o
�1J1"Ii1U C m im-
8eI"IitenlO88 of12 to 25
NA,IQ1'W and to 18 for
continu d om 7
----------
HRI
African N
military ing, Umkhonto
eSiz ,or MK, as i-
nated by J n z Wal The al-
leged gunman i lin ed to
Derby-Lewis' Stallard Founda
tion-a conservative think tank
committed to hite supremacy.
Derby-I.e . . accused of sup-
plyingtbe Z88 pistol used to kill
Hani.
Last y r, Derby-Lewis be
gan an weapons program, arm
ing and training whites in
anticipation of race war. West
ern Goals Institute, an organize- .
tion d voted to W em values
European culture, opposing
communism and multicultural
ism, supplied weapons and
training.
His program, says London's,
The Independent, evolved into
an ination lot aimed not
only at Chris Rani, but Nelson
Mandela and others. Clive
Derby-Lewis is the president of
Western Goals Institute.
My own theory on the killing:
Chris Rani as extremely popu
lar among S. Africa's angry .
youth. Mo popular th n Man
dela.
"Viva Chris Hani" graffiti cov
ered buildings and walls near
Afriam high schools in Khay
alitsha. Bani was a military gen
ius and, extremely close to
organized labor - the strongest,
most militant sector of the ANC.
When the new multi-racial,
transitional government takes
over, Chris Hani would almost
certainly take on some high
ranking position over the mili
tary: a military that's currently
controlled, and linked to the con-
rvative right-wing.
FOR WlllTE South Africa,
Chris Hani, Black, militant, bril
liant, linked to powerful African
trade unions, and, loved by mil
lions of angry African youths,
the choice was clear. Chris Rani
would have to die.
Enter Clive Derby-Lewis , a
man who spent eighteen years ill
. the South Africa military, a
"self-appointed" leader of the
white right-wing and South Af
rica's representative to the
MA C
continued from A7
Summit in Gabon, West Africa,
Farrakhan was welcomed and
accepted with open arms in Ga
bon. Why then was he not wel
come to participate in the March
on Washington here in the U.S.?
One does not have to agree
with Minister Farrakhan on
every' ue to respect him as an
important leader with a mass
following in the Pan African
World. 0 matter how eloquent
and militant sounding the
speeches and pronouncements
tlowing from th lip ofth Black
leadership on th stage at th
Lincoln Memorial, it is hard to
imagine a "lead rship" that can
not determine who can speak for
Black people f of the interfer
ence, intervention and veto of
.outside forces leading the Black
masses anywhere.
Too long have others deter
mined the destiny of African
people in this nation and th
world. It's Kujichagulia time!
Ron Daniel» rues as Pr uient of the
Inststu for Community Orgasusation.
and uelopmen: In Youn own, Oluo
He may b ntaa d at (216) 746�747
companion
"I D OT kill Mali G n,
Inver intended to hurt him, to
do anything oth r than to a t
him for a � lony," id the 53-year
old eve , his voice baking. his
body slumped. "I n't running
wild out there. I reacted to a itu
ation that was not nonnal. 1 j t
an writer.
ral u,na'V81"I�
public 0 eontri-
m de by
'can I I prof -
ionals, "h id.
W yne Circuit Ju
P Hood, ream ly nominated to
th federal bench by P ident
Clinton, ld the archive ' impor
tant to blac "historical position
in the rommunity.
"So often, Afriam Ameri
have been left out of history,"
Hood id, "maybe bees we
come from an oral tradition, or
because people thought our re-
cords ntt worth preserving.
"If people write about you in
the histoty boo , eYeryone takJ
you a little more riously. "
o ignifi-
cant' colI ionof19th tury
docum n , including 0 igned
by Macon B. Allen, the nation'
fi t African-Am rican lawyer
dmitted to the Main bar �
1844.
Littlejohn's arehiv will form
the nucleu ofth collection But
Littlejohn and Keith are liciting
doeumen from throughout the
tate nation. Ern t Goodman
and George W. Crockett Jr., who
together formed the first inte
grated Jaw firm in th United
Sta in Detroit in 1944, have
made a commitment to donate
th ir volumino records, Sheila
ow
t terrific
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