To y Lev ly (' 'fa ou pe with nthusiasm and splendor The confidenc of an African Qu n Rev alin your his toric purpo and responsibility o your own spirit of African love A cr tiveness engulfs your personality you h your lov of art and humanity A beautiful relationship of human spirit So needed in our struggle for FREEDOM Yes indeed, you are a sparkling angel A wonderful experience I have witnessed Giving proof of the royal greatness Of the divineness of African Woman Power to you, African Sister , , By MUMIA ABU.JAMAL When I hear politicians bellow about "getting tough on crime" and barking out "three trik yer out" rhetoric, veral ima corne to mind. I think of how quickly the tune changes when the politician is on the receiving end of some of that "tuffne "after having fall n from grace. I am reminded of powerful tate appellate judge, who, once caught in an intricate bizarre web of criminal conduct, changed his long- tanding opinion re­ garding the efficacy of the insan­ ity defense, a option he once ridiculed. � It r vea'} ,i n' II 0' h how illu ory nd r ns itory pow r and sta u can be, and how we ar 11 fter all, human. I 0 THI K of a young man I met in pri on who w one of the first wave ofp ple impri - oned back in the '70s under new, tougher youth certification tat­ utes, where teenage are en­ tenced as adults. The man, whom I'll call Rab­ bani, was a tall, husky 15 year old when he was arrested in southeastern Pennsylvani for a rrned rob ry. The pros cuter moved that he be judicially certified an dult, and th Court agreed. . Tried n adult, Rab ani w tried nd convicted of 11 charges, and enten to 15-to- 30 years in prison; for an alleged "robbery" with a C02 air pi tol. HI FIR T a' ds" I ""� ,. re s of ousands of others have been, that is to say, ware­ housed, in a vat that sears the c very oul. � He has never held a woman as 1\1a e or lov r; H has never held a newborn .... 0- in hi palm, its heart athump C\ with new life; �I t HE N'T EE T the sun � ri e, nor moon glow, in almost 15 t:; years; For a rob ry," rmed" with a pellet gun, at 15 y ars old. When I hear such easy, catchy, mindl logans like "3 trikes - You're Out," I think of men lik Rabbani, who had one trik (if not one "foul"!) and are, for all attempts and purposes, already out ide of any game worth playing. y 0 BUT PERHAPS THE most important dimension of the dy- namic new direction by Dr. Chavis has been a n openn to reaching out to all ctors of the National African American includ in t 50.000 l'Oit b ncb of t t branch in AalIIOCLIltion), among t ndi t' historic m DB Dr. Conrad Wonill. Chair­ man of th N tion I BI c United Front; Ch rl n tchell, Co-Chairpereon of the ti Am-nee Against Ra­ ciam aDd Political Rep ion; Dr. Maul Karenga, Chair­ man oftha US CRganization and t tor. of K anz ; Cornel W t, Vice Ch inn n, Demo­ cr tic Soci Ii t of America; Gw n Patton, Director, South­ ern Rainbow Education Project; Adjoa Aiyetoro, Director, Na­ tional Conference of Black Law­ y raj nd Dr. Leonard Jeffries, Chairman of th Black Studi Dept. t CUNY. The m ting wa an over- !ming uocess. It is a tribute to th I de hip of Dr. Chavis that leaders who would not have come to a meeting convened by the NAACP a year ago sat Lester's World SCRUB-A-OUB mm£ooo !N o oft w round th table together to dis­ cuss ways and means of orking collaboratively to rope with the crisis in th Black oommunity. Black leaders who in som ca had eriou differen with each other agreed to ide their differen to explore creating operational unity for the sake of th greater good of the Black N tion. It has been thi kind of new direction and bold new leader- hip which has been like a breath of fresh air revitalizing our oldest and largest civil rights organization During last year the member­ ship of the NAACP dramatically increased from 490,000 to 650,000 as Black people from across the nation have taken a new look at the NAACP. More than 60 percent of these new NAACP members are under 30 years old. Dr. Chavis's tenure at the helm has not been without difficulties, however. o E WITHI T E AACP who were/ate comfort­ abl with th old NAACP have I consistently resisted the new di­ rection charted by Dr. Chavis. And certain elemen of the me­ dia, particularly the New York Times, have been severely criti­ cal of Dr. Chavis in an obvious attempt to discredit him and his top associates, Dr. Chavis'refusal to distance himself from Farrakhan and the Detroit meeting with national­ ist, pan-africanist and progres­ sives are. particularly troublesome to his detractors in­ side and outside of the NAACP. Joe Madison, a board member who has emerged as a major critic of Dr. Chavis, described the inclusion of Farrakhan in the call for the Summit as an "extreme move" and labeled the leaders who attended the De­ troit meeting as a group of "washed up radicals from the p st .. Ind od, th D troit m ting h S caus such ncern among om of th B ard members that r. Chavi may b in rious j opardy. From my v: nt point. s a lif tim m mb r of NAA 'P, it's time 0 RALLY AR UND BE CHAVI ! Too man have h d th for Black ple hav fallen prey to fo ext mal to the BI ck community and their apologi ts inside the Black community. Ron Duruels nI. a. Pr ident of t]: lnstitut» ((lr Cum muruty Or muzalwn arul /)..'1 -lapru en t Ifl Youn .101 n, Ohm /I ma. b (,(IIIIIIC/{'d at (216) i4 574i . _ .. , o o estatto c Some Black columnists com­ pete for publication in big, con- ervative, daily n wspapers by blaming BI ck people entirely for th i r own probl ms in Amer­ i . And this bl ming th victim rtain Black nt nd hat I v ry, 1 1 crimin tion, nd ra By -James E. Alsbrook enforced segregation in Africa those "darki "in Africa cap­ and America have produced tured your great-grandparen these examples of psychological , and knowingty sold them to th . damage, twisted mindsets and white man for lavery? They ar­ brainwashing. gue further that "those African • Why did a Black woman kings who sold their own people buy all of the old Amos en' Andy were just 'typical Negroes. '" ta she could find, invite her Some African-Americans argue white friends to lunch and enter- that since the slaveholders paid tain them with th stereotype- for the slaves, the slaves legally perpetuating travestie? and properly belonged to the (Comment: Was thi woman as- lave buyers, sociating other Black people Why did a well-known wi th bu ffoonery . beca use she Black preacher in pest years say wanted to identify he lfas su- he thanked the Lord for making perior to Black people generally his ancesto la ,subjecting and belonging in me class with them to the whip and chain for h r white friends?) "discipline," and giving them the Why did Zulu Chief Bible so he could Itt rn -that Butheleze in South Africa coop- Blac should be sla and for­ erat with the azi-like white ever "hewers of wood and draw­ Afrikaners who want to preserve e1'S of water." Apartheid and white superiority • Why did an old lave who in that land and block elections died in the 1940s tell the Associ­ n ed to establish racial equal- ted Pr that Black people ity and democracy? (Comment: were "natural" slaves, were Was he trying to preserve long- wrong to want civil rights and h ld special privile for him- hould never have been emanci- I fat th expense of demOcracy pated? nd equality for millions of other Why during sla ry days Bl cks?) did ome Black men eagerly be- Why do some A frican come "whippers," the persons deans gJeefully argue that who horsewhipped other Black people when the slave master wanted to punish someon be­ cause he was angry or dis­ pleased. Why did some Black slaves report to the slaveown rs when they learned other slaves were planning to escape or revolt? All slaves were warned that the punishment for attempted es­ cape was deformation of some kind, amputation, severe horse­ whipping or death. Select one or more of the an­ swers below and apply them to th above questions: • Greed , anticipated personal gain. • No regard or concern for other Black people. Belief in the notion' of in- nate inferiority of Black ple. Belief in the notion of in­ nate superiority of whit people. Self-hatred g nerating from inability to identify ith those assumed to b "su nor" Suffering from th Cia nce Thom.i disorder. (EI borat on t his.i {Add 'our own an' w or explan.u ion.)