FRIDAYFOCUS The Michigan Daily - Friday, February 16, 1996 -3' t Students gain new perspective from South Africa visit I By Kate Glickman Daily Staff Re: lack History Month, celebrated in February, comes on the heels T the nationwide holiday for Martin Luther King Jr. The month usually conjures images of slavery, Jim Crow, W.E.B. DuBois, Malcolm X and other U.S. leaders and events. But to University students who traveled to South Africa this past summer, African American history is only a part of a larger celebra- tion, a global celebration for black people internationally. "There are two histories. The first is African and the second is African American," said political science Prof. Hanes Walton. "The African part is the oldest part. It goes back .... to the beginning of time." *lack history is a culmination of two distinct political identities, Walton said. LSA senior Ruquiijah Yearby spent three months in Durban, South Africa, with a group of students, and said she returned to the University with a new outlook. "When I came back, a lot of things were put in perspec- tive," Yearby said. Researching lead poisoning in children ages 3 to 5 and 8 to 10, the students learned about environmental problems King and got a chance to interact with the South African people. The students said the poverty they witnessed was shocking be- d their expectations. Little kids were running around without shoes, without clothes," Yearby said. "I learned how blessed we are as African Americans not to live in that kind of poverty," she said. Emerging from apartheid, the South African people are just beginning to change the old system. "People are excited for change," said Michelle Everett, an LSA senior who went to Johannesburg. "They are working together." Yearby said young people in South Africa have not learned African history because of a lack of resources. *Because of their whole system living as inferior, they on't know a lot about African history in general," she said. "All they know is that they have been fighting so hard for their rights." Since the fall ofapartheid, school curricula have changed to more accurately serve the diverse population, but rural areas still suffer without textbooks, Yearby said. "The experience reminded me that it is very important to celebrate Black History Month as a global celebra- Malcolm X :tion." Yearby, a biology concentrator, said she plans to become a lawyer And travel to impoverished countries to set up health care sites. Mack at the University, Yearby plans to educate blacks about student activism on campus through her Black Undergraduate Law -Association's Law Week. "I'm trying to getpeople interested in their rights and the law," she said. Through her sorority, Tau Kappa Omicron, Yearby also helped 'organize a symposium for Black History Month focusing on women's health. The event is open to all women, but Yearby said "we thought it would be a good time to do it." In Johannesburg, other University students studied how rapid urbanization has affected children in a study called "Birth to Ten." "The kids were like regular kids," LSA senior Greg White said of experiences in South Africa, "except everyone there speaks three to nine languages." White, who is black, said, "It was one of the best experiences of my life, because people don't realize what its like to wake up in the morning and have people look like you. "It was a very warm feeling. People are nicer," he said. White echoed Yearby and said the poverty in Johannesburg was like nothing he had experienced in the United States. "No person can imagine being in the condition that some ofthe people had to live in," he said. "It was like nothing I'd ever seen in my life." Leaving the country is important for African Americans, accord- ing to White. His experience has motivated him to become more active in the community. "People at the University have had little if any direct contact with struggle," he said. "People are complacent," White said. "Everything is here for us." Civil rights leaders and movements began to disappear in the '70s, and today's university students are out oftouch with activism, he said. White is a sociology concentrator and is busy teaching through the School of Education. He plans to teach high school. White volunteers for Project SERVE, giving time and energy to the black community. "When I came back my life was more focused," he said. Everett, who was on the same program as White, said she also changed after her visit to South Africa. "I have a different view of black history - actually seeing and meeting people - I understand more," she said. Everett described Johannesburg as a city that retains the physical characteristics of apartheid, like tall walls designed to keep blacks separated from whites. "If you can imagine North Campus surrounded by high walls and barbed wire," she said. "Security is really tight." The walls only had two entrances where about five to eight guards made sure women obeyed 1:30 a.m. curfews. While White and Everett traveled with the same pro- gram, Everett said women were restricted much more than men because of curfews and other rules of conduct. Everett commented on the differences between the United States and South Africa, saying some South Afri- cans were shocked when she spoke with both whites and blacks in the community. "Groups really didn't intermix," she said. "I caused a bit of a stir; people asked me questions." Interactions between African Americans and South Af- ricans were awkward at first, White said. "You're American, not African," he said. "We might not laugh at the same things." By the end of the trip, both made friends. "I can't wait to go back and visit," White said. Everett said she will celebrate Black History Month with a global outlook. Marketing the Dream Companies promote black history by selling products from Malcolm X hats to checks By Katie Wang 0 D What do baseball caps, T-shirts, buttons and checks have in common? The answer: These are products carrying the images of influential leaders or historical mo- ments in black history. Last October, the Deluxe Corporation, the world's largest supplier of checks in conjunc- tion with Intellectual Properties Management Inc., an Atlanta based licensing company, intro- duced a new line of checks that feature photo- aaily Staff Reporter understanding about how America works," Coleman said. "In order to get the message (of King) out you have to cooperate with corporations, it's the American way," he said. "It's exploitive if you allow it to be." IPM has exclusive worldwide rights to li- cense King's image. This summer, King's im- age will appear in the opening ceremonies ofthe Olympic Games in Atlanta, Ga. graphs of Martin Luther King Jr. during the civil rights movement. The checks are the lat- est marketing product featuring the image of. an influential African American leader. Several years ago, with the release of Spike Lee's movie about the MAWY A AOW O 176"O~o 'fi:. . i. _. ii -- o- iPM and Deluxe de- cided torelease checks with King's image be- cause "checks are a communication ve- hicle to reflect and re- member," Coleman said. "As people use checks everyday, they get a chance to reflect on the history and the life of Malcolm X, hats and T-shirts bearing an "X" quickly became a fashion fad. Engineering senior Shawn Ward said he wore a Malcolm X T-shirt then because the leader's image "stands for strong black men to stand up for themselves." Britches, a Virginia-based clothing store, sold X hats to add variety to the store's product line. Cathy Manuel, a merchandise manager for the store, said Britches decided to sell the hats because they "add alittle spice and controversy to ourmix." Do these products exploit the images of King and Malcolm X? Herschel Coleman, a spokesperson for IPM, says no. "When someone says that we are being exploitive of King's image, they have a poor times that affected America." The photographs on the check were taken by Flip Schulke, awhite photographer who worked on assignments for Ebony and Life magazines during the 1960s. "King'sfaceon acheckwouldpromoteKing's vision," Schulke said. "The more people see the pictures it would encourage them to use non- violent strategies." T-shirts and sweatshirts bearing the messages of October's Million Man March in Washing- ton, D.C., were another new marketing product. "The shirts represent all about what went on in the march," said Levancie Lofton, who sells Million Man March T-shirts at the Judiciary Square Metro stop in Washington. "They carry the message of the march." "I see black history tied into history period," she said, "The main thing I realized is different perspectives. When I think of African history there's Zulu his- tory and U.S. history and Euro- pean history. It's not one di- mensional." Black history with a global feel. "Black History Month takes on a paramount significance as we approach the 21st century. Civil rights laws and celebrations such as Black History Month have exposed the legal consequences of overt discriminatory practices and racial harassment. The struggles for, and achievement of independence by African countries in the 20th century have shown the strength, the humanity, the ingenuity and the c9ntributions of the African to the human civilization." - Yaw Boateng, professor of education at Eastern Washington University. - From "Ghana Review," Jan. 27, 1996. Students help high schools By Kate Glickman m Daily Staff Reporter In honor of Black History Month, LSA senior Patrice Petway and her sorority sisters will teach black high school women how to piece together a resume and apply for college. All over campus, student organizations and faculty members are reaching out to give their service and expertise to the community. "We're having a three-day workshop at Ann Arbor high schools," said Petway, president of the Black Greek Association. "A lot of people say they don't have role models," Petway said. Over three weekends, her sorority will talk to African American women about self-esteem and preparing for the future. "Taking the World by Storm," the title of the second workshop. will help black women with African queens like Sheba and Nefertiti, a history that is often neglected, Jones said. "How can we be like these queens?" Jones said. Giving a hand to high school students in Detroit Public Schools is something Rhea Norwood, a Business junior, plans for upcoming months. "During the regular year, African American his- tory is left out or less than a chapter in our books," Norwood said. Black History Month is a time when black stu- dents learn about events and people who are not covered in most curriculum, Norwood said. "I've learned a lot more history since high school directed toward African Americans,"Norwood said. "Like my black religion course which teaches the religion of our ancestors." Norwood wants to help Detroit public high school f Ila