http://thecityfix.com/sustainable-cities-and-hip-hop-creating-a-new-urban-beat/
Yesterday, on his 48th birthday, Pres. Barack Obama announced the Green the Block campaign to ensure that low-income communities and communities of color have the resources and platforms needed to access the benefits and opportunities of the growing clean-energy economy.
Launched in partnership with Green For All and the Hip Hop Caucus, the nationwide campaign will rely on a coalition of organizations to educate and mobilize young people about how to take action on things like installing energy-efficient light bulbs in neighborhood homes, planting a community garden, and writing letters to local officials asking them to promote the use of more fuel efficient vehicles.
Green the Block is just one example of how youth culture and in particular, hip hop culture is transforming the way we advocate for sustainable cities and transportation. And its not just in the United States.
Take, for example, the events planned for the World Urban Forum in 2006, where artists like Curtis Clearsky and other UN-HABITAT Messengers of Truth performed at the Global Hip-Hip Mainstage to inspire young people to change their cities for the better. The United Nations recognized that Hip-Hop is more than a genre of music or dance. It is a social movement.
Its about mainstreaming the idea of safer, cleaner and more accessible urban communities, and you can see it happening through whats commonly referred to as the five elements: emceeing, breakdancing, deejaying, beat boxing, and the art of graffiti. Heres a few examples from around the world:
MASTER OF CEREMONIES
Obama, himself, is the quintessential emcee for Americas youth, supporting the power of hip hop as a vehicle for change:
I love the art of hip hop; I dont always love the message of hip hop. The thing about hip hop today is that its smart, its insightful, the way that [rappers] can communicate a complex message in a very short space is remarkable. A lot of these kids are not going to be reading The New York Times. The question, then, is, whats the content? Whats the message?
Art cant just be a rear view mirror; it should also have a headlight out there pointing to where we need to go.
Barack B-Rock Obama meets with Ludacris. Photo via Snicka.
His decision about where to go was made clear through the establishment of the White House Office of Urban Affairs, which proves his commitment to promote strong cities as the backbone of regional growth. This summer, the Office kicked off a National Conversation on the Future of Americas Cities and Metropolitan Areas, essentially convening a whole community of urban policy emcees who will be talking about ways in which Washington can be a partner and catalyst for community-based solutions, instead of a bureaucratic obstacle.
Another public figure who comes to mind as a hip-hop-inspired voice for a new generation of sustainable city advocates is Majora Carter, who wrote a $1.25 million federal transportation planning grant to conduct a feasibility study for the South Bronx Greenway. As an African-American woman who grew up in the South Bronx, Carter understands that some people think cleaning and greening a city will kill hip hop because it takes away from the suffering, which often fuels the art form. But, she said in an interview, if we have industry that employs people and communities that are beautiful then hip-hop can just flourish. It will just be something new. It will be happy hip-hop! Hence her motto: Green the Ghetto!, which is also the title of her organizations blog, which recently posted this pic...
"Green for All" baby. Can ya dig it?