Posted on 01/10/2002 6:52:10 AM PST by white trash redneck
Kwanzaa Quandary
By Tom Danehy
Could somebody please tell me exactly when it was that we went from striving to be culturally aware and sensitive to accepting just about any load of crapola that comes down the pike? I'm betting that it was some time after 1966, when a college professor made up a holiday and, because he's black, no one in the past 35 years has had the nerve to say that it's the festival version of The Emperor's New Clothes. There's no there, there.
I'm talking about, of course, Kwanzaa, that glorious weeklong festival celebrated by tens of people around the country and given more fawning media attention than the entire cast of Friends. It's not that it's a bad holiday, per se; it's just that it seems ... well, forced.
According to the official Kwanzaa Web site (named, oddly enough, www.officialkwanzaawebsite.org), the festival was just made up by a guy named Maulana Karenga. I looked Kwanzaa up on Encarta and there was this glowing entry on the festival, but then I noticed that the passage had been written by Karenga himself. He claims that the festival is based on an African harvest celebration known as matunda ya kwanza, which is Swahili for "first fruits."
Here's where problems start to pop up. First off, I've never understood why the Afrocentric movement in the U.S. focuses on Swahili. It's a nice language and even the name sounds cool, but Swahili is spoken by people in the eastern and central parts of Africa. If learning an African language is an attempt to maintain a link to the distant ancestors who were brought to America against their will under the bonds of slavery, then people should speak one of the more indigenous Bantu tongues, like Fulfulde or Mande, from which comes the term "Mandingo."
My friend Bill Washington suggested that it might be that Swahili is the most common language in all of Africa and therefore more appropriate. But actually, far and away the most common language in Africa is English. Heck, more people speak the local type of Arabic in Egypt than speak Swahili in all the rest of the continent. It's entirely possible that more people in Africa speak French than Swahili.
Trying to make Swahili seem relevant to black Americans is like some of those pretentious Spanish teachers in Tucson who teach kids to speak Castilian because it has some built-in snob value over the more common (and infinitely more useful) Mexican dialect. However, if you want to teach kids Swahili, knock yourself out. Just be sure to tell them that if they ever go to Western Africa and speak Swahili while trying to do that Alex Haley, roots-finding thing, people are going to look at them like they've got snot on their shirt.
Another odd thing I found: The kwanza is the official monetary unit of Angola, where, of course, the official language is Portuguese (which also has nothing to do with Swahili).
I also wondered about this whole harvest thing. While much of Africa lies in the tropics, there really isn't a whole lot of harvesting going on around Christmas. The general perception is that Africa is in the southern hemisphere, but the reality is that nearly two-thirds of the continent lies north of the equator. In fact, the extreme southern tip of Africa, the Cape of Good Hope, is on about the same latitude line as Buenos Aires, Argentina, which, in turn is more than 1,000 miles north of the southern tip of South America.
About the only part of Africa that lies south of the equator and along the Atlantic Ocean (and therefore has the reversed seasons) is the stretch that includes the aforementioned Angola, Namibia and South Africa, a region that has virtually nothing to do with United States history. Plus, the native African languages in that area include the Bantu dialects of Zulu, Umbundu and Xhosa, and those delightful Khoisan (click!) languages. Again, no Swahili.
Then there is the name "Kwanzaa" itself. The Swahili word ends with one "a," but Karenga added another one simply because seven kids showed up for his first celebration. Does that mean that if the Johnson triplets had decided to stop by that day, the celebration would be known as "Kwanzaaaaa?"
I'm sure Karenga's intentions were noble, but you have to figure that if a holiday hasn't caught on in a third of a century, it doesn't have much of a future. Mostly, I can't imagine black kids sitting around and saying, "I can't wait for this dumb Christmas stuff to be over so we can get into Kwanzaa."
Still, I don't want to be so presumptuous as to speak for African-Americans, so over the past week, I asked every black person I saw if they celebrated Kwanzaa. Of the 34 people I asked, 32 said no, one asked what Kwanzaa was, and one said, "It's none of your business, White Devil!" I'll take that last one as a yes.
My friend Bill probably summed it up best. "On Columbus Day, people don't celebrate Italy. They celebrate Italian-Americans. And people use St. Patrick's Day either as an excuse to get drunk or as a day to recognize Irish-Americans. I think African-Americans are far more likely to want to celebrate Martin Luther King Day than to participate in Kwanzaa.
"Martin Luther King is infinitely more relevant to our lives than an African harvest festival. No offense."
Two Sundays ago, in the middle of Kwanzaa, I asked seven of my black friends down at the gym if they were celebrating the festival. As it turns out, none of the seven participates in Kwanzaa, all seven say they try to do something to honor Dr. King, and three of them say they also go out on the first Monday in October to celebrate the anniversary of the time O.J. Simpson beat the justice system by killing a white woman and getting away with it.
Now, there's something that might catch on.
;o]
And a Merry Christmas, Happy Hannukah, Joyful Ramadan, and Bountiful Kwanzaa to you all!
By the way, this is the same Tom Danehy who wrote that scurrilous article about home schooling that I posted a couple of weeks ago. Maybe he's trying to redeem himself.
What's the problem?
As long as history records the details of this scam, it will forever be seen as the fraud that it is. Just like the comic book "Yhe African Roots of Civilization". Some people need to associate themselves with civilization even if fraud and fiction becomes necessary.
Like the current Middle East claiming even a remote similarity to the golden age of Islam...
"The promotion of "self-esteem" in our schools has been so successful that people feel free to spout off about all sorts of things -- and see no reason why their opinions should not be taken as seriously as the views of people who actually know what they are talking about." - Thomas Sowell.
Did You Have A Happy Kwanzaa? - WorldNetDaily
Celebrate Reality - Not Fantasy - Tampa Tribune
Kwanzaa Quandary - Tucson Weekly
We Wish You A Phony Festival - Report (Canadian Magazine)
So This Is Kwanzaa - Newsmax.com
Ann Coulter on Kwanzaa - TownHall.Com
Mona Charen on Kwanzaa - Jewish World Review
Tony Snow on Kwanzaa - Jewish World Review
The TRUE Spirit of Kwanzaa - The New American magazine
The Story of Kwanzaa - The Dartmouth Review
The Truth About Kwanzaa - A Christian Viewpoint
A Momentary Loss of Reason - Binghamton Review
Kwanzaa & The White House - NY Post Editorial, 1997 (Freerepublic.com thread)
Michael Savage on Kwanzaa - NewsMax
Happy Kwanzaa - FrontPage Magazine - Link may not work, if it doesn't click here for the Free Republic thread.
I'm Dreaming of a White Kwanzaa - LewRockwell.com - Link may not work, if it doesn't click here for the Free Republic thread.
Letter to Editor - Ypsilanti Courier
What is Kwanzaa? - File Passed Around On Internet About Kwanzaa
Happy Kwanzaa by Patrick S. Poole
To be continued in next post...
The Black Panthers and the Police: A Pattern of Genocide? - NEW YORKER MAGAZINE - February 13, 1971 (Includes great detail of the murders committed by Karenga's thugs)
Ron Karenga - Dialog from the Black Radical Congress - December 1999
US, the organization the Ron Everett founded in 1965, the organization that murdered 5 members of the rival Black Panther Party is back Their website is here.
Graphic used on Official Kwanzaa Website for the Nguzo Saba (The Seven Principles of Kwanzaa)
Graphic used on Official US Website (US is Karenga's Gang that Murdered Members and Leaders of Rival Gangs) as their logo
The two members of the US gang who murdered the two Panthers after they dissed Karenga at a Black Studies meeting on the UCLA campus were Larry and George Stiner. Both were convicted of murder and sentenced to life in prison. They escaped in 1974. Larry turned himself in to the FBI in 1994, but George Stiner is still at large. He is on California's 10 Most Wanted list which can be found here. There is also and International Crime Alert on this fugitive who is considered armed and extremely dangerous here.
Afrocentrism Links
Clarence Walker Encourages Black Americans to Discard Afrocentrism
Fighting Fiction With Fact by Mary Lefkowitz (Google Cached Version)
Fallacies of Afrocentrism - Grover Furr
The Skeptics Dictionary - Afrocentrism
The Skeptics Dictionary Review of Mary Lefkowitz' Book "Not Out Of Africa"
The Trap of Ethnic Identity - New York Times - Jan 1997
Good work; this is why FreeRepublic is such a great place and such an important place because it gives us information we might not have known about or known how to have gotten and because we can network across the country in an activist way thanks to people like you. Great people help us stand on their shoulders to move important idease along. And of course if Jim Robinson hadn't provided the biggest pair of shoulders in the first place, where would we all be? Cheers! V's wife.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.