2013 I wrote this post after attending my first Black Students Union meeting, with a minority group of students of the university I attended in the USA. The conversation was interesting and issues that the African Americans community are freely and radically speaking about today, were those we spoke about in enclosed rooms and among ourselves. I decided that I wanted to share this post, untouched and unedited, as it were in 2013 when i first wrote it. With increasing unrest of race and social issues for brown skinned people in America, this post is just as relevant now as it was then.
Post:
Today I went to the Black Student Union
meeting at Bellarmine University. Today the topic of discussion was "What is Black Culture?" A very
intriguing question. I think no one can really define what black culture
is because culture is so diluted, culture is determined by different elements
of different places people live in. Culture can never really be definite
because of all these elements that contribute to it. It's more like the domino
effect, once touched by another element it causes change to the original
element. So what can you attribute to culture if you can never really fully
define it? Being South African, I find that we have it much easier, because we
have the privilege of having African traditions and having African culture.
What is the difference? Traditions are practices that belong to your tribe or
family and have been part of your ancestral linage, so each African
culture/tribe will have their own tradition. Where as in African culture, that
is an identity that unites us, influenced by all the different tribe and
cultures we have.
I feel like African American still carry around some anger, anger against slavery and against their own. I asked a few questions in the meeting just to find out more about how they feel and how they are treated as citizens. It was interesting to find out that the youth have so much to say, but I don't ever see any youth movements in the US that are highly publicized, but yet they have so much to say and what they are saying are things that need to be heard. The youth have such great ideas and visions for their country and for their communities, but there are so discouraged. The young people I met today are young African American leaders. I feel like they don't believe in themselves enough to think they make a deference and these are the kind of young people the government needs to motivate. If you can get a nation to start thinking of ways to improve their lives and the lives of their people and communities, you get a whole nation of Obamas in every black community in America.
The topic became more elaborate when we went into how African Americans look down on each other or have negative views of each other. That is something that i find common between African American and South Africans, in SA black people have a distorted ideas and images of each other. Jealousy and strife is a common thing. It’s funny how in both cultures you expect the black person (or coloured) to do something wrong and when your expectations are met, you throw around words against them. I feel like you get what you expect. Why can black people never be happy for each other? When one sees someone moving up in life they have to pull them down either with words or crime against them.
It is still horrible how the only people that are portrayed as the most dangerous or bad are black people. I decided to pull out some FBI stats on crime in the USA to see how true it is that the African Americans are the highest in crime in the country: (the table is below this article).
I will not comment on the stats on the table but I would like people to look at them and see how true or not these pre-conceived ideas and images of African American people are.
This is also for African Americans to stop portraying themselves as a culture that is not one hundred true of themselves. What people see on TV and in music videos, is what people expect you them to be. I know coming to the States I had my own idea of African Americans, but these are conceptions put in us by what they allow television to portray about them.
It is so difficult being an African American actor in Hollywood, because most of the movie roles they are cast in portray them in a light they are trying to get away from. In order for this culture to step out of the light they have been pushed in, is by not accepting roles that make mockeries of their culture. There are enough African Americans in American television to make a difference. In fact some of the most powerful women in the world are African American Michelle Obama and Ursula Burns. I pulled out more woman in media and in business in the USA, Oprah Winfrey, Beyoncé, and Rosalind Brewer. There are so many powerful voice behind the voices of African American people. The most powerful man in the world in an African American man and President of the most powerful country in the world.
African Americans have
so much cultural challenges, from within their own black community and the
outside.I feel like African American still carry around some anger, anger against slavery and against their own. I asked a few questions in the meeting just to find out more about how they feel and how they are treated as citizens. It was interesting to find out that the youth have so much to say, but I don't ever see any youth movements in the US that are highly publicized, but yet they have so much to say and what they are saying are things that need to be heard. The youth have such great ideas and visions for their country and for their communities, but there are so discouraged. The young people I met today are young African American leaders. I feel like they don't believe in themselves enough to think they make a deference and these are the kind of young people the government needs to motivate. If you can get a nation to start thinking of ways to improve their lives and the lives of their people and communities, you get a whole nation of Obamas in every black community in America.
The topic became more elaborate when we went into how African Americans look down on each other or have negative views of each other. That is something that i find common between African American and South Africans, in SA black people have a distorted ideas and images of each other. Jealousy and strife is a common thing. It’s funny how in both cultures you expect the black person (or coloured) to do something wrong and when your expectations are met, you throw around words against them. I feel like you get what you expect. Why can black people never be happy for each other? When one sees someone moving up in life they have to pull them down either with words or crime against them.
It is still horrible how the only people that are portrayed as the most dangerous or bad are black people. I decided to pull out some FBI stats on crime in the USA to see how true it is that the African Americans are the highest in crime in the country: (the table is below this article).
I will not comment on the stats on the table but I would like people to look at them and see how true or not these pre-conceived ideas and images of African American people are.
This is also for African Americans to stop portraying themselves as a culture that is not one hundred true of themselves. What people see on TV and in music videos, is what people expect you them to be. I know coming to the States I had my own idea of African Americans, but these are conceptions put in us by what they allow television to portray about them.
It is so difficult being an African American actor in Hollywood, because most of the movie roles they are cast in portray them in a light they are trying to get away from. In order for this culture to step out of the light they have been pushed in, is by not accepting roles that make mockeries of their culture. There are enough African Americans in American television to make a difference. In fact some of the most powerful women in the world are African American Michelle Obama and Ursula Burns. I pulled out more woman in media and in business in the USA, Oprah Winfrey, Beyoncé, and Rosalind Brewer. There are so many powerful voice behind the voices of African American people. The most powerful man in the world in an African American man and President of the most powerful country in the world.
"I enjoyed the meeting and i had a
lot of fun, thanks guys and great food."
Table 43 A the table is from: http://www.fbi.gov/about-us/cjis/ucr/crime-in-the-u.s/2011/crime-in-the-u.s.-2011/tables/table-43
Offense charged
|
Total arrests
|
|||||||||
Total
|
White
|
Black
|
||||||||
TOTAL
|
9,499,725
|
6,578,133
|
2,697,539
|
|||||||
Murder and nonnegligent
manslaughter
|
8,341
|
4,000
|
4,149
|
|||||||
Forcible rape
|
14,611
|
9,504
|
4,811
|
|||||||
Robbery
|
82,436
|
35,443
|
45,827
|
|||||||
Aggravated assault
|
305,220
|
194,981
|
102,597
|
|||||||
Burglary
|
227,899
|
151,934
|
72,244
|
|||||||
Larceny-theft
|
977,743
|
670,768
|
281,197
|
|||||||
Motor vehicle theft
|
50,902
|
32,575
|
17,250
|
|||||||
Arson
|
8,965
|
6,479
|
2,302
|
|||||||
Violent crime2
|
410,608
|
243,928
|
157,384
|
|||||||
Property crime2
|
1,265,509
|
861,756
|
372,993
|
|||||||
Other assaults
|
952,421
|
625,330
|
304,083
|
|||||||
Forgery and counterfeiting
|
53,791
|
35,239
|
17,695
|
|||||||
Fraud
|
127,664
|
84,919
|
40,621
|
|||||||
Embezzlement
|
12,454
|
8,155
|
4,032
|
|||||||
Stolen property; buying, receiving,
possessing
|
71,727
|
47,434
|
23,191
|
|||||||
Vandalism
|
182,482
|
132,850
|
45,055
|
|||||||
Weapons; carrying, possessing, etc.
|
117,820
|
68,453
|
47,515
|
|||||||
Prostitution and commercialized
vice
|
44,090
|
23,555
|
19,227
|
|||||||
Sex offenses (except forcible rape
and prostitution)
|
52,891
|
38,422
|
13,189
|
|||||||
Drug abuse violations
|
1,171,866
|
783,564
|
371,248
|
|||||||
Gambling
|
6,507
|
1,937
|
4,351
|
|||||||
Offenses against the family and
children
|
87,586
|
56,973
|
28,183
|
|||||||
Driving under the influence
|
924,210
|
788,175
|
111,480
|
|||||||
Liquor laws
|
380,663
|
312,106
|
51,446
|
|||||||
Disorderly conduct
|
447,201
|
281,531
|
153,840
|
|||||||
Vagrancy
|
22,375
|
12,989
|
8,794
|
|||||||
All other offenses (except traffic)
|
2,693,823
|
1,794,893
|
837,095
|
|||||||
1,150
|
634
|
506
|
||||||||
Curfew and loitering law violations1 Because of rounding, the percentages may not add
to 100.0.
|
this is great post!
ReplyDeletegreetings from jakarta
best regards,
ruanguji