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NYOIL



Last Updated: 11/20/2009

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Status: Single
City: STATEN ISLAND
State: NEW YORK
Country: US
Signup Date: 8/15/2006

Who Gives Kudos:


Sunday, December 07, 2008 

Current mood:  hopeful
Category: News and Politics
Statements from the State of the Black World

 

 

 

- an Op Ed by NYOIL

 


 

 

You either weren't aware or did not care ...

I was blessed with the opportunity to attend and sit on a panel for the State of the Black World Conference this year (Nov 19-23) by the Head of the IBW (Institute of the Black World) and Father of the event, Dr. Ron Daniels.  It was an incredible event that brought out some of the most respected names and the nameless in black cultural, political, educational, and social liberation leadership.  I found the experience conflicting and distressing in some aspects while being liberated and connected in others. I felt as though I gained a new perspective while learning how to reconcile some of my past issues with my elders and the generational gap that plagues us.


Having thrust myself into the forefront of conscious/political Hip Hop I find in some instances that there is an expectation that I should or would know many of the names and faces connected to the Black Liberation, black power, black theology, black cultural arts, and Civil Rights movements. But the truth is, I know more names, powers and associated origins of Super Heroes in the Marvel Universe than I do the names of the people who have shaped much of the black experience in the 20th century. My ignorance is one part victimization due to a skewered educational system that ignores--and in most cases censors--the contributions of black freedom fighters who have suffered and sacrificed in the name of reshaping the face of this country and the fate of our people. It is also however two part apathetic ignorance, an ignorance built on a lack of desire to learn about or care for the people, the places, spaces and names that have impacted my life.  And though I was warmly and well-received having made a name for myself I felt much like an outsider, disconnected from something I knew--or at least felt--i should be a part of, as if I've been deprived of some birthright.  So instead of reaching out in a way that would bridge the gap I found some of my communication came from anger.  Now anger is a product of needs not being met.  Someone isn't getting something they need (respect, space, an apology, attention..etc.)  and as they learn to resent that which refuses to supplicate them, they are learning to survive without it.  They are learning to no longer need something they've learned to resent.


Growing up without a father, I knew that feeling; trying to appreciate what extenuating circumstances must have kept him from me.  But despite what facts I could conjure in my young mind to excuse his abandonment, they could not alleviate the feeling of pain and resentment his absence created.  So, like so many other youths, I learned to not need him.  I remember when I finally met my father at 16 and to my surprise, he was well accounted for.  He was doing well, had dough and was getting married to a woman whose children he'd raised.  But what about me?  I imagine so much of the black youth feel this way about their elders...abandoned, disregarded, unimportant and when we are engaged it is as an afterthought or as an annoyance. There is an absolute disregard for HOW we have come to be who we are and a total disrespect to what we are and the real question WHY we are is totally ignored. 


So my frustration began as I interpreted my disconnection as not being apart of "the clique."  My righteous frustration was fueled by the ideal that "Black Leadership" cannot be a clique because cliques choose their membership.  Black leadership cannot be achieved through nepotism.  It cannot be handed down to a son or daughter.  It is NOT genetic.  It doesn't transfer over to your sycophants.  Black leadership must be determined by, and the inclusion into that "clique" has to be, contingent on the willingness of the individuals to do the work, make the sacrifices and put the needs of the collective before themselves.  The alphas of Black Leadership must be ever vigilant to source and recruit new talent.  Now I understand cliques, they are not a negative thing; they are a natural thing.  They generally consist of A-alikes, people that share similar theologies, ideologies, characteristics, politics and any number of things that delineate and define people... simply put, they share the same interests. 

This is most definitely true of "Black Leadership."  To see them discuss how they'd come to meet one another, years ago, how their paths crossed and crossed again like some great quilt, you realize that these aren't just "Leaders" who happen to know each other via the mantel of leadership.  No, this isn't like the fraternity of Rap where if you come out with a record or get enough fame you're instantly embraced by the community and the love is given in proportion to the love you get on the streets, radio, etc.  No, these people are FAM. These are people who have lived with one another, fought for, with and against one another, learned from, inspired, and were inspired by one another, have been friends, lovers and widows to one another.  And we're talking 40 - 50 years worth of this.  So this isn't "Sally Rottencrotch" and her cheerleaders crew that won't let you sit with them for lunch; these are people in the autumn of their years who've seen fire and rain together, whose association, whose "clique" has grown to be identified as BLACK LEADERSHIP.


So these understandings are coming to light within me. They collide and contradict one another as I try to find a middle ground. This middle ground that could act as a bridge between the generations. A bridge so desperately needed.  

 

I saw the elements of this bridge in the loving selflessness of Sonia Sanchez.  During the panel I spoke on, she opted out of resuming what had been scheduled at a second part to her panel because she wanted to hear what the youth had to say.  She wanted to understand our paradigm and connect to that.  She wanted to listen and be taught by our voices. Haki Madhubuti wanted assurances that we were choosing the proper course of action with our opportunity. He was a fatherly advisor with the interest and intent to continue this dialogue as well as devote his considerable resources to its doctrine becoming manifest. I witnessed this in Attorney Jaribu Hill who fought through unexpected conflicts that arose in the Youth section of the conference because she realized through her own hindsight that this anger and fury must be harnessed to the benefit of our people and our cause.

 

And I was reminded of something that helped to clear the desperate fog that was my angst and frustration. That when the Student is READY the teacher Will come. You see this is no clique; this is a library, a treasure of knowledge and wealth of wisdom. This is something that you don't access just because you exist, something that you must work to strive to be worthy of.  Because the safeguarding of our people of this struggle cannot be just passed on or granted because you THINK you are doing the work.  It must be earned because this road is a slippery slope with barbs at its base and little reward at its apex. This is not the way of the entitled, it is the way of the devoted. So since the State of the Black World I have chosen to become more devoted to this cause I've taken on. To be worthy of the burden I'm trying to shoulder. To be patient with myself and with my elders as we develop the relationships that allow for the love of wisdom to be passed on.

 

I am also recognizing myself as a father. Because to a 69 year-old I'm just a baby, to my kids I'm "Old Daddy," and I've been reminded in the kindest of ways to be mindful of the needs of my children, the needs of the youth as a larger body and the frustrations they must feel. To redouble my efforts to understand and appreciate them and their methods to be a help not a hindrance. To be a steering wheel and a guiding force without trying to pilot or captain their vessel.  I see it so much more clearly even in Hip Hop. I want to find a way to bridge this gap and to encourage a new generation of Hip Hoppers to the cultural side of the art form as well as help them avoid the spiritual, business, mental, physical and financial pitfalls this industry hides.

 

Ultimately I want to be a Father to my community, a community Father whose love for my people is transcendent of my own family but expands to everyone within my sphere of influence.  And to do that I am learning from my elders in their wisdom and their folly. I pray we are all the better for it.

 

My name is NYOIL and I approve this message!


The State of the Black World Conference took place Nov 19th - 23rd in New Orleans Louisiana. For more information about the SOTBW or the IBW http://www.facebook.com/home.php/group.php?gid=36663192769  or http://www.stateoftheblackworld.org office - 888-774-2921





 


 


 

Mister Instrumental: COLD DRINK VIDEO on my page.

 
congradulations. thats a good look. i didnt even know about the event. i wish i couldve gone to it.
 
Posted by Mister Instrumental: COLD DRINK VIDEO on my page. on Saturday, December 06, 2008 - 4:56 PM
[Reply to this
Paradise
Paradise Gray

 
I was aware and I care!



Jasiri X, Dr. Karenga, NYOil At the State Of The Black World Conference II (c) Photo: Paradise Gray 2008

It was great to spend the historic moments with my brother from another Mother NYOil. - Paradise
 
Posted by Paradise on Saturday, December 06, 2008 - 9:45 PM
[Reply to this
Poppa

 
wise beyond your years, and my fear is that you'll let it take over your greatest charm: rocking the mike.
 
Posted by Poppa on Monday, December 08, 2008 - 7:01 PM
[Reply to this
meemz

 
You are what is missing from hip hop!
 
Posted by meemz on Tuesday, December 09, 2008 - 12:39 AM
[Reply to this
Barbara

 
I know the feeling; how are we to fill the gap when the old-timers fade away when we have been kept ignorant of them and hardly knew what that "good stuff" was that they had? How can we have the same "good stuff?' Well, we won't. We can't. Even if we did, it wouldn't work, because this is now. But you know; you've seen it. We will have different good stuff, we'll be given the right good stuff for our time. Yours comes most visibly as your lyrics, a little less visible are those changes deep within your person that are behind those lyrics.

I had the chance to listen to my own father over these last holidays. He came to see me graduate. I had told him not to bother, it cost too much to fly in from the West Coast, he's already seen me get my Master's degree, etc., etc. But he had exclaimed "OF COURSE I will come." At 79, he dozed some during the ceremony. I din't notice. I was all caught up in myself, in being PO'd about the faculty members and institutions and people I thought had not done right by me, etc. When the ceremony was done, my Dad came out to meet me, crying, almost speechlees, but just barely able to tell me how very, very proud he was of me. And suddenly, in him, I saw what I need to be like, how I need to believe in and celebrate my kids, pay attention to the right things. To some extent, I also saw in his emotion how I need to treat myself; what i need to "rep," how I need to carry my head high and not grumble or talk about what isn't or wasn't. How I need to be successful right here and now.

For several days while he visited, he told me and my two kids (who'd come together for the event of my graduation) stories about what it was like 1963-1970 in Louisville, KY, where I grew up. He talked about getting a sense, early on, that change was coming. He talked about meeting Dr. King and (Dad was a newspaper reporter) following the protesters and anticipating - and trying to avoid- violent conflicts. He told tales of how things sometimes resolved themselves amazingly, in silly ways, and how sometimes they went horribly bad, fast. He told us he was proud to have intercepted a rock thrown at Dr. King. Then I found I could carry the story on, telling my kids about being a lone white kid at Brandeis High in NYC, getting pummeled in the stairwells, so afraid to go to school I got stomachaches even before I got to school, and then, how when I moved back to Louisville, the schools had been ordered to merge and the courts had ordered busing, so I was to go downtown to the formerly all black school. I'd never seen the KKK before, and I realized they were the tip of an iceberg I'd never known existed before. I cried and prayed for the black kids getting bused out to the white schools; they were getting hurt. I was bused also, but, of course, I was well-protected. I was never hurt, but spit on once, by the angry, scared kids waiting in front of the school to get bused in the other direction.

I graduated from the same high school as did Cassius Clay (now Mohamed Ali). And I just got my PhD in plant molecular evolution. And my Dad took a rock for MLK.

When the times change, the message doesn't, but the listeners do, So, the way we tell the story has to change, and for that, new people are given the story to tell. We tell it a helluva lot better when we include the chapters of those that went before us. We all carry in us a little bit of their story. I'm glad you could go get some of those good stories to enrich your good stuff. "Father, Father" is awesome.
 
Posted by Barbara on Thursday, January 01, 2009 - 7:13 AM
[Reply to this
SOULFLOWER "EMPRESS OF HIP-HOP"

 
Peace King. It's been a minute. Just wanted to come through and hail you up HIGH for all you're doing to help awaken the people. You are so crucial in these times. I'm bless. Still paying dues as always. Just came off Tour with Ky-Mani Marley and about to release the Electric Mothership Album so I'll be steady setting fires round the place and space. Truly looking forward to connecting and building again soon come. I'll let you know next time I'm in the city. As always I wish you all the highest. Please don't hesitate to get at me if you ever need anything...
Bless-ed Love, Soulflower
1
 
Posted by SOULFLOWER "EMPRESS OF HIP-HOP" on Wednesday, April 08, 2009 - 2:45 AM
[Reply to this