Showing posts with label diaspora. Show all posts
Showing posts with label diaspora. Show all posts

Anda brouwzeu (smile)

"Today is the National Day of Black Consciousness in Brazil; holiday now celebrated in more than 1,000 cities!" http://feedly.com/k/1ataCxi

Haley's Ancestral Environment, Virginia & Modern Chaos Design

CAPTURE
"In 1976, the African-American writer Alex Haley traced the story of his black family in the popular book Roots.  He discovered that his "furthest-back-person" in america was Kunta Kinte, a Gambian who had been brought in chains from West Africa to Annapolis, Maryland, in the 1760s aboard the English slave ship Lord Ligonier.  Haley (who also wrote the powerful Autobiography of Malcolm X) was fortunate in knowing the name of his first American forebear and in being able to locate the exact ship on which he arrived.  But the facts themselves are remarkably typical.  On average, the furthest- back New World ancestor for any African American today would have reached these shores shortly before the American Revolution, just as Kunta Kinte did.  (By comparison, the largest migrations of Europeans and asians to the United states began in the late 19th century and grew larger in the twentieth century.  So the average white resident of the United States has a far shorter American ancestry, as does the average Asian-American citizen)."
~To Make Our World Anew, by Robin D.G. Kelley, Earl Lewis


Ise MASSA'S FIDDLA
At minute 3:55 Fiddler tells sets about convincing an Afrikan that he is a nigger.  “Yo name is Toby!”  But Kunta (intact yut) stands up and prioritizes his real name.  


On Your Passing - for CLR James

You left me on a day of doubts
For once your sun sharp answers
Did not cut through my clouds
I sent my love upstairs
Did not dare come
From the landing I could smell your passing
An old time smell
A smell of changes and hard cedar
A smell you find in families and friends
And even now I am not struck by absence
You filled your time so well
A drop from the overflow
Could quench a thristy mind for years to come
By Jean ‘Binta’ Breeze