01 on ducation i r, We 1 frica . 'i. What es pi rtant what ta �tiJUI or �abama. f,P�iate your fcedbac oaber anlcl . -�" Thin are tlIrbuleDl ... btre In Niger. They not q te I to the scale of tbj happen- -f In Thhld, Benin or 'Jbao, but aoae I , turbuleDl. NIGER IS IN the proceu of formin from the mllitary �DI party to a system of multi parties. This seems to be the trend 'In West African countri at the mo­ ment, As tend to be the , a large part of the> protest' initiated by � universi ty tuden . This in : tum has affected tbe hi&h school I ltuden and to some de , the ; grade school t\ldents. • Last year, amidst a march by : university studen , nine students : ere bot by soldiers. out- I raged the students and they lit out : of c for six mon • The out-: I come VI called "anncc blanche" - l a blank year. Basically, owry stu­ I dent 100t a year of scbool. I, This year has seen the retin- . ell 0 bard • ' regularly .tudcn . ar;s on . I come to class. lbIy n I threatened with uotber year, , something tbey really can't afford. I In Febnwy, tbe anniveraary of I the deaths, the students became l violent. No one was hurt, but cars I were burned. Store wil¥!o were I broken and set afire and the . , American Cultural Center '91 at- : tacked. I I SOMESAYTHATpro-Sadam : faction infiltraled a peaceful stu- I dent marched and started trouble. , The university and all of the high I schools across the country were , closed for one month. Hence the , threat of 10 ing another year. : My situation bas been a little : different and a little I fnIItrat- lng. I teach English on the univer­ ;. sity campus. My school Is a I private international school of the : French speaking West African 'countries. ' : We are not directly affected by : Nigerian politics, but we haw , problems of our own, lite many I problems found in Africa. The root is financial. , My school is brand new and it : bas been opened without the • p�r funds. so in the middle of : the year, most teachers ref\Md to I teach until they got their books and cI materials (back to � finan- cial problem). So things have been stagnating. but oot quite as bad u the Univer­ si . Thin are beginni to pick • up nd I am finding myself very • busy. i will close now, but will : keep you posted of educational is- ,sues in Niger. Best Wis�. . . lIILTON: HIGHER EDUCA­ :'170N is desigMd to diIJIope with cdllege and world retUIen. Educa­ • ioll i.t ongoinl aNl cerllliNy IIOt � to c/lwroom".,. Let's Brief J. The infant mortality rate in 1990 was 121 deaths por tHobsand live births. - Hunger i� , :c In 1986, 65 perccnt of cb'fi,dren were underweipt. - thnger 1990 tIn 1984, there was one physician for every 1 ,010 ��()ple. - World Development Report ,1990 or ed to elimin ie the problem of r ci m in Cuba, and ho the revolution h d or ed to advance their entire ociety politic By, ocially, economically nd pirituaJity. Since the Cub n revolution, the new leade hip nd overn­ ment entitle each citizen to good he lth c e, unli e efore the tr ition hen he lth care '91 only for the ell-off nd the rich. Under the old regime, orkin people h d no right , no y in production quota , no v cation. Tod y 97� of the or e are in unions. They 11 or 11 month ith one month off for v ca­ tion. Also one may find it h rd to believe, but tatistics show th t Cuba's over- 11 heal th care is rated higher than the U.S.A. in a number of rea. For ex- VIEWS '" uu� I 100 cd t e malnutrition, t e hun er, the pro titu on at o r m media al ay tal s bout but couldn't find it! y e they got Cub mi ed up itb L.A., .Y., or Cruca o? e vi ited one of their ho pi t I here there h d been a hort ge of medicine beca e of the U.S. bloc de. They h d re olved the hort e by usin cupuncture nd herbal medicine effectively. Their doctor po e of h vin tremendo ucce ith them nd aving hundreds of thou and of doll rs as well. They even had g rden on the ide of the ho pital where they grew their own herb 1 plants. We vi i ted the Che Guev ra High School and were greeted by a very impre sive tudent body. We visited the cIa es and the tudent were busy tudying, not because they were tudying for a job, but because a,l In the pa t, the leader hi and the mul tinationals efi ted from raci m, ex! m, segre ation. Under tbe e the Ie dership they have stru ed to ee everyone as Cuba -not African or Sp nisb Cubans. There a no denial of tbe role African culture h played on time. All we hear from t in the development of the U.S. Olympic committee 0 - Cuban culture tod y.and his­ cial are complaints about todcally, in music, arts and pos ibility of not bavin air- crafts, and dance. RecOgnition conditioning. They fail to of thi was important in in that unlike all of the other Pa. and wderstanding Cuban uni,; , American ho ts, Cuba ill not que hislorical development. receive any funds to spo or • My trip proved to be more the game becau e of the then unique and hen people economic boycott of t U.S. k me III I go bact to Cuba? The Cuban people should be Myana er i definitely YES I I commended for tbeir dedlca- plan to visit Cuba agalnl Cuba lion for takina on tbe re POD- was such a po erful place to ibility of holdina the games:�, visit. - �EA5rERN', EUAOPt!. J a UNCLE S'AM ,'ALWAYS TAKES CARE OF HIS FRJfNf)31 .' Dear Dr. Faullmer: There you go againl Three eea a.o, you wrote an article criucizlng people who believe in Christianity. A couple of weeks after that, you criticized troloay. What' your problem? The next time, I you wl�l �ritic�e people who play the 10 ." ' American and., 'dt plUlosoJ)hiea have been with for centuries, and have &twn us hope, so leave alone. SIIDed •••. Mr. P., Mia I, FI Dear Mr. P.: .The issues - that you mentioned ve been left alone for too long. Many, many African Americans have great "faith" in reUgion, trol­ oay and, even the lottery. The trust is so great that billions of dollars are spent annually by people who hope for success. The sacrifices that one makes as the result of Utis hope only worsens the individual's situation, financially, socially and otherwise. Submitting one elf to an authority without . questioning the validity of that authority is to relegate one to continued ig­ norance. I do not usc the term ig­ norance in a' deroaatory man- , naer. But there are many ways to view anything. It is pouible 't�t the Ideas that one bas about the important things in his life may be wrong. But there are many ways to view anything. It is possible that the ide that one has about the important things in his life may be ,.' wrona. They may even be detrimen­ tal. st Us, Again By WILLIAM REED Isn't it time that so-called "minori ty" groups take a look at the obstacles that alway seem to con­ front us? While we are always in­ cluded out in the busine s of America, too many people have a record of moving the goalposts to keep us from u�ding on our own. Is it not true that if any' of us move to eliminate the European value sys­ tem from our lives and prac­ tices, too often we find oursel- ves caught up in the American Just-Us system? Contemporary American history illustrates that non­ white leaders will emerge, from the other side of the, tracks, preach a philosophy of group self-help and separation from Europeans and their values; only to fi nd themselve depicted as malcontents and demagogues in print and in the nation' courtrooms. As these non-white, and non-traditional leaders begin to gain wealth, growing organize- - lions, and increased self-deter­ mination, they've all gotten themselves into trouble with the mainstream media and/or the Jl.atice Department. WHENEVER WE'VE SET up systems that do not include as­ simulation of European values we get anee, wi� the cases of the Honorable Elijah Muhammad, Mar­ CUI Garvey, Rev. Sun Myung Moon, 'or Yahweh Bcn Yahweh. A half century ago, Elijah Poole became the Honorable Elijah Muhammad and started to build the American Black Mlalim movement. Elijah Muhammad pre cbed that Blaeicl would be bener off if they left white values and customs behind and started to build and think for them­ selves. Muhammad was then vilified in the American press as being a "danger" to the racial harmony of the country. Before him, Marcu Garvey created the greatest Black internal investment system, via the Back to Africa movement, that Black Vahwab Ben Vahwah America has ever known. Garvey mobilized millions in the 192(l§ to eek their own determination and destiny, and for thi he w sent to U.S. pri ons at the height of the movement. Sun MyungMoon, an Asian, built a worldwide movement b ed on the concept of the "unification" and true brotherhood of men. In the process of unifying the world, Moon built a large church treasure chest, but '91 hauled of! by the reds to Danbury Prison on charge involving less than S10,()(X) for "tax ev ion." AND NOW, ANOTHER "minority," Yahwah Bcn Yahwah . Submitting oneself to an authority without questioning the 'validity is to relegate one to continue ignorance. in a Miami, Flordia pri on 0 dubious federal charJea. Yahwah Ben Yahwah il the spiritual leader of a Black Hebrew Israelite rellglou denomination based in Florida. His orpnlzatlon has amassed a self-contaJocd $100' million empire that inchMi s.r markets, hotels, other real estate aocl child care racili ties to service BIIdEI. Yahwah Bcn Yahwah hal beeft held in confinment for over 6 months because authorities won't permit bail. The cbarps , against him,' and 16 follow range from homicide, to arson to extortion. Prior to his anat Ben Yahwah had been widely recoa­ nized a strong civic, bw political and religious leader in Southern Florida. While Bcn Yabwah may be guilty of the cbarps, "minority" people would do well to DOle that a very sinister sodal pat­ tern, ala the others, in this • But the public is nol "\mIwarc" of the Just-U problems of Ben Yahwah. More than 15,000 voters in Miami. and over a mil­ lion nationwide, have siped petitions for ban pro 10 aDd bond relc;uc of Yah ab. While Elijah M�mmad and Garvey have one' on to meet blue-eyed Savior in the Ity, today Black Americans ould do well to watch the treatment of the remalnln non-E� Moon aDd Yl The Ole Boy N twort i own and doesn't to current in ntlo of includ - any us in their groups or wntures. So, why i it that when leaders of "our kind" tart to make '-dway, per- ticularl y econo , y I ca t up in All.ta'l�CM J t-U sya m? FOR EXAMPlE, many people truly believe that they will be rewarded in an "afterlife" for endur­ ing trails, tribulation and pain in this life. And maybe they will be. It's also possible that they won't be. There are legitimate argumenm apintl the notion of an afterlife that should, at Ie t, be considered. What if there i no afterlife? One would , e COPI I then years on tbia � oductively and may have, r ined himaelf unncceuarUy And unwisely. I . trology may be alegitlma o� deavor a� the utrological c� may provide an accurate [naipt Intq one' "inner self." But suppolO astrology' just an UDldentific U­ lusion that is used to manipulate gullible and restrain them fro taking charge of their own lIvea. while making the happy .trol r rich. Thero a r 0 legitimate ar­ aumenu a g a t n a t as t r o lo y that should, at least, be considered. Maybe, Just maybe, astrology il onlyapmc. Thefaetis that whoever accepts any­ thing without questioning it, regardl ofhJs race, is isolating himself from informadon that is different from what be already kno . Some people refuse to con- ' sider another person's Ad simply -because he fears that the new idell m y prove his id to be wrong. He fears that he would be thrown into a period of confusion about his life. Confusion, though, is often a ign that one is learning thin about the world that he had not known before. Now he can find new answers to questions that he could not answer before. Discovering new, confuaina information is cenainly uperior to "faith," which tella you to k DO questions but to ccept your current limited knowledge the flnal truth.