IIGive me your rich, your famous, your anti-Black, yearning for white supremacy ..... We'lIleave the light on for you. II ( ) I Jill i ( J II S / \;' i C l' '.\ _____ .. By Munlia A1?u-Jant� "Constitutions are made of paper; Bayonets are made of iron" - Haitian saying Haitian President Jean Ber­ trand Aristide, the first demo­ cratically elected head of state this century, is still in a militar­ ily-imposed exile, one that has lasted over 2 1/2 years; one that may endure longer than his very presidency itself. Pere Aristide,. a Roman Catholic priest once given to the Salesian Order, won an over­ whelming popular vote in De­ cember 1990, roughly 68% of the electorate, in the presidential election, one borne on the flow of Lavalas (Creole for "flood" or "avalanche") 'springing from mass discontent with the Hai­ tian political-military-economic order. Aristide, a follower of Libera­ tion Theology (the doctrine that true Christianity must side with the poor vs. the wealthy and that oppression must be met by lib­ eration), sparked a powerful mass movement that his follow­ ers called La revolution sans ar­ mes (The Unarmed Revolution), and one that nt shock waves of alarm through the small, but powerful, Haitian elite. For although the Duvaliers (Francois and Jean Claude) were no longer in power in Haiti, the system that reigned for four decad ,Duvalierism, was still entrench d. Th leaders of the economic elite, the business class, th church, and the mili­ tary opposed Aristide and all he represented bitterly and re­ solved to tifle th priest­ turned-politician from h exercis of pow r. ARI T D , although bril­ liant and a gift orator, was a political neophyte, unschool d in th vils m n .were capabl of in the pursuit of power, nd while hi support among th ris­ ing tid of Haiti n asantry gr w, 0 too did his 0PI?O i ion ari - nd th op 1 Ion had th guns. Th lit cl saw th grow- ing Laoalos mov ment ourc ofdr d, nd heir I lato r fl c th From Death Row by stymieing Aristide's every ef­ fort to consolidate presidential power and security. The army's traditional role, protection of the largely mulatto elite from the African flood, kicked back in after a briefbout of confusion caused by Jean Claude ("Baby Doc") Duvalier's ouster, and those Aristide looked to for support, ran him out of the presidential palace, and into Venezuelan exile. Today, Pere Aristide is a President without a country, nor has he a cabinet, and these he counts as friends, the feckless Clinton administration, issue impotent press releases pro­ claiming " upport," while the CIA lobs "head grenades" at the . media, questioning Aristide's "mental tate." THE U .. D T CE it­ self from the suggestion of mili­ tary action in Aristide's behalf, while hailing a Haitian embargo on goods, food and medicin , that kill over 1,000 infants a week. Ari tide, as a liberation theologist, has spoken out in th past gainst the dual imperial­ i ms, both political and lig­ ious, vi ited against hi homeland, " ... the colonial ys­ tern, having di appeared from all the continents, endures in H iti. Th logy serv to 'zorn­ bify' th peopl 's spirits i ord r to subjugate th m mo readily to traditional overeignties" (New YorkR view of Books, Nov. 1 ,1993. And it is precis ly this anti- imp ri 11 pirit that cau U. . pau ,that par CIA p y­ chob bbl, nd that qui tly wi h th little lack, cour - t would just go aw y Lester's World com Identiti can often h nd empo er u . In my own family, "nam • ha conveyed incred­ ible psychological and cultural po er. Our nam make certain statem nts about tradition and heritage, our aesthetics nd of coll ivity, our vision and ultimate purpose in life. At the age of nine, my great­ grandfather Morris Robinson was sold on an auction bloc in W t Point, Georgia, in 1854 - sold by his own white, slavemas­ ter father. Th white owner who purchased him was named Ma­ rable. So Morris Robinson be- Y T D UG • was nam for Sojourner Truth, the great abolitionist and freedom fighter for our people .. The name itself has influenced "Soji" to become a poet, a young public speaker, and to partici­ P te in public demonstrations- -.':' .... ,. .. , .: ; .: "�-t : .; • ... .;.....,.'.-.....-::.� � A GUN AN TURN. LITTLE PUNK INTO A BIG /\1. tN ... man ri n . But that hould only b th beginning, not th end, of our interaction nd exploration of ch ot r' valu , traditions and cultures. No ingle group has monopoly on "truth", "wis­ dom" or "beauty." No culture should ever measured in hier­ archical terms, as being "high" .... Au ........... ca .... L , attacked feminism a "thr t" to Black manhood, and ev n justified bo r Mike Tyson's rape of Black woman. A central theme of such rhetoric - the exism, anti-Semiti m, homophobia, an� reactionary nationalism - is hatred. But what bothers African­ Americans and other people of color i that the demands for us to condemn Farra han are rarely replicated among hi when they must confront their own hate-filled demagogu . WHEN E ATOR Fritz Hollings of South Carolina de­ cribed African diplomats as "cannibals", the Senate aid nothing. Why the double-standard on hatred? Farrakhan' popularity i rooted in the deep dissatisfac­ tion and alienation felt within the African-American commu­ nity toward white power. De­ spite all of our efforts, we am losing ground in the struggle for equality. Our "race" becomes the ential vehicle through which we k to assert our humanity and struggle for self- pect. Yet if we define our politics implistically, as a narrow defi- ... nition of ourselves - whether as African-Americans or Latinos only, or working people or women only, or Christians or Jews only - we surrender any hope for creating an agenda to liberate all people who are op­ pres Dr. Manning Marable is Direaor of the IMtitute for Research: in AfrU;aA­ American Studies at Columbia Uniuer­ ity. New York City. "Along the Color Line" appear' in ouer 250 publication. and is broadcast by 75 radio tation. .. (III/RIll),) Readers Write In his new book, A Way Out Of No Way, r memb ring th civil rights movement and his participation in it, Andrew Young recalls th Birmingham of old. He rememb rs w h n th Southern Christian d rship Conference (SCLC) mad the de­ cision to concentra i fforts in that ci y, all th taft' w f; rful. He n r calls how r. King joked about who w ing to giveupth ir life in Birmingham, even delivering atiri I ulo­ gies for ch of th staff. But th Birmingham of today i a diffe nt city. It is city with an African American mayor nd a majority - Black ci y uncil. Instead of Bull onn r h d­ ing th poli force, n African American, Johnni Jo on is today, th poli chi f of an inte­ grated force. CI rly, chan has taken pla in Birmingham. By Bernice ARn .'1' , mayor m t irnm - owell Jackson