READERS WRITE EDITORAL , . W canbeall we want to be! By KEN ETH NODGAA We are beautiful, humble, gentle, great, proud, strong. intelligent, and confidentl We are African­ American men and women. ' We have endured hundreds of years of slavery, and racism, the pain of segregation, lynching, unemploy­ ment, and yet we have remained strong. Sometimes we may become angry knowing the past, but then we realize that it was nothing we did. We were the victim -not the vic­ timtzer. So we remain humble, mowing that deep inside of us lie the souls of leaders like M.L.King and Ell. Baker. We have been told that our skin is Black and ugly. That only white­ colored skin represents beauty, but now we realize that we are beautiful! That beauty comes in all colors, shades, and races. ----------------�,�,�,����'�------------�----�------------'------------------ I UNDERstAND __ "'.' :�t:G.;(�:'::.:'. 'OKAY THEN... . :\).;';'·::-:�'�I��· B�;:C��A�E�;'����?�' THAT BLICK :'/" HERES YOO_K '/'/' _. -',., PEOPLE ARE :', CHANCE w- · WOlJl..D � UKE TO " NoT HAm X. MAKE '(WR SE.E. I N THE 'til:!!-r£' HOUSE. WITH ,-HE.. C�I(E_ of • PRESIDENTIAL CA.NDIDATES .... VIEWS OPINIONS m in Pre ident Ari tide, who w ept into power by n overwhelming vo of th Haitian people, w forced to flee the country in the ce of military coup everal months go. Sin that tim the Organization of American Stat and the international community been working to return Ari tide to power. On the surface th United Stat bas projected itself as a guardian of Hai tian democracy and a champion of Aristide's return to power. In fact, the behavior of the U.S. has been ambivalent and hypocritical. INDEED, U .. policy towards Haiti over the last few decades has been one of the principal ources of the current crisis. For years the U.S. government successfully propped up the corrupt dictatorship of the Duvalier family - Poppy Doc and Baby Doc. Under the ruthless regimes of the Duvaliers, a small Haitian oligrachy imposed their will on the masses of Y Haiti n people ro e up in rebellion and ousred the hated Baby Doc Duvalier, who was the successor to hi father, . Papa Doc. What the rebellion failed to uproot, however, wa the entrenched, corrupt oligarchy which the Duvaliers had nurtured nd protected for years. Consequent! y, the last decade has been filled wi th fake elections, coups and counter coups, as various factions within the oligarchy sought to grab and maintain power. Meanwhile the Haitian masses continued to suffer. It was a humble, visionary and :� '.' • t .' .. ' r. · :. U.S. joined in thi call nd-" :. O T I nction ere impo ed in n' :: , w s � AD tide ho w elected President t mpt to Loree the military junta to' :: in ma hing victory in c down. To date, lhecoupl rs":, internationally upervised election. h ve tubbornly refused to'" : Though the U.S. w lukewarm. on relinquish power to Aristide. !I:.:' AD tide, the democratic proces d " . , po n loudly and clearly. . 0 G CRY does no " ,I Ari tide made no ecret of his ant a leader with Aristide's vi ion- i ;: intent to build a people democracy of new H iti in power. ., .: ba ed on genuine poli tical and Art tide is the personification of·,! " economic democracy. Finally it the Haitian masse' piration for, :: appeared that the Haitian m real freedom and economic equali ty. " :' ,- would be delivered from the His return to power would be in :� tyrannical rule of a corrupt Haitian direct opposition to the longstandin :1 oligarchy. corruption, mis-rule and abuse of .: " Internationally upervised power of the oligarchy. :1 elections nothwithstanding, the Hence the negotiations for Haitian oligarchy was not prepared Aristide' return have been' :,i to surrender it' power and . repeatedly thwarted by forces' ,I, privileges. representing the oligarchy who are ... -:- :: Hence the Army, a tradi tiona! tool insi ting that Aristide be forced to :: of the oligarchy, acted to drive share power with the leaders of the.. :: President Aristide from power. coup. :: Thisi a prescription for paralysis e , :: and death for Aristide. :' :' " " ,I " " ,. ... ; .,' ;: ; ..... .- r as Ida B. Well in her crusade for justice. As intelligent as Carter O. Woodson, and W.E.B. Du Bois in their struggles for Freedom, Justice, and Equality. , OUf goal are to be as proud as Sojourner Truth, strong as Harriet Tubman, and yet as gentle, and dedi- cated as Mary Mcl.eod Bethune. .,.. Yes, we live in two world realities .' - The present reality of in- -z: .. _:?�,::? .. »: dividualism, crime, brutality, and - - , _ . hatred, and the future reality of - .. _-- -., building a society that wHl transcends the evils of racism . ' sexism, unemployment, classism, etc. A society that would be beauti­ ful, humble, and gentle. One that �ould, as M.L. King once said, Judge people base on there charac­ ter, and not the color of their skin." A society that would value people first, and money second. A society that would see people, and not economics, as the center of all development. WE'VE LEARNED to develop the confidence needed to become the greatest we can be. We're working to advance ourselves, our families, and our race, So we may transcend tbe anti-human behavior that has plagued our society and the world for so longl Our goals are to be as intelligent :" � ... ". RE5()LT5 o �HARR\S--*- . PO, BOx J..{770 CHICAGO, IL.� Di mantle U.S. apartheid in education Now that the stage is being set inside South Africa for the dismantling of apartheid, it is our concern that renewed attention be given to dismantling systems of racist segregation and discrimination here inside the United States. The latest ruling by the Supreme Court of. the United States on school desegregation is another step in the wrong direction. It has been 38 years since the historic 1954 Brown vs. Board of Education decision in which the Supreme Court voted that separate and unequal schools were uncon ti tutional. For years considerable progress was made toward .desegregating the nation's schools. . In mo t cities this was only accomplished after severe court battles and local truggles against institutionalized racism in the education system. During the past 10 years, however, the Supreme Court has taken incremental teps backward away from the firm stance . if the Brown deci ion. Today, school systems aero the nation are resegregating based on race. At a time when there should be a stronger federal demand that all of the children of this nation be given an equal opportunity to receive a quality education in public school , the highest court in the country cts THE LATEST RULING involves the De Kalb County, Georgia school district, which has been under federal court-ordered desegregation since 1969. The United States l1th Circuit Court of Appeals in 1989 ruled against the De Kalb County school officials, concluding that the school district should remain under federal supervision until it had achieved and maintained racial equality for at least three years in seven specified aspects of its operation. The Supreme Court now says it disagrees with the U.S. 11th Circuit Court in Georgia, and instead agrees with the De Kalb County school officials who want to be released from federal scrutiny and supervision on the issue of school desegregation. Ruling unanimously 8-0, the Supreme Court has given a clear signal to hundreds of school districts that "local control" and resegregation' of school sy tems is becoming more and more tolerable­ and permissive. Intere tingly, Justice Clarence Thomas, also from Georgia, did not participate in the vote because it w argued before the Supreme Court to dilute the federal role in achieving school desegregation. . AS MALCOLM X once said, "We are today seeing a global rebel­ lion of t� oppressed against the op­ pressor, the exploi ted against the exploiter." ' Inspired by a poem by Mychal Wynn prior to Thomas' appointment We know, though, from reviewing Thomas' publicposition on related matters that the vote would probably have been 9-0 if Thomas bad voted on this case. Justice Anthony M. Kennedy wrote the majority opinion in the De Kalb decision. Kennedy wrote, "Partial relinquishment of judicial control, where justified by the facts of the case, can be an important and • significant step in fulfilling the district court's duty to return the operations and control of schools to local authorities." We most not forget why the federal courts were first petitioned to order school desegregation. THE NAACP LEGAL Defense and Educational Fund and other civil rights organizations had to sue hundreds of school districts throughout the country to challenge the racist segregation of students in ' public schools. Now ome of these same school districts are attempting to use the federal courts to justify the resegregation of schools. �y, it appears that the present composition of "Justices" on the Supreme Court are also prone to be more sympathetic to tbi regressive and backward tendency. ". I' I' I • .. .. I, I. • Unfortunately, the U.S •. , government bas been a party to these ' attempts to place Aristide in a life-threatening position. - ,. I' " DEMOCRACY IN Haiti and the .:: life of President Aristide are clearly, :. still in danger. Unless the coup .. " leader are removed from all :: positions of pow�r and the mill tacy, " :: neutralized, Aristide's return to Haiti I' I' I will be like walking into a dea . :: chamber. -, " " It '1 I I, :' I' , ADstide can only be returned to;., power under conditions which insure his security and political survival.: it, Otherwise the promise of genuine." political and economic democracy:'- :: which he represents will once again�'. " be frustrated in Hai ti. ' :: I, f, :1 Ii :, ,I " ,t ,I , " :! t ( , RonDaniels serves as Presidens- · of, the Institute for Community t. Organization and Development in" I Youngstown, Ohio. He may be comacted at (216) 746-5747. tit � j., �, . ;;.. :; , :i ;, I' " " .1 " " '. " CIVIL RIGHTS JOURNA , , �. I The school systems of our nation should be preparing for the" increasing multiracial diversity of." :� the national population. On the " :� contrary, the ugly specter of racial �� discrimination is regaining new;: pseudo-justification not only in' :; some local school districts but also in : .. the Supreme Court. ' • .. " ,I , ., I " AIL OF these �ron8 steps pose . :: a renewed Challenge to the Civil' :� Rights Movement of the 1990's ': Yes, there has been considerabl --. 'progress. But there are man . indications that certain aspects of the foundation of the 'progress won are. being removed. The oppo ition to racial progm�1;I; is methodical and persistent. W �ust �t rest on � memory of pasegE, vtctones. The Immorality of the recent decisions of the Sup rem Court in regard to public educatio must not go unchallenged. , All children 'should have fair chance at life. To deny educatiOJUlI;iiiii# opportunity to a child based on race is wrong and should never be toleratednomatterwhatattemp are made to justify it. America apartheid in education must b dismantled nowl