Hale

W. E. B. DuBois famously wrote in his Forethought to The Souls of Black Folk [1903] that “the problem of the Twentieth Century is the problem of the color line.” Half a century later, in a fiftieth anniversary edition of that seminal work, he updated that prescription with an analysis that stands to define the problem of the Twenty-first Century:

… today I see more clearly than yesterday that back of the problem of race and color, lies a greater problem which both obscures and implements it: and that is the fact that so many civilized persons are willing to live in comfort even if the price of this is poverty, ignorance and disease of the majority of their fellowmen …

The issue of inequality, its causes and cures, has become increasingly a part of our national discourse. It has become an elephant too large to ignore.

Whatever the causes of this inequity, and there are multiple causes, it is hard to imagine there are any solutions that do not involve solving our nation’s public education mess.

An understanding that we must find new and different way forward through our education crisis has perhaps helped fuel the strong local interest in the discussion series focused on a new book, Reign of Error: The Hoax of the Privatization Movement and the Danger to America’s Public Schools, by Diane Ravitch. Education writer Jan Resseger has been a part of these discussions, and reported on them as well. Nearly 100 people attended the first session on January 21, 2014. Even more impressive, seventy people showed up for the second session on a day so frigid that schools all across the region were closed for the day. You can read Resseger’s captivating account of those sessions here and here.

Lead sponsors for these community book discussions have been the Heights Community Congress and the Cleveland Heights-University Heights School District. The third session is set for Wednesday, February 5 from 7-8:30PM in the Cleveland Heights High School Social Room. It will address Chapters 21-31 of the book, which focus on the role of poverty and segregation in public schools.

This is the first year of mandated “reforms” under which a startling number of area third graders will be forced to repeat the current academic year, if they fail to pass standardized test that will be given statewide in April. The fallout from this outcome is likely to be painful, and could very well have political ramifications in this gubernatorial election year.

Whether you have read the Ravitch book or not [I have yet to], whether you have school age children or not [mine are grown and gone], America’s broken system of public education affects us all. We all need to get involved in the discussion and seek solutions. Our continued failure to do so will result in a punishment far worse than a rap on the knuckles.

For more information on the community book discussion or Wednesday’s session, call 216.321.6775 or visit www.heightscongress.org.

• • •

A new weekly radio show on education issues has hit the local airwaves.  “Education in America with K. D. Hale" debuted January 22, just a day after the first community discussion session mentioned above. That first show featured Dr. Belinda Miles, provost and executive vice president at Cuyahoga Community College, Dr. Terrence Menefee, principal of Cleveland's Valley View Boys Leadership Academy, and Ms. Annisha Jeffries, youth services manager of the Cleveland Public Library.

The second week’s show featured Phillip Schwenk, principal of Max Hayes Career and Technical High School in Cleveland.   The program focused on career and technical education as a viable option for many young people, as an option to the college prep pathway that is often promoted.

This week’s show, on Wednesday, February 5th, from 6PM-7 PM, on AM 1490 WERE, will feature Dr. Julian Earls, former director of NASA Glenn Research Center. Career opportunities in the STEM arena [science, technology, engineering and math] will be a centerpiece of the program.

K. D. Hale is the show’s producer and host. Hale is executive director of early college & outreach programs at Tri-C, but the program has no affiliation with the school.

Listeners are welcome to call in during the show with questions or comments. The call in number is 216.578.1490.