AUGUST 9 - 15, 1987 THE ICHIGAN CITIZEN 3 lac he I h needs hould be elec ion issue, ays group The Blac Congre on Health, La and Economic BCHLE, an umbrella organi­ zatl n repre nting Black pro­ fe ional or anization called for n tional rategy to addre the high morbidity and mortality occuring dispropor­ tionally in the Bl c com­ munity. The Congre ppealed to all communities to hold incum­ bant and political candidate for local, tate and n tional office count ble. In re onse to the 1985 ep rt of the Secret ry of HH' Ta Force on Blac and inority Health hich identID d alrno 60,000 exce Bl death largely due to categorie BCHLE on e Continued from Pel and child eleton are believed to be the mo t significant eletal sample of free Bl c s ever di 0 ered arch eologically. o four years after the ele ons were excavated from the long- bandon d cemetery of Phil elphi' First African Baptist Church th remains are being reburied. The Fir African B ptist Church F cemetery w s di overed in 1980 during con- ruction of the Philadelphia Comrnunter Rail Tunnel, accord­ ing to an "Arch ology" m azine article co-authored by ich 1 Parrington of ilner nd ciate the arch eological fum .respon ible for the e ca­ vation. In 1984, the eletons were shipped to th mithsonian In tituti n' useum of atural Hi tory in ashington D.C. to be studi d under the direction of Dr. J. Lawrence An el the 1 te curator of phy . cal anthropology. Several of the n tion's le d­ ing physical nthropologi ts have been eng ged in a variety of specialized udi to determine the diets nutrition and health of the F population, hop- ing to rtain the cial condition experienced by the early orthern B1 age earn- er . Th elet proj ct i cur- rently coordin ted by Prof. Le ey in-Hill of the Uni­ verisyt of the Di trict of Columbi d Blakey in con­ junct' n ith die Smith man' anthropol department and th archaeological fum of fi- ner and iate Blakey i ong c dre of i ed ' Operation Taking group ." Charge", a call for awarene Finally the Bl k Congre within the Black community: called attention to the under- • Since large portion of the representation of Blacks among Bl c community are being physicians other health care denied aeee to health care professi onals and other careers becau of the lack of health in science, This problem insurance, being under-insured constitute a Blac Brain Drain," and becau of adverse changes ated Art Coleman D execu- the edicaid program, tive director of BCHLE. BCHLE demands that thi be- In 19 5, the Ta Force come an election i e. # Report identified di The Bla Congre call categorie that ccounted for on all component of the health 0% of all Black di a care y em to ppoint Black They are: Diab te Cancer to health policy decision-m ing Cardiovascular disea s Violence po ition . (homicide suicides ace 'dents , Emphasis in the Blac com- Chemical Dependency Infant munity mu be pl ced on ortality. They are sub an- prevention early detection, and tially preventable. teatment of di se ith pro- In ddition ince the T gram targeted to Blac chil- Force Report was published, dren and dolescent. it h s become clear that AIDS and orking is al disproportionately ill- be formed ing Blac Americans. Twenty- among organiz tions five percent of adult AIDS government enci s busine victim about 60% of children indu ry, voluntary health and half of all women ith organization and community IDS are Black. FIGHT FOR FREEDO ell story a Philade phia's "freell B·lac re archers applying state-of-the- mehtods in eletal biology. He has introduced new method of dental-defect analysi that measure the defects in the dental enamel of eletons to determine the duration of re s, particularly from fetal life to 6� years of ge. This method ed light on health conditions by way of general stre indica- tors. 'In any archaeologi al ex­ cavation, the teeth are the mo likely to be preserved. It's very fortunate becau teeth have some of the be t data" he explains in an interview. Data collected in the study were compared with data on slave and other skeletal popu­ lations providing "hard biologi- cal evidence on the relative status and quality of life ex­ perienced by free Blacks' the researcher emphasize . The re arch findings on the free Black children caught BI ey by surpri. I thought these children would've had somewhat better health than the slaves children. But the dental-defect analysis provide no evidenc in pport of better health, either as fetu or children." Some of the data from other researcher in the pro­ ject are till out he quickly points out, and they may show improved health among the adults. What Blakey finds really ironic is that while only about 9 percent of Black Philadel­ phians during 1823 to 1 43 were born into slavery, 30 percent of Bla k Philadelphia Baptist ere born into avery he say citing censu data. He notes that Blac Baptists may have been on the lowe t rung of Philadelphia's cial ladder, which may explain why the free Blacks buried at the First frican Baptist Church suffered from condition similar to slavery. Although the Liberty Bell city wa a m jor center for abolitionist activity and refuge for run-away slave cen­ sus and other hi orical record ppear to support the eletal project' finding y Bl ey, indicatin that many free Blac were en aged in tren- uou ork condition and were victuns of vere cts of di crimin tion. Between 1829 and 1 43 the home and free Blacks were mob attacks and were toned in he y re ord sh tudent from the predomi- nantI Blac niversit of the District of ell a Ho ard niver ity played 'an integral role in the eletal project Bl ey points out. an Jenkins a Ho ard n­ ior majoring in anthropol gy, says he found malnutriti n a one of the cau s of e treme levels of stress that led t high death rate among the free Black, particularly am n children. Their dental defe t were equivalent to th found in orth American and e t Indian slave populati n Bl ey' student e plains. The study say J e in 'had a profound effe t and influen e on me.' He n plan to develop nior the i focusing on oppre 'on am n BI k people from th p r- e tive of physi al anthr p l­ ogy. , e'r tryin to fill in me of the gap in our under rand­ in of African-Amen an hi­ tory ," Bl ey tre s. • One can talk bout impre i n of hat life wa like f r slaves and for BI c of th orth but the eletal g ve us relatively ob' ective a' s for m in compari n. This project help the pub­ li understand the ignifican e of di rimin ti n part fr m very in American hist ry' he dds noti that th re' fro-